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Comment: Re:Indonesian, Korean and french (Score 2) 227

by ChunderDownunder (#43784939) Attached to: Australia Makes Asian Language Learning a Priority

Our former, deposed, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd bignoted himself by declaring himself fluent in Mandarin. Needless to say, as PM he gave a few scripted speeches in the language, appearing prominently on the TV.

But when push came to shove, Beijing told him to get stuffed in terms of foreign policy, so a fat load of good his supposed fluency did him.

You'll hence probably find the average Australian is quite sceptical of the motives for this legislation. Learning languages is a good thing in itself but still... With Rudd still as a member of the government, the policy seems motivated by appeasing his supporters more than simply learning an Asian language for the greater good.

Comment: Re:Some Asian languages are more equal than others (Score 1) 227

by ChunderDownunder (#43784481) Attached to: Australia Makes Asian Language Learning a Priority

It's important to the identity of the people of Timor Leste. For nearly 300 years they were under the Portuguese flag until the estado novo collapsed and the Indonesians invaded soon afterwards. Rightly or wrongly, the government has reasserted its Lusophonic identity, making Portuguese again an official language alongside Tetum.

As for not being able to "do it themselves", since independence in 2002 they've relied economically on benefactors such as its neighbour Australia and the UN to provide aid. With Portugal suffering under austerity and Brazil itself an "emerging nation", only the committed from those nations will cross oceans to volunteer their time as native teachers.

I could teach English or I could (after some training) teach both. You might say my dreams of volunteering are fanciful but 'gap year' participation is a more concrete response than just buying their coffee. Is it any more fanciful than Germans (whom I knew) teaching English as volunteers in Peru?

Comment: Re:Meanwhile in Quebec... (Score 1) 227

by ChunderDownunder (#43783869) Attached to: Australia Makes Asian Language Learning a Priority

It's a difficult accent, to be sure. To an untrained ear it sounds little like the language I waded through as a teenager.

During my travels through western europe, I found french canadians to be a darn friendly bunch - compared to other north americans. :) They were fairly accommodating in switching to English in a glorious Canadian accent...

Comment: Re:Won't help with 'to-the-metal' apps (Score 1) 126

I thought the issue was that developers had written asm to extract maximum performance from the CPU. With the inference that shoddy programmers wouldn't cleanly decouple arch specific code.

If it's arm-specific C code then intel just needs to supply the header files and reverse engineer the libraries to link against.

Of course app vendors need to see a financial benefit in porting.

Comment: Re:Well... this is going to be awkward... (Score 1) 153

Does the PDF viewer run acceptably fast on a modern machine?

I'm running a 9yo machine and pdf.js takes forever to render. When Okular is embedded (kparts integration), it's snappy.

pdf.js might be a good choice on Windows where you have that Adobe monstrosity updating itself every few days (I have used sumatra in the past) but KDE's viewer runs faster on old Linux desktops. :-)

"Contrary to popular belief, penguins are not the salvation of modern technology. Neither do they throw parties for the urban proletariat."

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