The internet is the bare specification how computers can find eachother and exchange packages of information.
This limited scope was complicated enough.
It is amazing that the elegance in the solution for a couple of hundred computers still works for millions of devices.
Even the IPv4 to IPv6 transition shows the strenght of this elegance.
Once having this issue resolved, all the rest became possible.
Run your own protocol on top, if you wish.
No business plan, No patents, no royalties. That's why it did not flop.
Lately there has been a rumour that the Chinese were after Yahoo!
My guess is, "Yahoo!" is something is see Ballmer yell on stage, jumping around. "Bing!" is sounding like chinese to announce on stage.
They are just trading the names.
Just wait and Google.
Remember when we thought SQL was so much slower and not fit for the big work? Well it was'n SQL, it were the early implementations that were slow.
Now the Javascript specs are very powerfull. And the engines (implementations) are getting faster all the time. I see SproutCore and Objective-J pushing the envelope, amongst others. Javascript has only just arrived.
Anyways, that's only my impression.
It would be great if the confort that comes with that speed would also be for individually produced content, and not only for community consumed content.
Participation is what makes the internet great, let's keep it this way.
What percentage of online systems store their user's passwords one-way encrypted (let alone encrypted)?
Indeed, but it is not that transparent anymore.
Telenet recently lowered/raised the bandwidth cap to an unknown level.
Before that I could check the bandwidth day per day, to monitor my household (2 adults and 2 teenagers). Now they employ an opaque policy that says:
Whatever average means, only Telenet knows. I asked to see my bandwith use, but they do not give this information anymore.
Telenet explains it this way:
In dutch or french (might get "session expired") - Follow dutch "Online Support > Internet > Internetdiensten > Vrij downloaden":
http://onlinesupport.telenet.be/eCustomer/iq/telenet/request.do?session=%7B6eba0150-ad10-11df-e0fe-000000000000%7D&event=1&view()=c%7B55394320-8a7f-11df-cb0d-000000000000%7D&varset()=pobj:%7Bcf80cb00-843d-11df-71a8-000000000000%7D/
this should be marked insightful. gdmnd.
Somehow, developers have to realize that the iPhone, iPad (and in a certain way an iMac too) are no longer meant to be computers with an operating system. They are devices with an API. As far as I see these API's are trying to protect the devices (and the company and the users).
Get over it.
Every now and then, some writer tosses up some words like "Cybercriminals have long targeted xyz products due to their popularity". They don't. Criminals are lazy. They attack weak and easy spots first. It has nothing to do with "popularity". If it were, apache http servers would be the most attacked server application of them all - and they aren't.
Normally, music, other peoples stupid jokes, shoulder taps, and office noise, they all annoy and distract me while I am analyzing a concept or a technical problem. I hate to put music between my ears when I'm thinking.
But once I know exactly what to code and how to code it, it is more fun and even more productive, to add a soundtrack to that "roller coaster" coding - until something breaks unexpectedly. Then the soundtrack stops again.
If my boss wants me to put away the headphones, I keep on nodding to the music in my head.
If.
He doesn't, because he knows me.
I hope your boss knows you too.
http://libwww.freelibrary.org/closing/
Quote:
All Free Library of Philadelphia Customers,
We deeply regret to inform you that without the necessary budgetary legislation by the State Legislature in Harrisburg, the City of Philadelphia will not have the funds to operate our neighborhood branch libraries, regional libraries, or the Parkway Central Library after October 2, 2009.
I wonder if this has any connection to what they learned creating the optimized javascript "interpreter" they made for their next generation rendering engine Webkit.
Given that generally you should only buy shares from a company you believe in - long term, wether they succeed or fail...
would you buy stock from your company if you wouldn't work there? Yes? Accept it and help it succeed.
If no, don't accept it and leave. Now.
The Mac uTurn
Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?