Comment Re:How about å, ä, ö, and ø? (Score 1) 968
I guess you didn't get the joke about Columbus and Eriksson.
Hint: the A in ASCII stands for a land discovered by Leif Eriksson.
I guess you didn't get the joke about Columbus and Eriksson.
Hint: the A in ASCII stands for a land discovered by Leif Eriksson.
You know, you could add a pen to the device, so you don't have to deal with, say, something that makes it hard to swipe your finger across the screen and reduce the grease in the screen.
Then, after that, you could make the movements more like handwritting, since people are used to that.
Then, maybe, to help people write things faster, put split areas for letters and numbers.
You know, I think I saw that somewhere else before....
"I have some bestiality on my computer, but you can see clearly that the girl is ENJOYING IT!"
Best rendering so far!
Others focused in removing the crossing edges, which is an improvement, but this arrangement makes it easy to see who is suing and who is being sued.
Thank you!
From the "Features" page:
"Firefox 4 Beta includes an updated Windows interface that's sleeker and easier to use. (Mac & Linux are coming soon!)"
The Chromified look is not available in the Mac and Linux builds yet (just tried.) Everything else is there, though.
I'm also from the South hemisphere (Brazil, more precisely) and it's too damn hot for this time of year.
Hah, it had to be circletimessquare -- oh how I miss Kuro5hin and this kind of out-of-the-box thinking that used to come up there so often from you and the rest of the people. Too bad the place was filled with trolls to the point of unusability the last few times I tried to return.
nothing really innovative or useful came out of Mozilla labs.
Well, not quite. Weave is freaking awesome if you have Firefox on your mobile and your desktop: Log in in, say, Slashdot and weave will carry your session and cookies to your mobile.
[I reckon Mobile Firefox is not that spread, but it surely helps that I have the reference hardware
I was wondering the same thing ("MeeGo is now on Nokia's hands")
Well, one thing, this could be Intel cheating Nokia after Nokia cheated Intel porting MeeGo to ARM processors (or so it seems, from what I read somewhere.)
I keep all my open source projects on Google Code. I had one that was marked for deletion for more than 1 year. Then I decided to reactive it when Mercurial support landed. For some reason, the repository wouldn't work no matter what format. I searched and searched and searched and finally found the Google Code project page. Submitted an issue about the repo and kept watching it for two days. On the second day, the issue disappeared. Before opening it again, I decided to check the repo: everything was working as expected.
Support for Google products exist. It's just a pain to find it.
Those of us in the rest of the world, who have been suffering being the weaker part in the worldwide marketplace game, we've been paying attention for much longer than two years.
I really don't understand why people want to settle things between Adobe and Apple. Honestly, I'm loving it.
The more Steve Jobs complains about Flash, the more focused in building a decent runtime for Flash Adobe will be (current Flash on Linux is a resource hog and OS X is not that far away either); The more Jobs says H264 is for "open web", the more people will scream about it being a patent encumbered protocol.
Unless she shows it being compiled as native code, I call it bullshit.
Hey, guess what: my little Python Twitter Client also runs unmodified on Linux, OS X, Windows and Maemo. All that due the nature of a VM running under those machines.
"Oh, but what about the iPad and the iPhone?" Adobe probably have an iPad/iPhone version of their VM running around and he installed it using the ad-hoc feature.
Honestly: bullshit. Big steaming pile of bullshit.
If you think the system is working, ask someone who's waiting for a prompt.