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Comment Re:Productivity (Score 1) 503

I don't use MS Office unless I have to use a customer's desktop, but I found that customers stayed with the old MS Office as long as possible. I've never talked to anyone who thought the ribbon interface was a benefit. I haven't found any articles lauding its productivity.

I personally find it more confusing and obtuse. I generally stick with basic document features, but the ribbon UI really encourages that, because I can't find advanced features anyway.

Comment Re:Productivity (Score 1) 503

I found Gnome 3 really dropped my productivity. I stayed with it a month or so just to try to find a way to make it work, rather than abandon it because its different. I tend to have many windows open at the same time and switch between them. The switch in Gnome3 took too many steps, I could never get to where it was intuitive. I kept having to think about the desktop and stop thinking about my task.

Comment The nice thing about Linux is choice (Score 2) 378

I've tried Gnome 3 and I chose XFCE. It's not great, but it's a heap better than Gnome3.
I really hated that it got harder to switch between windows. Alt-Tab would switch between apps. Now all my terminal windows were on top. I eventually figured out how to select a specific terminal window, but then every time I switch, I have to think about what I want and how to get there.

Apparently it's good design for the masses, but it's really bad design for developers.

Comment Re:Yes (Score 5, Insightful) 782

Agreed, If you've provided the link to your site in the released game with the information that the source is available, then you've complied with the GPL. If you're really bothered, then donate the profits to an Open Source game development. But personally, I think $2 is a perfectly reasonable fee for a decent game. If I don't want to pay the fee, I can grab the source and compile it for myself.

Comment The internet has restraint (Score 1) 708

There are lots of people who choose not to exercise self-restraint on the internet, but it has thrived as a medium for years because of the self-restraint of the users.

It's not perfect, but I think his problem is that internet users don't want to pay what he wants, for what he wants to sell when he wants to sell it, so he wants them restrained (forced to pay) his way.

Comment Re:I know... (Score 2, Insightful) 528

Think about what you would want to know if you walked into your network cold. (don't document the passwords, but make a provision for passing them on).

Don't document every detail. Point to reference material, but you shouldn't be documenting theory, just your implementation.

Also, I hate to take the pessimistic view, but based on my experience, even if you do a stellar job, there's only a small percentage chance that anyone but you will read the document. But you can sleep well at night knowing that they can figure out your handiwork (network design) from your writting if they do decide to RTFM.

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