I know, right?
He probably didn't even write the kernel his machines are running, or the compiler he used to build it (if he even compiled it himself)!
Agreed! I was surprised to see that the judge used those words, as I thought the question to be answered by a Sun employee not on Oracle's payroll was not "is fragmentation bad?", but rather "did Android fragment Java?"
From earlier in TFA:
Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's former CEO...testified that Android did not fragment the Java platform.
Even if they fail to produce anything interesting, that in itself will be an interesting result.
There are likely a number of assumptions about intelligence as an emergent behaviour of non-quantum physical phenomena that could be invalidated by the failure of this experiment.
"Brains can't work according to such-and-such a principle, because if that were true, Furber would've succeeded."
I quite like Ars, but you can't trust them about anything that is related to Apple.
I like that on Slashdot it's more news and less opinion.
If this site just had the ability to collapse threads, so people could skip fanboy ratholes with a single click, it would be a big improvement.
Built-in adaptive bitrate streaming probably made their lives a lot easier when developing a client. That's why so much video delivery is done through Silverlight - it's either that, HLS, or WebM.
However, it looks like HLS is the way of the future. Used (and developed?) mostly by Apple until recently, it's got some advantages (uses HTTP, so benefits from existing caching solutions and is accessible through firewalls), and Google supports it in Android 3.0 and later. Other companies that need to do over-the-top video delivery are also jumping on the bandwagon.
It looks like MS sees the writing on the wall.
Posting to undo accidental mod.
For the record, I took the parent post as a joke. I think responding with humorous summaries of Ubuntu would be better than modding it Troll.
The Linux client and the Android client likely have no more in common than the OS X client and the Windows client.
It's more accurate to speak of Android and Linux as two separate platforms for Skype than to imply that Skype on Android has any impact on Skype on Linux.
I have felt the same way, but I think it's a blessing.
On linux, the UI has remained simple and usable, whereas on other platforms everyone gets to be guinea pigs in the develoers' horrible window-management experiments, and cruel abuse of white space.
Sony actually doesn't have a similar system. There are two differences:
1. If your purchase is over $5, you can opt to be charged exactly the amount of your purchase.
2. I see prices in my local currency.
Back in the day when I thought Sony were trying to be the good guys with the PS3 (allowed linux without a fight, let us plug in regular USB peripherals, supported SD and CF cards, supported user-upgradeable hard disks) this was one of the things that made me glad I had bought one.
Seems things have changed a lot in 4 years, but they don't make it difficult to get to a zero balance in my PSN account (when I can access it at all
I find this as well - Flash Block for Chrome prevents me from playing embedded Vimeo videos until I "Always allow flash on this site", then it plays fine.
By your logic, Apple is silly to go with iOS against market leader symbian with multi-year head start. Or android for that matter.
Your analogy is only apt if you think MeeGo represents as much of an improvement over iOS and Android as they offered over Symbian when they were first released.
Do you believe this? If so, why?
One way to make your old car run better is to look up the price of a new model.