I pirate everything too, but I'm not an hypocrite
Yes you are. You want to be paid for your software works, but refuse to pay others for their software works.
That is the definition of hypocrisy. Say one thing, do the other.
I, on the other hand, want to be paid for my work. And I damn well pay for the software I use from other vendors.
That has caused many people on the other side of the transaction to believe the whole setup is bad, which leads to widespread rulebreaking.
You are right. A whole bunch of people have realised that people are benefiting from their work without being paid for it. And now they want to be paid for it. People steal my work daily. It does not help pay the mortgage, or cover the cost of creating the work. You seem to think its perfectly OK to steal from me. BTW, the software I create, you'd only want to use it if you are in business, and thus making money from using it. People steal because they think they can and should, not any other reason.
I abhore software patents and I do not wish for any extension of copyright law.
f you build a house you get paid ONCE by
Because only ONE group of people can use it at any one time!
You are missing basic and fundamental parts here:
a) Cost of creation. If creation cost X million, but sale of individual items is small fraction of X, then of course you need to sell many items
b) Created item may benefit many people at once or only a few people at once, or one person at a time. If if benefits many people at once, and they get more from using than they pay, why is that wrong, why should the creator not be rewarded? They've still benefited each user of the item to a greater extent than the user of the item has paid.
When you finally get around to creating a digital work that takes much time (in my case, years) to create, you'll understand why your attitude is so ignorant. If you want my work, you can pay for it, or create it yourself.
Copyright is not theft.
Then you need to do some serious studying.
Using copyrighted material without paying for the right to do so (except for fair use situations), IS theft.
Your comments are not insightful, they are downright ignorant.
"owing in no small part on his insistence that his work be made available for unrestricted electronic distribution and copying."
The fundamental and basic point being, that is Cory's right to insist on those terms for his work, NOT FOR THE WORK OF OTHERS.
How long until you people get this? What works for one person does not necessarily work for another.
Windows 7 like a Cadillac
Like a Cadillac? That is an advertisment for speed? Blimey...
The Dell Precision laptop series all supporting docking (D-Dock port replicator).
The hardware is excellent, as is the build quality.
Mine (a Dell Precision M6300) has 4GB RAM, 1920x1200 17" screen, 110GB disk, Core 2 Centrino at 2.X Ghz. Good track pad, good keyboard, matte screen (despite some other comments on here about glossy being OK, they are wrong, you want the matte screen), lots of USB ports, will dual screen easily using the ports (even through the docking station), etc.
You can't buy them new for the price the OP wants, but you can buy them on Ebay, often in very good condition, for the price the user wants.
I concur with those that say widescreens and laptops suck for development. They do, but if you want/need a laptop for development and you don't want a Macbook Pro, this is the one to buy (currently its M6400, superceding the M6300).
My previous laptop, a Dell Inspiron 8000, purchased in 2000, is still working, the only niggles being shift and control keys that are slowing failing due to the aluminium oxide build up on the key contacts. Dell's are reliable and don't die (witness the tales of dying Macs elsewhere on this thread). And of course this machine has a proper 4:3 screen rather than a widescreen, so much nicer to use - sadly the market doesn't cater to developers in that respect.
Why is Firefox going backwards in usability? Despite all the publicity surrounding Microsoft's Ribbon bar, why do people put it in their software? Its horrible. It makes usability really suffer. What to do is not obvious. Where is the menu bar? Dunno, I can't see it. Hmm, well what do I do to get to see it? Dunno, its hidden. Try something. Like what? I dunno. Many minutes later after a lot of random mouse clicking (which does nothing) and key pressing, someone presses "Alt", at which point the menu magically appears. Wow, thats intuitive. NOT.
If I struggle with it, how on earth is my father, who is 70 soon, going to live with it? Well he isn't. He's self taught and I'm often surprised at the things he does on his own (installed Ubuntu without asking for any help +1 for Ubuntu the installer is that good), but Ribbons will floor him, for sure.
The Ribbon bar is about as a good a UI decision as Apple's single button mouse on the grounds that users aren't bright enough to understand multiple buttons. Doh!
As for instruments having off days - for sure. I play bagpipes. Some days they sing. Other days, best to put them down and not bother at all. Most days, somewhere in between
Thats 440 per year, on average.
Don't Ferrari only make something like 1,000 cars (of a particular version, save F50, or whatever) a year?
Thats not such a stretch, its a factor of 2.
I agree that the Stanley was history though, whenever I see a steam car its obvious the tech has been superceded.
Real Programmers don't eat quiche. They eat Twinkies and Szechwan food.