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Those come later, unexpectedly...
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Oracle is heavily promoting Java for embedded systems, but there are doubts as to whether it's up to the job Wait... let me guess! Write once, run... (needs something here)
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Oracle hypes Java for the Internet of things Oracle attacks open source[^]
..but regardless of Oracle's speech, Java will be there; Windows is too expensive to put on a lot of devices.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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We all have ideas or projects that we've been wanting to do but the time is never quite right - well that is what Progvember is about. You have 30 days to make it a reality. Why should those English majors have all the fun in November?
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Coding and then coding some more at night, and all weekend, every weekend. That's my November anyway.
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At its Ideas Summit in New York, Google revealed Uproxy: a service that aims to change the way people around the globe use the internet. A browser extension for Chrome and Firefox, uProxy can bypass restrictive firewalls that hinder users from accessing vital (and trivial) information online by creating peer-to-peer connections. "After all it's not easy, banging your heart against some mad bugger's wall."
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Version 10.9 of OS X trades big cats for surfer dudes, will land on Macs today. Free? Well that's thinking different
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The company has listed various vulnerabilities which affect Java 5, 6, and 7, as well as Oracle Database 11g and 12c, Fusion Middleware, Enterprise Manager, E-Business Suite, Flexcube Products Suite, Oracle’s Health Sciences and Retail Products suites, Primavera, PeopleSoft, Siebel and MySQL. Have a nice day
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The Wall Street Journal reports that Microsoft is testing prototypes for a device similar to Google Glass, which includes a camera and Internet capabilities. Microsoft has reportedly been in contact with Asian manufacturers to supply components for the device, but the Journal's source emphasized that the product may not come to the mass market. It looks like you're trying to read something, would you like help with that?
modified 22-Oct-13 13:17pm.
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*cough*teportedly*cough*
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Danke. Fixing.
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TTFN - Kent
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Current wireless networks have a problem: The more popular they become, the slower they are. Researchers at Fudan University in Shanghai have just become the latest to demonstrate a technology that transmits data as light instead of radio waves, which gets around the congestion issue and could be ten times faster than traditional Wi-Fi. May cause seizures in some people. Use caution when transferring large files.
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So, if we call tech support they will tell us to turn the switches off the on again??
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I'm guessing it should work also when the light is off, I wonder how that will work. Perhaps the wifi signal will go over the ground/zero connectors?
Wout
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True. But at the moment we can only speculate, for there are many ways to do this...
I wonder about what else can people invent.
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They were discussing the possibility of flickering the light "BILLions of times a second" (sorry, ghost of Carl Sagan attacked at that moment). So, I guess technically you could still use it when off, if the "off time" was still the perceived setting.
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TTFN - Kent
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Now they only need to find a way to make visible light go through walls...
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The failure rate for software development projects is high generally, particularly large ones like Healthcare.gov, says Standish Group data Too big to succeed (500 million lines of code?!)
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I read 500 thousand, and even that was a total guess.
Wout
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Yeah, everyone is pushing zeroes as guestimates. Either way, way too many, but very predictable. People seem to have forgotten just how buggy Twitter and/or Facebook were at launch (or maybe not launch, but when they were trying to scale).
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TTFN - Kent
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A small-claims complaint asks Apple for a way to remove the automatically downloaded iOS 7 install file on iOS 6 devices and earlier, something that can take up space. Really? {blink} {blink} REALLY?!
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I'm still on 5.1, works just fine . I don't want any of the post-Steve stuff.
Wout
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But... it's so flat!
Actually, I like iOS7 for one reason - the auto-updating apps. Now I don't have to look at those ugly red blobs on my AppStore icon.
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TTFN - Kent
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