Comment Re:What's the point? (Score 1) 511
Well, there is a whole lot of Java in the enterprise and other organisations like banks.
Obviously they are always last to move, because they have a lot of legacy applications anyway.
Well, there is a whole lot of Java in the enterprise and other organisations like banks.
Obviously they are always last to move, because they have a lot of legacy applications anyway.
No, dynamically is definitely the wrong approach. It just won't work.
Shippping LLVM byte code could still be possible yes.
Does any distribution have some kind of package that can be installed ? llvm-runtime. Like you can install Python or Java.
Shouldn't be to hard to make a package for Linux for that, right ?
Maybe someone could even add it to the kernel so it can recognise the bytecode.
Maybe it is just me but when I see these things, I sometimes get crazy ideas. And I think:
Might as well translate into LLVM bitcode and recompile the code:
http://www.phoronix.com/scan.p...
Hell, maybe it's even faster if you compile the LLVM bitcode with emscripten and use asm.js to run into the browser.
We are not disposable blue collar idiots. We are white collar professionals and we just want the same damn respect accountants, other dept managers, other educated employees and even secretaries get within the same organization.
If you are not in the 1%, then you are one of the rest.
Some might get a bit more, some might get a bit less.
That's all there is to it.
The problem is context.
On one site the same content is illegal on an other it is legal.
Why do people think "virtualized computing" is cloud ? It isn't. Because a VMWare cluster isn't cloud.
Cloud has characteristics like:
- pay per use
- API to control it, so it can be automated
- a failure model, like availability zones. So you know that things are 100 % seperated so if one AZ goes down an other AZ does not depend on it.
- etc.
Nobody says it has to be virtual either, you can get physical machines from Rackspace or Softlayer.
Number of birds killed for human consumption ?
one way or the other this is going to solve it self, right ?
Or pipes, etc. get a lot bigger (things like silicon photonics in the data center and NVRAM will help) or people with more knowledge of the problem will find a better job.
I'm starting to think it would be easier to solve the energy storage problem than get a working fusion power.
Because it looks like solar is on a similar exponential improvement cycle as Moore's law:
DNS is still pretty centralized though.
But that actually has a fix without having to change everything (!):
set up your search path correctly.
I should probably add:
most businesses probably have a public website.
Don't make the internal domainname the same as your website.
If you want to re-use the same domain, use:
office.domain.tld
As a business you register a domain from a TLD of your choice for US $10 or more a year.
Then you use that domain internally.
The reason start up and VC-investors put money into Bitcoin is because the blockchain is actually a novel and useful technology.
If you think PayPal is the cause of the problem, you haven't looked close enough.
The whole system is a total mess.
First of all there are, far and far to many regulations and a lot of countries has some of their own unique regulations as well.
The second problem is: SWIFT is from the 70s it's a rigid protocol that isn't going to change any time soon:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
It usually takes days before a transaction is confirmed. Bitcoin takes about 10 minutes, a lot altcoins take minutes.
Memory fault - where am I?