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Comment: Last Software Written By Bill Gates (Score 1) 143

by curmudgeon99 (#39763929) Attached to: 30 Years of the TRS-80 Model 100
This was my first computer! I spent $1,000 on it. It was awesome and I still have it. I'm sure if I popped some fresh batteries in it it would still work. The funny thing is I'm betting Bill Gates also wrote the manual which was famously a mess with references to non-existent sections. Still, this got me into software development. I remember I had a tape-backup drive that I used to store off programs and after I had been storing them on tape for a long while I noticed that I had a variable-speed tape player and I was never able to recover a dang thing from tape. Still, I loved this and eventually got a floppy disk drive for it that would store 250K. Still have all that in a bin.

Comment: WHAT New York City Phone Booths ??? (Score 1) 124

by curmudgeon99 (#39624897) Attached to: Giant Touchscreens Coming To NYC Phone Booths
So, they're going to do this for all six pay phones in New York City? I should clarify to mean working pay phones. The subways are full of the derelict hulks of formerly working pay phones. Across the five boroughs, pay phones--especially working ones--are as scarce as hen's teeth. Actual step-inside phone booths are even less abundant.

Comment: Stop The Yahoo Spam Tsunami First (Score 0) 40

by curmudgeon99 (#39541299) Attached to: Yahoo To Implement Do Not Track
Yahoo, this is all fine but I think the rest of the world would be happier if you would first stop the tsunami of spam email that comes from @yahoo.com servers. It's ridiculous. Unless you want to block every moron who still uses an @yahoo.com email address, you are stuck putting up with a tidal wave of spam.

Comment: Hah! What Has Indian Invented? (Score 0) 157

by curmudgeon99 (#39399353) Attached to: Indian Government To Tax Angel Funding
This is rich. They're going to tax Indian entrepreneurs. So, who? What has India invented? The last thing they invented was Sanscrit. The rest has been derivative.
But I will say the only impact this law will have is making sure it stays that way. To a person who lives in the United States, this is comical. "Don't interfere with your enemy when he's committing suicide."

Comment: The Brilliance of 'MapReduce' Is Overblown (Score 4, Insightful) 117

by curmudgeon99 (#38080742) Attached to: First Look: Oracle NoSQL Database
I cannot understand why MapReduce has been turned into such a holy creation. The idea could not be simpler: you have a big dataset? Break it apart into pieces that are free of external dependencies, process the pieces in parallel and then aggregate the matches from the processed pieces.
This is not Hadoop, with its elaborate application plumbing or CouchDB with its curious use of MapReduce as part of its querying system.
MapReduce is too simple for all acclaim. It's too obvious.

Comment: TFA F'd in the Ass, Oracle Lied (Score 1) 117

by curmudgeon99 (#38080616) Attached to: First Look: Oracle NoSQL Database

The person who wrote this article was an idiot. First of all, it describes several brilliant innovations Oracle brought to the table:

It's a key-value store I guess they have to steal that idea to join the category.
Consistency can be throttled so that a write does not complete until it has gone to one, a quorum or all replication nodes. Duh! For years that has been a feature on nearly every incumbent NoSQL DB such as CouchDB, MongoDB, Cassandra, and others.
It allows you to attach a version number to an object. Duh! again. Another common and central features in CouchDB.

Are you still an ALCOHOLIC?

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