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Comment Re:Occam's Razor (Score 3, Interesting) 392

Maybe my point wasn't clear enough then; I don't believe that there was any kind of conspiracy to "kill" Hypercard -- I believe that all the developers moved on to either more capable development platforms. The person likely to build something in Hypercard then is probably reaching for Dreamweaver, Excel, or FileMaker Pro now. The actual developers have moved on to professional tool sets.

Hypercard killed itself.

Comment Re:Occam's Razor (Score 2) 392

They may lack "automatic redline change" illumination, but that's not an impossible thing to add if anybody wanted it.

Version control is a lot more than that; you have to manage branches and merging which would require a lot of work to integrate into a visual development tool. As it stands, the LabView user would still need to understand the code underneath in order to meaningfully contribute. Integration is another mess (how do you write test cases in a visual designer?).

Having "grown up" with the Amiga, visual development has attracted me, but it has never escaped the realm of neat toy.

Comment Occam's Razor (Score 5, Interesting) 392

Or, it could be that all those fond memories of Hypercard are exaggerated. I can't recall even one such application that was useful apart from simple educational games. The challenge in creating a GUI-based development system has been tackled many times. The most recent one that I have used is the default Mindstorms programming environment LabView, which I quickly discarded for a gcc-based environment.

The one killing blow that keeps me from really using these environments is that they are fundamentally incompatible with version control. This means that they cannot be large projects, or have much collaboration -- relegating them to trivial systems, which are all I remember Hypercard being.

Comment Re:Assange condemns greed? (Score 1) 944

I would agree with you if you amended your statement to include all the tax breaks the baby boomers gave themselves. They want to have their cake and eat it too. The trouble with reform is that it must come from both ends: revenue and reduced spending. Whenever either is discussed, all rational conversation is shut down by the screaming heads on either side.

Comment Also Denis Kucinich (Score 2) 804

Don't forget Kucinich as well. Most of the left of the country oppose the Middle Eastern wars. The reason that Paul stands out is that he is pretty much alone on the right. I remember Richard Gere standing at that New York support event and getting booed off stage for daring to suggest that war wasn't the appropriate response. It was a mini-McCarthy era from 2001 to around 2008 or so -- if you didn't have a yellow ribbon on your car, then you supported the terrorists.

And now the same kind of demagoguing is happening to our monetary system -- popular vitriol is being thrown at the government to ensure that the entire system collapses, putting the crown jewel in to Bin Laden's legacy.

Comment Re:Steam vs. Retail (Score 2) 342

You're talking about this story: http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2011/03/steam-user-violates-subscriber-agreement-loses-1800-in-games.ars

In which case Valve refunded the account. Regardless, this is the future whether you like it or not. You won't be buying physical media in the very near future. The 360 and PS3 may well be the last consoles to even have removable storage of any kind -- if not, the next generation will be the last.

Comment Steam vs. Retail (Score 1) 342

Developers complain about pirating on the PC, so they make console-only titles, then they complain about used game sales. I would have purchased Red Dead Redemption on Steam, had it been available -- instead I bought a used copy at GameStop for $20. Sorry Rockstar. Eventually all games will be delivered digitally, and the producers will need to have a more sane stance on pricing. Not every game is worth $60.

Comment Re:No reason to buy (Score 1) 215

Many people have sight problems that prevent them from seeing 3D -- why would Nintendo exclude them by tying gameplay mechanics to a display device? It's similar to cinema -- not everyone wants to see a movie in 3D.

I think the biggest problem facing the 3DS is its underwhelming software lineup.

Comment Re:Cool! (Score 3, Informative) 137

Visual Studio can work with Java projects? If you want to use the Microsoft vertical stack, then stick with Visual Studio. Netbeans supports several application stacks -- many use it just for it's comprehensive PHP support.

Comment Re:"If we litigate, we have a chance to win.'" (Score 1) 346

Media broadcast/production companies don't want to know the real numbers -- although they could learn a lesson from Arbitron's PeopleMeter device. This little electronic sampler is what they moved to in order to more accurately measure radio listeners. They did away with the pen-and-paper surveys, and added in all kinds of non-traditional radio broadcasts at the same time (retail locations, etc.). Popular radio programs actually came out ahead, even though they fought tooth and nail to keep them out of their markets (they feared change).

Comment Old IBM XT (Score 1) 498

I recently recovered my grandmother's IBM XT data. She had hundreds of WordPerfect and Personal Ancestry files -- all on an MFM 4MB hard disk. I was able to get the image off after booting it up with an old monitor, and I made a DosBox image for it so that my dad/aunt/uncles could double-click and run all her stuff. My father was upset because I sent the link out to everyone before he had a chance to go through it for "personal" data that he would then presumably keep from everyone else. I doubt she cares, though.

Open Source

Submission + - Oracle Sends Hudson Up the River (itworld.com)

itwbennett writes: Brian Proffitt is blogging about (yet another) stupid open source move by Oracle. The twist: Oracle is actually fighting to keep the Hudson software project hosted on Java.net. In fact, Oracle has threatened that switching the Hudson code repositories over to GitHub, as the Hudson team had planned, would be considered a fork. 'Wanting to move a project away from its hosting infrastructure doesn't in any way mean developers want to fork it' says Proffitt. 'Now the Hudson team finds themselves trying to figure out what the heck to do next.'

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