Submission + - How to keep cloud data encrypted without cross-platform pain? 2
Ideal would be a competitive cloud storage service like Dropbox or Google Drive that provides trustworthy encryption with suitable clients. Is there anything like that?
I've said it before: Homeopaths actually can be useful, if they are well educated (medically) and do take their time speaking to a patient. I've met doctors I wouldn't trust making a relyable anamnesis and I know homeopaths whos diagnose I would trust. At least more than some of those doctors.
The medicine of course is bunk, but here in Germany it's partially justified by some as a cheap means to get to placebos.
London is Berlin plus extra dirt, pricepoint and noise, minus the vibe. At least in Berlin you get the all-out hippster flair, although gentrification has pushed that out of the door quite a bit already. However, Berlin is spread out so far and has so many green areas it's hard for it to gain the solid all-through gentrification and establishment in top-tier living costs that London or Paris have. Which is a very good thing IMHO.
Bottom line:
I'd probably choose Berlin over London. But then again, it also depends largely on the people you're with and the job you have. With the right people around you and the right things to do, such a drab town as Düsseldorf can be fun aswell.
MS didn't kill Java - Oracle did.
And on a sidenote:
You might want to consider abandoning Windows as a plattform.
If you're looking for something stable with a brand and a future, perhaps you should try the Google ecosystem. With either web or android. I see Windows on the downslope. It only takes a critical mass to see Exchange as a dated groupware model and moving to Google and to see a subscription to office software for the bizar contraption it is and moving that to Googles free version aswell. Once that happens, Google will have taken over the planet for the foreseeable future and MS will be lapping up its dribbles it leaves behind.
.Net, from day one, was a vehicle for clueless middle-managers to justify sitting around blabbering web-economy bullshit and spending ginormous amounts of money for their consulting buddys to scoop up because they have a few devs at hand that are willing to play along and develop under-performing, non-future-safe, overpriced superfluos crappy MS-lockin middleware and shoddy MS SharePain intranets.
I said it when
*Everyone* with more than 2 braincells saw this and still sees this. If they'd've FOSSed
MonoDevelop/Xamarin Studio FOSS Edition is the key point here.
I have to admit, I resent MS just as much as the next guy and I consider C# a half-assed cross between readability of C, speed of Java and portability of Visial Basic and unlike some MS fans do not consider the PL the second coming of Christ.
You can get from zero C# experience to an own feasible GUI app in a matter of hours.
Something I can't say of other great toolkits, such as Qt.
In a nutshell, MonoDevelop is the only reason I would actually even consider C# as a PL for a project.
And now with major components of the
My 2 cents.
Dystopia? We are living it and don't even see it.
The problem is powerful tools in stupid hands. Or greedy hands - greedy being a subset of stupid.
If we'd take a measured approach to tech advancement - which might even mean an accelerated approach - we'd all be living in a utopia already.
The US has no or only very little means of wealth distribution, which is why life can suck so hard over there. But even a bum doesn't have to starve in the US and child labour and epidemics are basically history there too - so I'd say all in all that we're headed in the right direction in that dept.
I see this with many of the older light airplanes. Types like the Cessna 150 and Piper Cub were designed when people weighed less, and it's difficult to get two 2015-size people plus a usable fuel load in either. There have been commercial plane crashes due to portly passengers (e.g. Air Midwest 5481).
I can fly a Cessna 152 solo with full fuel tanks, but if I have anybody in the plane with me I have to calculate how much fuel I can carry without being overweight. I can't do anything meaningful with a 150, and I'm not that heavy.
...laura
Indias legal excecutive is basically "Judge Dredd" in real-life. Courts are so behind, murder investigations and convictions can take up to 25 years before even starting. The police solve this on their own to maintain order by staging "encounters" for people who've killed more than once. They basically find you, arrest you for something petty they can pin on you and then shoot you for resisting/trying to flee.
With such factually absolute powers for the police, they're bound to turn corrupt.
I'd say it's no surprise that in such a system an exposure of police corruption get's you killed mafia style.
A better PL, a Swift Book for free, a working pipeline with free (beer) tools ready to roll from day one and no-bullshit support for all the things the predecessor (Obj-C) supported.
That's all it takes to bring a new PL front and center for more than 1 week.
Apple knows how to build user experiences and that includes developers on their machines.
Now if only every software technology would take care of things the way Apple does and not promise things their toolkit can't hold for longer than a download and a first tryout.
Just saying.
We use our systems for mission critcal stuff. That means they need to be setup and maintained well. Which in turn means, a good system setup is as valuable as the system itself.
We know how to maintain systems and how to keep them bloatware free. And they're ahead of the curve by 2-3 years compared to mainstream anyway.
So, in the end, it's no suprise systems are in operation for a few years.
Did they have an actual engineer check the statics, weight durability, corosion and weather/temperature resistance/durability?
Or did they just have that artist draw different cute pictures of Rivendell-Style bridges and pick the prettiest/easyest to print?
I'd rather ask before I break my neck and drown crossing one of these. Just saying.
Aside of that: Neat project. This is where things are headed. I like the outlook of this.
What is algebra, exactly? Is it one of those three-cornered things? -- J.M. Barrie