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Windows 8 Release Preview includes the sixth release preview of Internet Explorer 10. After several years of beating the drum of standards compliance and freedom from plugins, Internet Explorer 10 has surprised many with the integration of Adobe Flash. That's not the only provocative change the new browser makes... Internet Explorer may be making up for its sordid past.
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At the Microsoft presentation at this year's E3, the company showed its hand in its plans to integrate Windows 8 and the Xbox platform -- perhaps even giving glimpses into its future plans, even with its next-generation Xbox platform completely absent. Xbox Music Service, SmartGlass and "the web transformed for TV"...
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The idea of a former cyberwarrior using his talents to hack a wildly popular consumer device might seem like a lark. But his campaign, aimed at winning a little-known hacker contest last year, points to a paradox of our digital age. The same code that unleashed a communications revolution has also created profound vulnerabilities for societies that depend on code for national security and economic survival. There's a hack for that.
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Now this is actually useful information, not just a stream of useless numbers with no context or history to them. I question the need for delete status dialogs at all, but this is nice.
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Instapaper does less than its competitors, costs a great deal more, and is, at its core, a black and white list of text articles you’ve expressed an interest in reading. It was a decidedly iOS-only app for a long while, but now it has arrived on Android, and it’s getting enough attention to force some brief server maintenance outages this morning. You can just imagine the look on the face of the business major trying to figure this out. [ITworld]
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It's no secret that Linux kernel founder Linus Torvalds has issues with the GNOME desktop. Late last week Torvalds made his displeasure known again, this time taking aim squarely at the GNOME Shell Extensions web site. The site drew Torvalds' ire after he decided to update an older Fedora 14 machine to the current edition, Fedora 17. From there, things did not go well. [ITworld]
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Honestly, I haven't heard a single positive quote come from that guy. I'm pretty sure he just hates the world.
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No, they just only bother reporting on bad things he says.
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f So far, no one seems to have cracked this!
The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob!
"People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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Perhaps, but his general choice of words make him sound like an angry person. Maybe it's all in my head though.
modified 4-Jun-12 16:11pm.
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Well posibly, but afterall, considering how stressful his job is...
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f So far, no one seems to have cracked this!
The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob!
"People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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Last week, Verizon FiOS announced speeds (for some users) of 300Mbps. Now the price has leaked: $205 per month, plus some installation fees in most cases. [ITworld]
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In some asian countries, 100 Mbps is considered average. England's is 3.6 Mbps. Terrible.
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f So far, no one seems to have cracked this!
The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob!
"People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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Not as long as 20 Mbps is sufficient.
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Acer s7 Touchscreen Ultrabook[^]Quote: Acer says the 11.6-inch S7 is "the world's smallest form factor ultrabook with touch," measuring a scant 12mm thick (the 11.6-inch MacBook Air is 11.8mm, for comparison).
A powerful ultrabook with up to 12 hours of battery life and a touch screen for Windows 8? I think we are finally seeing some good market competition in the laptop space. This is going to be a good summer.
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Facebook has released a library of C++ software components used to help run its site, the social networking company announced Saturday. By releasing this library, called Folly, Facebook will be able to release more of its internal programs as open source, because they rely on different components in this library. [ITworld]
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Funny, I thought Folly was their IPO...
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ha. I knew that was going to be said sooner or later...Facebook is going to be going the way of myspace sooner or later
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Apple and Microsoft are both releasing cryptographically signed versions of their operating systems. Two companies. Two effectively identical approaches to improved security. But, here is a thought that struck me... Waiting for the other boot to drop.
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Documentation for code libraries is generally improved with the addition of sample code that shows how those libraries are used. When using XML documentation comments, three tags can be used to incorporate examples within the compiled help file. WTFM so others can RTFM and learn.
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I love being super fast in the shell so I decided to do a new article series called Bash One-Liners Explained.
In this series I'll use the best bash practices, various bash idioms and tricks. I want to illustrate how to get various tasks done with just bash built-in commands and bash programming language constructs. Read > Learn >> Master
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I’m going to assert here publicly that I believe virtually all software that is created today is of relatively poor internal quality. Feel free to disagree, but hopefully you will at least grant that poor quality software is common enough to warrant discussion. Given that we as an industry produce loads of crap quality software, the obvious next question is: why? Click the link to find out... Error. Abort. Retry. Fail...
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Of course. And its downstream costs are astronomical.
That's how the system works. For example, Bill Gates got rich by rushing out crap. He built the ship that leaks like a sieve, and we get paid (a lot) to man the pumps.
The other answer is it's not that we're lazy, it's that we just don't care.
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Microsoft’s Imagine Cup brings students together from across the world each year, in effort to use technology to solve the world’s toughest problems. Here are four of the finalists projects. Which of these ideas do you think could have a lasting impact? When I left you, I was but the learner, now I am the master.
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Whether you’re curious but not sure where to start or you’ve decided along the way that you just can’t stomach the stuff (read: you need to be tricked and cajoled), we have a book for you here, so click through and get to expanding your horizons. And hey, sci-fi buffs: be sure to add to our list in the comments! <Jedi wave>These are the books you've been looking for.
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A hands-on assessment of Apple's pioneering, ill-fated Personal Digital Assistant, twenty years after its original unveiling. Anyone who calls it rubbish didn't actually try one in 1992. It was brilliant.
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