It's not theoretical, it's the exact reason that companies have been complaining about. Google told companies that they cannot use same ads on competitor services.
It's the most fun a guy can have with one hand.
Adobe has recently made their full software suite available for a monthly fee. Compared to paying several thousands for the software, you only pay $70 per month. For me that seems much better. If, on the other hand, I would like make longer commitment to Adobe's software, I could buy the whole suite, too!
It makes a great difference when you're traveling elsewhere. Oh right, US people...
Everywhere else but the U.S...
Charlie and Dino sounds like some kids adventure movie. What's up with that?
Doesn't anyone have problem with the full source code being available? I mean if you develop with HTML5 and JS the full source is there. I think companies might have a problem with that.
I'm just waiting for them to pick up the pace like Chrome and Firefox did. HTML 38, here we come!
As you said, not knowing the OS is the problem. However, some things are clearly intended to distance OS X from Windows, while providing no usability improvement.
Just the other day, I spent some 45 seconds trying to delete a file the Windows way. First I realized there was no Delete key, which is annoying even if it's not strictly the OS' fault. So I tried backspace, seems like a logical alternative when you want to delete stuff. Nope, so I tried right-clicking and all sorts of weird click+button combinations I could remember.
Only then did I remember that you must absolutely drag files to the trash.
No you don't. Cmd+Backspace deletes them just fine.
An Ada exception is when a routine gets in trouble and says 'Beam me up, Scotty'.