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Comment Re:Hardly (Score 1) 374

What I really don't understand is why corporations don't require their users to use IE6 for their internal web-apps but allow them to use an alternative browser such as Firefox or Opera for browsing the modern Internet. It's ironic that Microsoft's decision to disallow side-by-side installations of IE which could cause much larger adoption of alternative browsers such as Firefox.

This way, corporations could run their crappy web-apps on an ancient browser and use a modern browser for everything else. Just rename the "Internet Explorer" icon on everyone's desktop to "Corporate Web Apps" or something.

Comment Re:Market share (Score 1) 481

Automatic updates weren't enabled on XP until one of the service packs. So millions of PCs will never know about the new browsers.

They will when they can no longer view many of their favorite websites. I'm glad YouTube and other sites are doing this. We need strong leadership to force IE6 off the web.

Pretty soon, the idea of banning IE6 from websites will hit critical mass and suddenly it'll start affecting websites used by people in businesses who refuse to upgrade out of IE6. That's when those IT departments will finally upgrade to something newer than an 8 year-old browser. In Internet years, that's like 100.

Portables

Traveling With Tom Bihn's Checkpoint Flyer 133

Some people care about bags; obsession is a better word. (See the Bags subforum of the Every Day Carry Forums for evidence.) How are the straps attached? Is that 1050 denier, or 1600? Makers like Crumpler, Ortlieb and Maxpedition inspire impressive brand-loyalty, but probably no bag maker has customers more enthusiastic than Tom Bihn's. (There really is a Tom Bihn, too -- he's been designing travel bags since he was a kid; now he has a factory with "all the cool toys" to experiment with designs and materials.) When I started looking for a protective case for my MacBook Pro, I discovered that a few of my coworkers were part of the Bihn Army, and after some Tupperware-style evangelism I was convinced to buy a few items from the Bihn line-up: a backpack (used); then a messenger bag (new); then a mid-sized briefcase, used, which is now my portable filing cabinet. (Take this bias for what you will; I stuck with my previous messenger bag for more than a decade.) For a just-completed trip to Israel, which I couldn't quite make in true one-bag travel fashion, I brought along one of the newest Bihn Bags — the Checkpoint Flyer — and found it to be worth its (considerable) price. Read on for my review.
Graphics

Submission + - Ray tracing for gaming explored (pcper.com) 3

Vigile writes: "Ray tracing is still thought of as the 'holy grail' for real-time imagery but because of the intense amount of calculations required it has been plagued with long frame render times. This might soon change, at least according to an article from Daniel Pohl, a researcher at Intel. With upcoming many-core processors like Intel's Larrabee he believes that real-time ray tracing for games is much closer than originally thought thanks in large part to the efficiency it allows with spatial partitioning and reflections when compared to current rasterization techniques. Titles like Valve's Portal are analyzed to see how they could benefit from ray tracing technology and the article on PC Perspective concludes with the difficulties combing the two rendering techniques as well as a video of the technology in action."

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