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One of the many new things introduced with Windows 8 is the concept of “Enterprise SideLoading”. While existing “desktop” apps can be deployed in the same fashion as with previous editions of Windows, “Windows Style” apps are published to the Windows Store and then downloaded from there. Microsoft realise that this isn’t the preferred method for organizations with bespoke apps for LOB (Line Of Business), HR etc, software purchased directly from an ISV etc. and so “Enterprise SideLoading” was born. This enables organizations to publish a Windows Style app directly to machines, circumventing the Windows Store, and is available in a couple of different ways. Bloatware, enterprise-style.
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One Very Proud Dad is a wonderful animated promo by Rackspace for the Open Cloud, produced by Impossible Engine. To say this explains cloud computing is a stretch, but it is fun to watch.
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I love it!
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There's undoubtedly more to discover in this case, but the lessons about control are clear. Locked-down devices, proprietary formats and digital restrictions all combine to create the conditions for this sort of failure. Combine that with the faceless bureaucracy of a large company with little respect for its customers and their liberty, and this sort of situation is bound to arise. You can't tell an ebook by its seller.
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If she were in California, she could take Amazon to small claims court.
m.bergman
For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.
To succeed in the world it is not enough to be stupid, you must also be well-mannered. -- Voltaire
In most cases the only difference between disappointment and depression is your level of commitment. -- Marc Maron
I am not a chatbot
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All your money are belong to us!
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.-John Q. Adams You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering.-Wernher von Braun Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.-Albert Einstein
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The single most important tool I’ve found for improving Digital Literacy is Wolfram Alpha. At your fingertips, whether on your phone, tablet, or laptop, you have access to all the world’s readily available data. All you have to do is ask. The best thing I can do to improve data literacy is to teach students (and other adults I know) to question the facts they are being quoted as gospel. You better think... think about what you're trying to read right here.
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After months of rumor roundups and speculation, Apple’s iPad mini has finally been announced—and the 7-inch tablet market has just heated up. This growing product category now has more to offer than Android devices with differing UI skins and varying components—or that BlackBerry PlayBook that’s not selling too hot. That’s not to say that Apple’s entrance into the mini-tablet game is solely what’s fueling the fire. Up until now, only the first-generation Kindle Fire and the recently launched Google Nexus 7 were considered worthy buys. Add the iPad mini to the mix, and this particular product category has a little more steam. What's your take? Too big? Too expensive? Too late?
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In a non-final Office action the USPTO has declared all 20 claims of Apple's rubber-banding patent (U.S. Patent No, 7,469,381 invalid, including claim 19, which Apple successfully asserted against Samsung in the summer trial in California. Rejection
"As beings of finite lifespan, our contributions to the sum of human knowledge is one of the greatest endeavors we can undertake and one of the defining characteristics of humanity itself"
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I have come to believe that the best and most cost effective technology upgrade that one can make is to themselves. I’m not talking cyborg implants here. I’m speaking about knowledge. That is, increasing your skill, aptitude, and understanding when it comes to any device, application, or tool. Money is not the only upgrade cost. Time and attention are as well.
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Last week, Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates stopped by the Microsoft campus in Redmond to celebrate 30 years of the employee Giving Campaign here at the company. While Bill was here, Next at Microsoft Editor Steve Clayton had the opportunity to sit down with him and get Bill’s thoughts on Windows 8, Windows Phone 8, Surface and the exciting wave of products the company is launching this month. Spoiler: he likes it.
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When you save your blog post it goes into a database, same goes for your bank account balance. A database can have anywhere from hundreds to billions of entries in it! Because a database isn’t actually a spreadsheet, though, you need a programming language to get data in and out. A popular one is a language called SQL. You might have heard of MySQL – it’s one of the many databases that use SQL. Lady Ada says: NoSQL is impolite. NoThankYouSQL, please.
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Maybe I'm not looking in the right spot, but I don't see much article.
I was just getting settled in to have a nice read.
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The primary cause for problems achieving persistence, upgrade, visibility, extensibility, and live-programming is local state. And I don’t just mean the explicit local state (mutable references and objects). Even implicit local state, represented in continuations, closures, callbacks, message queues, procedural stacks, dataflow loops, etc. will cause the same problems. The issues are inherent to the fundamental nature of local state: state cannot be cheaply recomputed or regenerated like other live values, and because the state is locally encapsulated it is semantically inaccessible to components that might provide persistence, extensions, or support transition of state during upgrade. When we need state, global state is great. Local state is the mind killer.
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Several months back we have been playing with different file systems on various system platforms, examining the security posture and robustness of numerous device drivers’ implementations. One of the configurations we spent some time on was the commonly used NTFS on Microsoft Windows – as the file system is rather complex and still largely unexplored, we could expect its device driver to have some bugs to that would be easily uncovered. In addition, it was certainly tempting to be able to simply insert a USB stick, have it automatically mounted by the operating system and immediately compromise it by triggering a vulnerability in ntfs.sys. We had some promising results during the process... Reliable execution of code with escalated privileges. Achievement unlocked!
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Windows Enthusiast Ed Bott of ZDNet compared the skepticism and apathy facing Windows 8 to the gradual adoption of Windows XP just over a decade ago, making the case that nothing has changed in over ten years and that everything is fine and there’s nothing for Microsoft to worry about. He’s wrong, here’s why. It's Windows. What could possibly go wrong?
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I swear if I had a pound for every linked article on The Insider referring to rubbish like "post PC era" I would be a very rich person indeed.
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What would you prefer?
Director of Content Development, The Code Project
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A more varied theme/range of topics
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The software giant asked the exec to deliver a new, quality operating system and do it on time. This week, we'll find out if his sharp elbows and turf fighting were worth it. Steve vs. Steve. The ultimate battle.
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This is a heady time for Microsoft as it rolls out an ambitious OS and polishes off its productivity suite, billed as "the new Office." At the suite's core is Office 2013—the desktop applications. Changes include a sleek appearance that reflects the look of Windows 8, functional improvements, and tie-ins to SharePoint and SkyDrive for storing documents online. In addition, the various components of Office Web Apps improve productivity in the cloud, while Windows 8 Surface RT tablets get their own flavor of Office. Now with more Nyan Cat and a built-in Ryan Gosling meme generator.
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An academic paper from law professor Colleen Chien of Santa Clara University looks more closely at the challenges patents pose for startups. She found 40 percent of the respondents to her survey reported trolls causing significant operational impact on their young businesses, including delays in hiring, undesirable changes of strategy, and loss -- or elimination -- of value. She also found that patent trolls were frequently used as a buyer for the patents of failed startups. None shall pass... unless you pay a licensing fee.
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Windows 8 is a major release, and it is very different from the Windows before it. And yet it's strangely familiar: when you peek under the covers of the new user interface and look at how it all works, it's not quite the revolution that Microsoft is claiming it to be. A brief history of Windows: from Win16 to WinRT.
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The people who make the hyperlocal weather app, Dark Sky, have opened up their API so regular mortals can access the app’s short-term rainfall forecast. As it happens, there’s more information in the API than is presented in the Dark Sky app itself... Raindrops keep falling from my code.
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I am reading Jesse Storimer’s fantastic little book “Working with Unix Processes” right now, and inspiration struck after the second chapter “Processes Have Parents”. When a Unix process is born, it is a literal copy of it’s parent process. For example, if I am typing ls into a bash prompt, the bash process spawns a copy of itself using the fork system call. The parent process (bash) has an id which is associated with the child process (ls). Using the Unix ps command, you can see the parent process id of every process on the system. Meet the Parents();
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