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Comment Re:Apple's target market isn't going hackintosh... (Score 2, Interesting) 1012

I've gotten tired of dealing with "almost" myself.

This.

Every few weeks I think I want to try to put OS X on my netbook. I start reading the various how-tos, and they all look hideous. Dozens of links to dozens of forums, each one providing a tiny piece of the puzzle and execrably spelled.

Then once you get out the other end of this nightmare you have a netbook with no (or bad) power management and probably no sound. Oh, and you have to troll eBay for a wireless card to replace the included one.

No thanks.

Comment Re:Eh (Score 3, Insightful) 572

This was the creepiest fucking thread I've seen on Slashdot. I like the way you keep replying to yourself. As if you think, "Oh, hey, here's a creepy fact about college-age strippers and drugs the Slashdot community is dying to learn from me."

Comment Re:Let the FCC know your own opinion (Score 1) 239

Why is it called "Open Internet"?

If the FCC regulates the Internet's backbones, even in the name of "preserving a free and open Internet," they'll have to monitor the Internet. Somehow.

When did nerds start salivating over the FCC acting as an Internet gatekeeper? Are they really that pissed off at AT&T for not letting them use Skype on their iPhones? Or whatever?

Comment Re:KVM/Vmware/OpenSolaris zfs go virtual (Score 1) 244

Sun also provides enterprise ops center software that can be used to manage the zones via a gui. Copy/create/rollback, etc..

This is very important. One of the most important traits of a 3-tiered development system is setting it up so that the "test" environment can be rebooted back to a clone of the live site. "Test" should be just that--for testing. If your test environment goes pear-shaped, who cares? Clone the live site, run the updates from "dev", and your "test" is back.

In general it's rarely a good idea to provide a migration path from "test" to "live". As development teams get larger it may make sense to have intermediate changes done on "test" and then ported up to "live" and down to "dev". At this point you'll be looking at a migration manager of some sort.

Comment Use CVS if you're feeling burly (Score 1) 244

CVS (of whatever flavor) can help you do this. It's a pain in the ass, and everybody will hate it, but it works.

I've done this with virtual machines as well. It's kinda whizzy to do, but probably overkill.

The simplest way for me was to simply use rsync. Rigid delineation between live and test/dev environments is important. Use a completely separate database (not just a different schema), and if possible a completely separate database server. Changes to the database schema should be encapsulated in update scripts and tightly controlled and thoroughly tested in the test environment. Use a database that supports transactions and use them. Updating the live site should be performed by updating a clone of the live site in another directory. That way if everything goes tits up for some unexpected reason you can revert back to the old site while you lick your wounds. Virtual machines definitely make this all techy and bitchin', but editing httpd.conf and restarting Apache also works.

The best solution is going to be customized to the needs of the project. Most projects don't need a dev/test/live arrangement. Dev and live are sufficient. The most important thing is to establish a framework of how changes are to be made to the code base or database, and stick to it. CVS will help enforce this, but at the cost of having to use CVS.

Comment Re:Wow, my clock must be broken (Score 4, Insightful) 227

Can you imagine an Amiga with today's hardware specs?

Yes, it would be "in development" until 2015, and then released to practically nobody, who would promptly sue.

I've ceased to be excited by the "potential" of any hardware platform. The history of technology is littered with a lot of potentially great things that failed to do anything remotely great.

If you wanted to sum up Apple's recent successes, it would be "they delivered." Apple didn't promise the world, they merely delivered a continent or two. Here's a product: you can do these things with it.

Comment Re:"Collector's edition" (Score 1) 241

That's not true. Originally it was going to be the successor to NWN, without BioWare having to work within the restrictions of D&D and Forgotten Realms. Their own story, their own rules. They were talking about a toolset just like Aurora as well. This is going way back, before there was even so much as a screenshot.

Comment Re:Actually, you're a good example of that. (Score 1) 1255

For every woman who is willing to stick it out in the face of something like Shuttleworth's comments, there are uncounted numbers who hear the message loud and clear: They are not welcome as FOSS developers.

"Stick it out in the face of..." Seriously?

The message "They are not welcome" is loud and clear? Seriously?

While I'm all for a general air of civility, overreaching, like you do here, isn't helping. Actually, I wonder if you even know any women, or if you're just white-knighting. While the plural of anecdote is not data, I don't know many women who would be particularly bothered by the weak-tea examples of sexism I've seen mentioned so far. Most women seem to put their big-girl panties on along with the guys in their big-boy shorts and can take the occasional joke at their expense without fainting dead away. They're not "sticking it out," they're simply not as big a weenie as you think they are.

The ratio of women in programming positions, Free or otherwise, very likely has nothing to do with sexism. There aren't many women garbage collectors either. What of it? There are some jobs that women as a rule do not want to do. I don't want to be a nurse, but scads of women do. They're not keeping me out of nursing with all the "Cathy" comics around the hospital break room.

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