Comment Re:All the "bonkers" and "Crazy" talk... (Score 1) 184
Which forum? Did he identify himself, and was this confirmed?
Drug people tend not to reveal who they are on the internet, nor what activities they are engaging in. So this seems odd.
Which forum? Did he identify himself, and was this confirmed?
Drug people tend not to reveal who they are on the internet, nor what activities they are engaging in. So this seems odd.
I've been using Linux for the past 10 years or so. I choose Ubuntu as my Linux of choice.
How am I a moron for choosing an environment where most things work, out of the box, without me having to spend days fucking about? You can be sure that whatever I'm trying to actually achieve with the machine will take plenty time, so not having to configure everything about the OS is a distinct advantage.
My time is valuable to me, and Ubuntu saves me time. I fail to see how this is moronic.
It's extremely difficult to prove correctness in anything but very short programs. It's done for some critical embedded code, but is totally impractical for anything you're likely to run on a PC. Not to mention that the average programmer doesn't know how.
Now, preventing a program from hanging is pretty easy in most modern languages. Just put the whole program in an exception block. But that's probably not exactly what you want, is it?
It wouldn't work anyway. An exception is absolutely not equivalent to a hang (non-termination). Look:
try{
while(true){
{
sleep(1);
}
} catch(Exception e){
System.out.println("this line will never print");
}
I lolled.
... for the Source engine that is.
They actually wrote their own wrapper for DirectX to OpenGL. The user Rbarris on the Steam forums was / is involved in the development. It performs well according to their testing.
The fact that Apple is suing over Galaxy Nexus is all over the news.
Yes, but we were talking about slide to unlock. So I went and checked for you - it isn't involved the the Galaxy Nexus case:
Get your facts straight instead of being hysterical perhaps?
I'm being intentionally obtuse because the patent in question is so obviously idiotic.
Good plan!
The point is that Apple only gets trigger-happy when the product is considered "as good as an iDevice" or better. They are trying to protect their premium image by trying to ban the better Android products while letting the shit ones through.
Why is this surprising?
Apple goes after infringing phones that aim at the same market segment as theirs. The ones in the other segments aren't going to be eating their revenue, so why spend money on them?
Google has already changed slide to unlock they used in Android 2.x to the new model in ICS, where you need to drag a thingy out of the circle (in any direction); no shiny text involved. That's what Galaxy Nexus uses. Apparently, that's still not good enough for Apple.
I had no idea Apple was pursuing slide to lock on devices where it isn't present. Would you care to provide proof of that, and perhaps suggest why they're being allowed to do so? Heck, perhaps even suggest what interest Apple have in doing it?
By your logic, since the first thing you encounter in a car is a steering wheel, whoever put it there first could have got a design patent on it as "one of the identifying features" of his product. This is an idiotic argument. Identifying features - if you want for them to actually be identifying - should be sufficiently different and notable. Slide to unlock isn't.
You're being intentionally obtuse, but that's nonetheless exactly right. Whoever put it there first could have taken a patent, and would have been idiotic not to do so if it was different to whatever contraptions were used to steer before the wheel. Although I feel quite deeply that the steering wheel and construction would be better suited as a patent, rather than a design patent, since it has rather more than just visual impact.
A very quick google found a patent for steering-wheel mounted controls for things in your car:
http://www.google.com/patents/US5855144
This hasn't stopped manufacturers from including this feature in their cars, or making their own patents based on it. But of course, an item on the steering wheel isn't actually the first thing you encounter on a car, is it? It's the exterior of the fucking car.
I digress, but my point stands... Slide to unlock isn't particularly more innovative than so many other ways of opening a touchscreen device. It's characteristic of iOS devices, and that's why Apple are going after it.
Really.
Like so many of their patents, it's about keeping the device recognizable. And frankly, I don't see the problem - if you can't come up with something equally functional that isn't the slider with the shining text, you're trying to copy their design. Or I should be doing your job.
Slide to unlock is the first thing you encounter. It's one of the identifying features of the product.
"It's an emergency as these phones make the 4S look quite out of date."
The apple fanbois wouldn't care - they'd buy a week old turd if it had an apple logo stamped on it.
(Score:5, Informative)
Now that's just sad.
Or, perhaps, those particular high-profile products actually do infringe on their patents?
A crazy suggestion, I know!
Which has precisely nothing to do with the ACs whining about the restrictions on iOS software installs.
And exaggerate more - if they were blocking all competing products, you wouldn't be able to buy anything else.
Which you were fully aware of when you bought it.
At least this time it gives them a chance of making a good, well-integrated product.
I've been a Windows hater for a very long time, because it's a shoddy product. That said, I'll easily be able to find respect for MS if they carry on doing interesting, useful things.
No amount of careful planning will ever replace dumb luck.