Comment Re:Mac version control (Score 1) 244
p4 had a gui and a command-line interface from the macintosh programmers workshop (MPW).
free for single users.
p4 had a gui and a command-line interface from the macintosh programmers workshop (MPW).
free for single users.
This doesn't solve fragmentation at all. The problem is (from an app developer standpoint) is that there are too many variables in the android world to code an app once to run successfully across the ecosystem.
Say for example you've got an app that requires typing (an e-mail app).
You have to design a version for on-screen keyboards (because it'll use part of the screen real estate) separately from a version that uses a hardware keyboard. They don't need to be separate apps, but you need to design (visually at least) for both scenarios, or you end up locking out a good portion of the people who use android devices.
This design (and resultant porting) is exactly what killed the feature phone app market. Developers spent too long making ports of an app for the Sony w810, w900 LG VX9600, Motorola RAZR because each one implemented things JUST different enough, regardless of the JSR being implemented. Then you had to test each one fully.
Sure, there are 100,000+ android devices out there, but they're across a wide set of carriers and hardware, so in order to sell your app on all 100,000 of those phones you've got to tweak your app for each device.
Conversely, with the iPhone there's one hardware platform. One way to implement a keyboard. One way to call the Camera API (and if there's no camera, the app doesn't need to do anything different). This makes an app developers life MUCH easier since they only need to design and write ONE app to reach all 2+ million handsets out there, Apple's draconian and confusing app store submission policies not withstanding.
So fragmentation will ALWAYS be an android issue until they say "here is our reference hardware platform(s) -- you must use of these three sets of features when building hardware." Coincidentally this is exactly what MS is doing with Windows Phone 7 -- three hardware platforms, that's it. You still have to design your app three times, but at least you know that if you design for one hardware platform, ANY device within that platform by ANY manufacturer on ANY carrier will have the same exact limitations and abilities.
using the youtube flash player?
html5 != no flash
html5 is just a version of html which supports a video tag just like an image tag. it also supports the object tag. which means flash works in html5.
the only case where flash isn't going to work is where the operating system or browser does not have a flash plug in.
safari only supports h.264 in the html5 video tag as well. yet, youtube works just fine in it.
mozilla only supports ogg in the html5 video tag. yet, youtube works just fine in it.
happened to me on sunday. and six other friends. 25 people i know since sunday have gotten hit as well.
obnoxiously there's no way to report the incident to google. all the help stuff is self-serve and the "send feedback" link is a closed beta.
i had a 28 character password of numbers, letters (upper and lower case) and punctuation that I only used for gmail, so it's highly doubtful they were able to guess at that.
somehow i feel like this is linked to the theft of their security software
Not only do you get some sort of possible bizzare nerd cred for using DEC's old credit union, but just like USAA, you've been able to deposit via check for about 3 years now. Sure DCU has no snazzy iPhone app, but, damned if i've ever lived near one of their banks in my lifetime.
unless you're in a western country where there are laws specifically prohibiting this type of firing.
at the larger corporations i've worked at (read: the ones with deeper pockets), firing someone is about a 2-3 month ordeal even if it's an termination required offense (with the exception of breaking the law -- stealing, assault, etc). you have to have a written warning, followed by a 30 day period of being "on watch" followed by a final review. THEN an extra month while the legal team gathers and documents everything.
Why?
Lawsuits. Wrongful termination lawsuits, unless you as the company, can prove beyond the shadow of a doubt, that the person was unable to perform the job you hired them for (working weekends, especially if you can't prove that overtime was mentioned and being payed when the person was hired), the person you filed will win the lawsuit. Then you're a) out of a bunch of money and b) have to offer them their job with the same benefits and position as before. And you'd better be damn well sure about it next time you try to fire them.
no, but when apple ported quicktime over they also moved a significant amount of support code to have quicktime build correctly. this support code (libraries, etc) is also used by itunes and safari.
remember yellow box from NeXT? Ran on Windows, as well as other unixes? Quicktime is just that lingering yellow box code that enables other mac software to be easily built for windows.
Sure they could re-write from scratch, but why bother?
none the less the comparison is that it's streaming. streaming audio to the phone does not compete with the itunes store in anyway, shape nor form. you're on the subway in nyc and want to use spotify? tough luck unless you're on an elevated train line.
Better sell the rest of your SCOX stock boys...In a decision that may finally settle one of the most bitter legal battles surrounding software widely used in corporate data centers, a federal district court judge in Utah ruled Friday afternoon that Novell, not the SCO Group, is the rightful owner of the copyrights covering the Unix operating system.
"And remember: Evil will always prevail, because Good is dumb." -- Spaceballs