Comment Re:DRM (Score 1) 123
I have a number of O'Reilly books, and none of them have that, at least in the ePub or PDF. It is not a bad idea though.
I have a number of O'Reilly books, and none of them have that, at least in the ePub or PDF. It is not a bad idea though.
Yeah that was a mistake. He should have said TEN average 25 year olds.
http://www.devtopics.com/programmer-productivity-the-tenfinity-factor/
You're pretty much right. Do a google search for "Visual Fred", a name given to VB.NET by MS MVPs.
...they have a Squirrel Girl movie.
It's just the next Wave of features from their Labs.
No! Especially if this is GMail we're talking about, *archive* and not delete. Delete should mean GONE (with a 7- or 30-day safety window, for example).
- I do agree with the second point. Delete if you've read it, do not need to act on it - but keep it if you thing you might possibly need to refer to it someday. Archive it.
- Avoid leaving things in your inbox. Do it, defer it, or delegate it. If you defer, set a calendar event or a todo item (that links to the email message if possible) and get it out of your inbox.
Keep your inbox like your physical mailbox. You don't leave stuff like bills in your mailbox until you are ready to take care of them, right?
Basically it boils down to: don't use your inbox as your task list! Otherwise, your process list is all backwards. Whatever comes in most recently into your inbox seems to take the highest priority, and it shouldn't be that way. Use a proper task list or calendar for stuff you need to take care of.
It is a bit of work to do this, but keeping organized is not automatic, it takes some discipline.
Exactly, the key is "inbox zero". People who leave messages in their inbox are just putting the issue off and causing their own "hell".
Are you profiling? Let's not propagate that canard.
1) Climb off high horse
2) Read review
From my understanding, 5MB is the default, and if it grows the user is prompted to allow the increase. That may be just for databases though, I haven't personally tested it.
See: http://ofps.oreilly.com/titles/9780596805784/ch05_id35816678.html
I had this for months, it started to get out of control when the other person bought a bunch of stuff on HSN and I got all the invoices, shipping notices etc. Fortunately (or un-, depending on your viewpoint) they had shipping addresses in the emails. I wrote a direct but polite letter telling them that they are using the wrong address for everything. It really tapered off after that.
iSSH is just* a SSH client, available from the App Store. Installing it means nothing. TFA should have referred to installing OpenSSH server and connecting to it through [something like] iSSH.
*by just, I don't discount the amazing featureset of the program, including tunneling, VNC and X11. It's a "must have" app.
I intend to get the $4.99 e-book upgrade, I think I want this in both formats.
Regular books are still very useful, they free up a load of screen space and have excellent portability.
Hint: if the book says "Definitive" in it's title, it's probably going to be big.
You're probably either looking for "Javascript: The Good Parts" or a moderate weight-training program.
No.
But if you need a reference, you should have one that includes jQuery, given how widespread it is, don't you think? There are only 43 pages that cover jQuery directly, so it's only a quick intro anyway.
A computer scientist is someone who fixes things that aren't broken.