They (Dell) are actually pretty friendly if you buy enough stuff from them as a mid-large business.
However Dell is quite different from the average teleco in that they actually have competition. Going off the example in the link, if Dell decided they didn't want to sell servers with virtualization solutions, I would leave and buy my stuff elsewhere. However, if Time Warner decided they didn't want to allow 3rd party VoIP I wouldn't have much choice but to accept it since I really need broadband and Time Warner is the sole provider in the area.
Connect(m_ui.messageLineEdit, SIGNAL("textChanged(QString)"),
this, SLOT("TextChangedSlot(QString)"));
Connect(m_ui.sendButton, SIGNAL("clicked(bool)"), this, SLOT("SendClickedSlot()"));
Connect(m_ui.actionChangeNickname, SIGNAL("triggered(bool)"), this, SLOT("ChangeNickname()"));
Connect(m_ui.actionAboutQt, SIGNAL("triggered(bool)"), this, SLOT("AboutQt()"));
Connect(qApp, SIGNAL("lastWindowClosed()"), this, SLOT("Exiting()"));
Magic strings galore. It's completely out of place in CLI land.
That doesn't solve the stability problem. If one of those worker threads does something naughty, the whole process is going down.
Although process creation time on Windows is slow compared to other OSes its more than fast enough for spawning a process per tab. Chrome and IE8 have already proved this in the real world.
...and trying to find a way to unify the gaming experience across mobile platforms, computers, and consoles.
I got it! We'll build a giant computer network that spans the entire globe. Then we can hook all of these mobile platforms, computers, and consoles up to it so they can communicate seamlessly. In fact, we can hook just about anything up to it. I propose we call this new invention "The Internet."
If I'm reading this right, the point of the web application is to manage the VMs. If it didn't have privilege to manage (or destroy in this case) the VMs, it would be pretty useless.
After Goliath's defeat, giants ceased to command respect. - Freeman Dyson