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Nice!
Ron Anders wrote: But now at 53, I gotta do something. I hear you! I have a few years on you and am stuck mostly in the 70s. Some of my recent stuff can be found here[^].
/ravi
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Good advice!
/ravi
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Flaws in third-party software libraries often find their way into products, a problem that will occupy developers and sysadmins next year. Thanks, Poindexter. Wouldn't have known that otherwise.
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The best reason to roll your own. I really don't understand devs who seem to spend more time and effort looking for third-party libraries when they should be able to write their own.
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Well, one of the reasons would be that in programmer's school they tell you 'not to re-invent the wheel'.
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Then can you explain the wide variety of wheels? Would you want a car that uses truck wheels? Or a truck that uses train wheels? Or should we all still use wooden wheels?
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Pshaw...that's all window dressing...wheels have been doing the same thing since the cave man days
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Caves have windows?
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Yeah, the entrance is dual purpose
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For those of you who are relatively new to the Web, the <blink> tag is an HTML command that causes text to blink, and many, many people find its behavior to be extremely annoying. "Don't blink. Blink and you're dead."
OK, this is not exactly of broad interest, so I admit I'm putting it in mostly so I can use that quote. However, a great view into the pre-standards standards, and this money quote that explains so much of the Web, "One of the engineers liked my idea so much that he left the bar sometime past midnight, returned to the office and implemented the blink tag overnight."
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Well, to be fair, blinking text pre-dates HTML.
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True, but even then its sole purpose was so that movies could flash the "bomb about to blow up" text.
TTFN - Kent
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The whole "let's parallelize" thing is a huge waste of everybody's time. There's this huge body of "knowledge" that parallel is somehow more efficient, and that whole huge body is pure and utter garbage. Linus has never met two lines he'd like to meet
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Quote: End users are fine with roughly on the order of four cores
The thing about IT is that it is not ever defined or restrained by the needs and desires of the present but rather the edge of what is possible is what drives us.
For example, many of the things that required a very high end machine last decade can be comfortably done on a multi-core PC.
Where Linus is right is that the complexity and potential for errors is often much higher than the realised benefit and this requires languages to change too. Things like immutable objects, tail recursion, PLinq etc. are all clues to the direction in which we should be heading (IMHO).
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If you've ever done any 3D rendering for video, you'd definitely be happy with all the cores you could lay your hands on.
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The Random Darknet Shopper, an automated online shopping bot with a budget of $100 a week in Bitcoin, is programmed to do a very specific task: go to one particular marketplace on the Deep Web and make one random purchase a week with the provided allowance. The purchases have all been compiled for an art show in Zurich, Switzerland titled The Darknet: From Memes to Onionland, which runs through January 11.
The concept would be all gravy if not for one thing: the programmers came home one day to find a shipment of 10 ecstasy pills, followed by an apparently very legit falsified Hungarian passport– developments which have left some observers of the bot’s blog a little uneasy.
If this bot was shipping to the U.S., asks Forbes contributor and University of Washington law professor contributor Ryan Calo, who would be legally responsible for purchasing the goodies? The coders? Or the bot itself?
Methinks it is like a weaselblank check for a lawyer.
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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I believe the coder, there must have been an if else condition, more like,
if(product != typeof(Product.Drug)) {
}
.. well who knows what would be done there or here, but I'm still very much confused, how did bot made the agent agree to give him a Hungarian passport?
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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It is not a very new project, I think it runs now for several months.
First I hated this project, meanwhile I start to like it. It shows all the pervert possibilities of a not controlled net.
Also internet must not become a lawless area!
Bruno
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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An interesting story, but I have trouble believing the "Hungarian Passport" forgery thing.
A faked passport without a photo of a real individual is useless.
«A man will be imprisoned in a room with a door that's unlocked and opens inwards ... as long as it does not occur to him to pull rather than push» Wittgenstein
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Mary Jo Foley wrote: Spartan is still going to use Microsoft's Chakra JavaScript engine and Microsoft's Trident rendering engine (not WebKit), sources say. As Neowin's Brad Sams reported back in September, the coming browser will look and feel more like Chrome and Firefox and will support extensions. Sams also reported on December 29 that Microsoft has two different versions of Trident in the works, which also seemingly supports the claim that the company has two different Trident-based browsers. Microsoft is building a new browser as part of its Windows 10 push[^]
It must be warrior like the 300[^]
Wonde Tadesse
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Seems good. But I don't think IE will be my default browser anytime soon.
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Holy Cow, they weren't kidding. I loaded the VIM color page and FireFox sucked up a GB.
I disabled ADB and FF instantly went down by 200MB in memory usage, from about 800MB to 600MB.
Good grief. What a piece of crap. Blocking ads with CSS? Geez, I thought it was actually stripping the href tags or whatever so the browser wasn't even loading the ad crap.
Marc
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It could be useful for pay-per-view ads. This way the owner of the site still gets his money and the user simply don't see crap on the screen. Until the ads seller find it out it works...
I have NoFlash plugin and it does its job well, the most obnoxious ads are the flash ones, the play audio, video, weight a ton, start unprompted and generally slow down the navigation, especially if they are present in every page of a site and I open several links in different tabs. AdBlock + NoFlash does its job well, bu now that I know the inner working of AdBlock I think I'll search another...
Geek code v 3.12
GCS d--- s-/++ a- C++++ U+++ P- L- E-- W++ N++ o+ K- w+++ O? M-- V? PS+ PE- Y+ PGP t++ 5? X R++ tv-- b+ DI+++ D++ G e++>+++ h--- r++>+++ y+++*
Weapons extension: ma- k++ F+2 X
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