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NewsAd industry calls IE10's 'Do Not Track' setting 'unacceptable'staffTerrence Dorsey4 Oct '12 - 9:43 
Microsoft drew the ire of online advertisers -- and praise from many privacy advocates -- when in late May it announced that IE10 would have the "Do Not Track" (DNT) option switched on by default. Later, it backed away slightly, saying users could turn it off when they were first told of the feature as Windows went through its setup paces. Do Not Track is a browser feature that signals whether a user wants online advertisers and websites to track his or her movements. Four of the five major browsers -- Firefox, Internet Explorer, Opera and Safari -- can send a DNT signal. Google has pledged that Chrome will support DNT by year's end.
Do not track means do not track... except when it doesn't.
GeneralRe: Ad industry calls IE10's 'Do Not Track' setting 'unacceptable'memberZac Greve9 Oct '12 - 7:55 
Is this really all that much of a surprise? Who wouldn't guess that the ad industry would revolt against that? I, for one, hate that industry, and I curse it straight to the worst place anyone could go. I hate how a number of advatisors use flash ads to show a popup window and won't let you close it until you click on the ad. Mad | :mad: Death to those people! Mad | :mad:
 
(Please excuse my spelling, Firefox's spell check is not all that helpful.)
I think computer viruses should count as life. I think it says something about human nature that the only form of life we have created so far is purely destructive. We've created life in our own image.
Stephen Hawking

NewsHP CEO: We’re screwed (for the next few years)staffTerrence Dorsey4 Oct '12 - 9:42 
The lack of central leadership left individual units to figure out things for themselves. The company's marketing? Totally uncoordinated. Its services unit? Directionless from four changes in the top in as many years, and hurting from changes in the sales force. Its products? Too many, too slowly delivered, poorly packaged. Managerial accountability? What's that?
HP doesn't have an innovation problem—it has a problem actually doing anything with its innovations.
NewsA Coder Interview With Darrel MillerstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:07 
In this installment we talk to Darrel Miller, an independent ERP and business systems developer.
We talk to developers about their backgrounds, projects, interests and pet peeves.
NewsThe Pitfalls of Cut and Paste CodingstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:06 
We’ve all been guilty of it in our development careers at one time or another. When starting out using a language or framework that you’ve never used before you often have no choice but to. What I’m talking about is the act of “copy paste coding”, and it’s as common in the programming world as chewing gum under seats. When you copy and paste other developer’s code into your application it’s important to fully understand what the code does before you continue; or risk joining the many fools that have gone before you.
Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V, Ctrl-Whooops!
NewsOpen Source Big Data for the ImpatientstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:06 
IBM[^]:
There is a lot of excitement about Big Data and a lot of confusion to go with it. This article will provide a working definition of Big Data and then work through a series of examples so you can have a first-hand understanding of some of the capabilities of Hadoop, the leading open source technology in the Big Data domain. Specifically let's focus on the following questions.
Hadoop 101.
Generalmore useless jargon technology?memberdevvvy3 Oct '12 - 20:35 
can somebody tells me why i shud be excited about "Big Data"? This simply reminds me of Cloud computing (which is quite useless if you work for banks/government/financial) and Business Intelligence/Data Mining (i.e. a lot of un-directional data sniffing) - to me, really, "Business Intelligence" should be secret pwd to client's or competitor mailbox, that's common sense is it?
 
I got a god damn huge logging database which I intend to truncate - that Big Data too?
dev

NewsHow browsers workstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:05 
Web browsers are probably the most widely used software. In this book I will explain how they work behind the scenes. We will see what happens when you type 'google.com' in the address bar until you see the Google page on the browser screen.
The <music> goes round and round... and it comes out here.
NewsRuby -vs- PythonstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:05 
Ruby and Python. Two languages. Two communities. Both have a similar target: to make software development better. Better than Java, better than PHP and better for everyone. But where is the difference? And what language is “better”? For the last question I can say: none is better. Both camps are awesome and do tons of great stuff. But for the first question the answer is longer. And I hope to provide that in this little article.
Ladies and Gentlemen, we have a split decision.
NewsWhy computers have two zeros: +0 and -0staffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 11:04 
Here’s a strange detail of floating point arithmetic: computers have two versions of 0: positive zero and negative zero. Most of the time the distinction between +0 and -0 doesn’t matter, but once in a while signed versions of zero come in handy.
Is the zero half full, or half empty?
GeneralRe: Why computers have two zeros: +0 and -0memberBassam Abdul-Baki4 Oct '12 - 1:02 
0 = 8 when it's both full and empty.

NewsHow Big Data Is Improving HealthcarestaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 10:34 
With the increasing digitization of healthcare, the trend of "Big Data" has been gathering steam. According to a new report from digital health consultancy DrBonnie360, there is an estimated 50 petabytes of data in the healthcare realm. That's predicted to grow, by a factor of 50, to 25,000 petabytes by 2020. The report, which I've summarized in this post, does an outstanding job of profiling the leading products utilizing Big Data in healthcare.
Take two petabytes and call me in the morning.
NewsiOS 6 Maps is data-efficient compared to predecessorstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 10:34 
In the face of negative press about iOS 6's new Maps app, a bit of detective work by mobile app producer Onavo has unearthed a positive tidbit of news. The company says that iOS 6's Maps app uses considerably less data than its Google-powered predecessor—in fact, Onavo claims the much-maligned Apple Maps is "up to five times more efficient" than the previous incarnation.
Remember, no matter where you go, there you are.
JokeRe: iOS 6 Maps is data-efficient compared to predecessormemberlewax003 Oct '12 - 10:57 
I don't think claiming you're 5 times as data efficient because you only have 1/5 as much data counts...
NewsMeet the Nimble-Fingered Interface of the FuturestaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 10:33 
Microsoft's Kinect, a 3-D camera and software for gaming, has made a big impact since its launch in 2010. Eight million devices were sold in the product's first two months on the market as people clamored to play video games with their entire bodies in lieu of handheld controllers. But while Kinect is great for full-body gaming, it isn't useful as an interface for personal computing, in part because its algorithms can't quickly and accurately detect hand and finger movements.
Digital digits.
NewsWhy I use Windows 8staffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 10:33 
Yes, I have switched to Windows 8 full-time, and it’s not because of the new Metro interface or charms. It’s not because of the ribbon or Internet Explorer 10. It’s really not because of anything you may expect. It’s much more simple than that. Here’s my top reasons I’m sticking with Windows 8 on my laptop.
Metro is the least important reason to like it.
GeneralRe: Why I use Windows 8protectorAspDotNetDev3 Oct '12 - 12:01 
Interesting. I wonder if the copy files feature automatically queues rather than thrashing the hard drive with parallel copies. That would be really useful.

GeneralRe: Why I use Windows 8adminChris Maunder4 Oct '12 - 10:17 
The startup / reboot time of Windows 8 on my Ultrabook is amazing, and the little things like the progress dialogs, task manager and the little UI enhancements are magic. It's Win7 evolved, and I love Win7.
 
But the Metro/Desktop dichotomy is a debable. If I could turn off Metro, or safely hide it, and if I could get back a start menu with quick search I'd be very, very happy. As it stands I find myself dropped into metro fairly often, so I browse IE, and then if I download something I get kicked back to the desktop. Or if I want, say, multiple tabs, I need to go back to the Desktop.
 
It's jarring, it's unnecessary, and we all see what they are trying to do, but please: don't do it.
cheers,
Chris Maunder
 
The Code Project | Co-founder
Microsoft C++ MVP

GeneralRe: Why I use Windows 8memberahmed zahmed5 Oct '12 - 13:48 
Chris Maunder wrote:
but please: don't do it.

At least, not on desktops.
If your actions inspire others to dream more, learn more, do more and become more, you are a leader.-John Q. Adams
You must accept one of two basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe, or we are not alone in the universe. And either way, the implications are staggering.-Wernher von Braun
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.-Albert Einstein

GeneralRe: Why I use Windows 8memberDrABELL7 Oct '12 - 6:24 
Good news, Startup/Reboot time is extremely important performance metric! "Life is too short to wait until win7 reboot" Smile | :) , so win8 is highly welcomed in this regards. Another "nice-to-have' is long-anticipated stable version of IE10 with at least the same level of HTML5-compliance as found in other major web browsers (i.e. FF/Chrome). Third item on the list could be performance estimates regarding HDD/SSD operations. And one extra point of interest: its efficiency in regards to parallel algorithms running on multi-core CPU, in particular Parallel.For and Parallel.ForEach.
NewsPlayBook OS 2.1 update boosts security, managementstaffTerrence Dorsey3 Oct '12 - 10:32 
Research in Motion Wednesday released a BlackBerry PlayBook OS update that adds full device encryption to secure personal data stored on the device to go along with the already-available encryption for corporate data. The PlayBook OS 2.1 update, which is fully described on a BlackBerry site, is available for Wi-Fi-only BlackBerry Playbook tablets.
I guess they do still make these Playbook things. Who knew?
NewsPHP, the web’s most popular programming language, is coming to mobilestaffTerrence Dorsey2 Oct '12 - 11:33 
A certain kind of developer loves to hate on PHP. They are really going to hate where PHP’s custodians are taking it next. When it comes to mobile apps, Gutmans sides with the likes of JavaScript creator Brendan Eich in a firmly held belief that the web and web languages will eventually catch up and win out over native stacks. But, he hinted to me, PHP and Zend will be providing client-side app-enabling tools. Gutmans declined to comment further, saying he would only announce the full details at Zend’s conference in late October. However, it sounds like PHP will have a mobile app story of some sort, in spite of being the web’s predominant server-side language.
Get used to it: PHP will be with us forever...
GeneralRe: PHP, the web’s most popular programming language, is coming to mobileprotectorAspDotNetDev2 Oct '12 - 11:41 
Terrence Dorsey wrote:
PHP will be with us forever

 
Just like Flash. Smile | :)

NewsAcorn: yet another JavaScript parserstaffTerrence Dorsey2 Oct '12 - 11:32 
Acorn is really fast. Just like Esprima. Acorn is tiny. About half as big as Esprima, in lines of code. Still, there's no good reason for Acorn to exist. Esprima is an excellent project, well-documented, and small enough for any practical use. It exposes an interface very similar to Acorn. The only reason I wrote Acorn is that small, well-defined systems are so much fun to work with, and that Esprima's web page very triumphantly declared it was faster than parse_js, the implementation in UglifyJS version 1, which is a port of my own parse-js Common Lisp library. I just had to see if I could do better.
Why did he code it? Because the challenge was there...
NewsWhy does TypeScript have to be the answer to anything?staffTerrence Dorsey2 Oct '12 - 11:32 
TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript and you write it like you write JavaScript which I like. Any existing JavaScript is already TypeScript. One argument has been made that TypeScript is for people who don't want to learn JavaScript. I don't buy that. As Ward Bell said in an email: TypeScript is not a crutch any more than JSLint is a crutch. It doesn’t hide JavaScript (as CoffeeScript tends to do). - Ward Bell. I think Ward says it well. Folks rail against static typing but they don't complain about JSLint. TypeScript offers optional type annotations - it's hardly a perversion of JavaScript.
TypeScript has been out a day. It's way early to see if it has legs.

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