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Microsoft might be close to releasing the preview version of Windows 10 for phones as the Insider app is now available in the Windows Phone store. Sure, run your phone on an alpha version of the OS. What's the worst that will happen?
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Sure, run your phone on an alpha version of the OS. What's the worst that will happen?
That you don't reach the beta?
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Today, we’re excited to release the alpha version of Rust 1.0, a systems programming language with a focus on safety, performance and concurrency. Look at that: it's rusted almost all the way through
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It's better to burn out than it is to rust
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.0
There's a fine line between crazy and free spirited and it's usually a prescription.
I'm currently unsupervised, I know it freaks me out too but the possibilities are endless.
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Yeah, but I've used that song for the last couple of posts about Rust, so I decided to skip it this time.
TTFN - Kent
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Gotcha, didn't go back very far but should have figured you'd be on top of it.
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.0
There's a fine line between crazy and free spirited and it's usually a prescription.
I'm currently unsupervised, I know it freaks me out too but the possibilities are endless.
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Despite improvement in Windows, IE vulnerabilities remain a major issue. "The more things change, the more they stay the same"
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The choices of Yahoo’s management could have affected the fortunes of another giant – Google. "It's easy if you try"
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*gag* me with a spoon
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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Version 1.5 of the language will use a tool chain written in Go as Google seeks to eliminate C programs from the source tree Go, go, gadget compiler
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Redmond's latest salary survey shows employers paying 25 percent more and up for Azure and big data work. "No one knows the lonely one whose head's in the clouds"
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We are moving the Roslyn OSS code from CodePlex to GitHub. GitHub has a vibrant open source community that we want to actively be a part of and contribute to. We are also going to take this time to modify our pull request process. Another vote of support for Codeplex,and the TFS-Git bridge
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Microsoft has finally embraced Linux -- with a bit of passion. Jack Wallen reports why he believes the makers of Windows have finally come around to sidling up to the open-source platform. How far the "Year of Linux" has fallen
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Now we'll know if Linux has a backdoor.
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I kind of feel disgusted with myself whenever I have a reaction ... like the one I had to this article ... of perceiving an author as kind of a "punk kid" that is way out of his depth ... "playing the age and experience cards" I call that, and I consider it a trap, a vice, a weakness.
Nevertheless, I just don't find this article credible; well, yes: Microsoft makes nice today towards Linux: the PowerPoint presentation, the saccharine signage, the flacks-primed-at-the-pump with today's spin ... all there for the enactment of another ceremony of innocent intentions.
I believe in this rapprochement about as much as I would have believed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact between Germany and Russia in WWII in 1939 was about anything but naked power-play.
Is it in the long-term interest of MS to undercut their lucrative server business ? And, why shouldn't playing to win in the Cloud arena, and making sure the MS OS for desktop and mobile works best in the MS Cloud ... be of utmost strategic importance.
"Beware of Geeks bearing gifts," Homer did not rhapsodize.
Yada, yada ... okay: whadda I know, twelve years out from setting foot in the U.S., and not owning a smart-phone.
cheers, Bill
«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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BillWoodruff wrote: and not owning a smart-phone
"A smart man carries his smarts inside his head." -- Abraham Lincoln, upon seeing the first iPhone
modified 9-Jan-15 16:19pm.
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Bill, I have to agree with your "punk kid" perception. I get this a lot when dealing with new, shiny objects that are drooled over in one way or another by the various "kids" with their perception that any technology more than a couple of years old should be dumped along with those old fuddy-duddies who still think there is some value in them - "Boy! Are they out of touch, LOL!" (or whatever the appropriate hip TLA is these days).
I find the "smart" phone mania equally annoying. When it boils down to it, all I want from a phone is the ability to make calls and save the numbers so my old brain doesn't have to remember then anymore. I use an "old" Blackberry Bold. I make calls, I store the numbers. OK, granted, I do store a few eBooks on it to read while waiting at the dentist's or wherever but I don't need a Kindle, Nook or any kind of iCrap to watch YouTube with wires stuck in my ears - I have always avoided "ear-buds" and still have good hearing. I believe we are going to have a generation of prematurely deaf people if the level of noise coming from other people's ears (and cars) is anything to go by.
I sometimes hope that some solar flare will come along and fuse all satellites into scrap that then falls from the sky taking out all the cell towers in incredibly coincidental targeted strikes that have a by-product of scrambling the airwaves - leaving that world a more peaceful place where if you want to call someone you have to find a hard-wired phone with a proper handset rather than putting a large piece of flat plastic against your face.
I'm not a Luddite, but I'm beginning to understand them.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Sources familiar with the company’s Windows plans tell The Verge that the new browser, codenamed Spartan, will include a host of new features not found in rival browsers. "And by Spartan law, we will stand and fight... and die."
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Who stand and fight like Spartan...are immortal
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Native Internet Explorer 6 support ?
I'd rather be phishing!
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A rendering engine that works?
Oh, wait...
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It might be great ...but, it's only going to be a "Windows Store App" (whatever that is) so most people won't want it and therefore not use it - and therefore it will die a quiet death no matter how good it is. Another simple mistake by the out of touch (although they think they are the only ones in touch) MS Marketeers who think that the Windows Store is the only way to do things (and the evil ones who think that this is the only way to control the unwashed masses). They should try living in the real world outside of their padded cells at MS HQ.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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The proposed Kona Project would define Java APIs for use on embedded devices. Write once, run on all your things
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The NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory’s (JPL) Laboratory for Reliable Software recently published a set of code guidelines, “The Power of Ten—Rules for Developing Safety Critical Code.” The paper’s author, JPL lead scientist Gerard J. Holzmann, explained that the mass of existing coding guidelines is inconsistent and full of arbitrary rules, rarely allowing for now-essential tasks such as tool-based compliance checks. Existing guidelines, he said, inundate coders with vague rules, causing code quality of even the most critical applications to suffer. My number one rule: Treat all code as safety critical!
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Jason Cardoza wrote: full of arbitrary rules
What other kind is there?
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