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Objective C looks as alkward as COBOL.
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Awkward yes, but it doesn't have nearly enouch CAPITALIZATION OF BOILERPLATE[^] to reach the depths that COBOL calls home.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Not really very knowledgable on COBOL. Just know I started in Basic and FORTRAN, and one look at COBOL convinced me I did not want to work in that language.
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I've turned into a rabbid RabbitMQ fan in the last week or two, though so far I've only scratched the surface of what this thing does. Below I'm going to walk through the code for a chat service, built with .net, that uses RabbitMQ for sending and receiving messages. But first a short discussion of Message Queues, RabbitMQ, and how to get this rabbit up and running. Hey, Rocky! Watch me pull a message queue out of my hat!
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Thanks for the link - just playing with RabbitMQ, notably in comparison to Apache's Qpid. Thanks!
Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that. - George Carlin
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Well over two years ago, I was bitten by the “email is broken” bug. You know that one - your inbox is clogged and exploding, you’re tired of the text, you hate labels and folders and you just want it to stop screaming at you. Or maybe you’ve never been bitten by that bug - you’re a Gmail ninja, an Outlook pro, are super-efficient or buy nothing and have no friends. Nonetheless, I assumed that I wasn’t alone in feeling this, so my co-founders and I set out to change the world for my 3.5 billion email using brethren. I’d say that’s pretty noble of us. Well, I’ll spare you the suspense and tell you that perhaps a new client ISN’T the answer. Fortunately, building a new email client is not the only option...
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The possibility of OpenJDK on Android doesn't have any technical obstacles, Java founder James Gosling says: "Technically, it's not a huge problem. Android is just Linux on ARM, and there's already a nice ARM/Linux version of OpenJDK. There are issues that would make the current binaries inappropriate (mostly graphics integration), but it's not insurmountable." Major benefits would be performance and compatibility, Gosling says. If anyone really wanted Java on Android, there's little standing in their way.
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We have another Nintendo teardown for you U. We got our hands on the Wii U, and despite the temptation to escape into the world of Super Mario, our spudgers got the better of us. An important part of the game is getting back together again... and working.
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As a business developer... I have been extremely disappointed in Microsoft over the past couple years as Sinofsky ‘flexed his muscles’ within the organization. Enterprises require predictability and some reasonable level of transparency. Microsoft provided neither of these over the past couple of years. The complete ‘blanket of silence’ surrounding anything to do with Windows 8 was stifling. As a result people at Microsoft were unable to talk about anything useful at all for an extremely long time. The future of .NET, Visual Studio, Blend, and many other key developer technologies became completely opaque. If there was any ray of hope over the past couple years, it was in the server and cloud space.
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The world's oldest original working digital computer is going on display at The National Museum of Computing in Buckinghamshire. The Witch, as the machine is known, has been restored to clattering and flashing life in a three-year effort. In its heyday in the 1950s the machine was the workhorse of the UK's atomic energy research programme. A happy accident led to its discovery in a municipal storeroom where it had languished for 15 years. What makes you think she's a Wolverhampton Instrument for Teaching Computing from Harwell?
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