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The app is essentially a persistent news ticker for your desktop, serving up the latest headlines as they happen. 1995 called and said, "Push is the new thing!"
Just what you need to help maintain Flow: a constantly distracting source of angst.
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I overheard the phone call: We could call it "Active Desktop"!
No? OK, how about calling it a widget?
Not that either? Umm... Live tiles?
That, too?
Well, damn, hire someone to think of a name for it!
What?
Yes, of course it needs a new icon! Do I have to think of everything, around here? They've been trying to force us to clutter up our windows desktops with their "active" st*ff for years
When everyone chooses not to take them up on this "new initiative", will they finally take the hint?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Taking bets on how long until ticker displays headlines not related to broken Windows Updates.
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Can I go for "more than ten years", or do I have to be more specific?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Cool, unlike many I like a small, unobtrusive news ticker. It looks like this one might be configurable to be reasonably small.
Unfortunately (grrr) it's not yet downloadable from the UK. Even if you go to the US MS Store, it still won't let you download to the UK.
I used to use the BBC news ticker many years ago. Does anyone know of a configurable news ticker program that can take a feed from various sources? I've kind of missed it since the BBC new ticker ceased.
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The hotel chain says it uses an application to help provide services to its guests. Beginning mid-January this year, the login credentials of two employees at a franchised property were used to access guest information on this app. You can check out anytime, but your data never leaves
Until someone downloads it.
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Aw, they're just jumping on the "stay at home" bandwagon.
Some companies will do anything for publicity.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Need a resilient lunar building material? Urine luck. "Uh, Houston, we've had a problem." We need more beer
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Is logical:
- Moon pee
- Mars poo *
...
I don't want to think what we'll need in the next planet
*The Martian (2015) - IMDb[^]
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Here are some magazines. We'll need the new base by Tuesday...
TTFN - Kent
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In space, no-one can hear you retch.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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After changing the tech that powers its browser, Microsoft is giving Edge new privacy tools, smarter bookmarks and a better way to manage all those tabs you have open. I think I've seen this movie before
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Quote: as of today, it works on mobile too. The browser now lets users dock tabs to the left side of the screen rather than the top Um... Say what?
So, first they force everyone to use a desktop OS that's designed for phone screens, and now they're trying to force everyone to use phones with desktop-sized screens?
Anyway, if the most important thing to you is tab management, use Opera.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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How the times have changed.... AOL used to pay MS for IE-Core so that they could make their own browser on top of it. Now MS contributes code freely to a project for that is used more by its competitors.
Now MS knows they are not going to win the game; they are going to follow the Lt Commander Data model of playing Strategema : don't play to win, rather play so that the game lasts indefinitely.
Back in the 90's you actually purchased software to browse the web. Nothing but Netscape[^]
Where would we be now if we the companies (MS, Google, et al) charged for the browsers instead of spying on our every move?
Director of Transmogrification Services
Shinobi of Query Language
Master of Yoda Conditional
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MadMyche wrote: Where would we be now if we the companies (MS, Google, et al) charged for the browsers instead of spying on our every move?
Somewhat better off overall, I think.
Good: Free stuff on the Internet (software, services) speeds adoption.
Good: Free stuff on the Internet (software, services) makes people's lives easier and more convenient.
Bad: We become the product and privacy is seriously damaged.
Bad: Incumbent vendors become dominant making it more difficult for new entrants to gain a foothold (in some sectors).
Overall it strikes me that paying for what one actually needs would have worked out better for everyone.
modified 1-Apr-20 12:41pm.
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If we paid for browsers, I doubt it would make much difference.
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MadMyche wrote:
Back in the 90's you actually purchased software to browse the web.
Netscape was free for a long time and even after they tried to charge, people stopped using it. I don't know anyone who actually paid for it. I do remember how the version around 96/97 would leak just sitting idle.
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MadMyche wrote: Where would we be now if we the companies (MS, Google, et al) charged for the browsers instead of spying on our every move? Still using IE 2.0? (or maybe 5)
Hurrah for
<blink />
TTFN - Kent
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Developers are still working—and for some, working from home is their status quo. But now, even those developers who usually work from home are finding that they have new “coworkers” with schools and other workplaces shut down. The refrigerator
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Kent Sharkey wrote: The refrigerator The right answer, but it really needs an echo effect and 1950s spooky movie background sounds.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Eclipse Theia combines some of the best features of IDEs into one open source extensible platform. For those who like editing code, without using 'm', 's', 'f', or 't'
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The year of the Linux desktop may one day come.
The year of the Eclipse IDE? Never in a million years.Eclipse Theia combines some of the best features of IDEs Good luck guessing what they've renamed them and finding where they've hidden them.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Oh, thanks. You just made me choke on my pie. Far too accurate.
TTFN - Kent
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Is that a VS Code screenshot?
Those icons on the left are exactly the same (except Microsoft has updated their icons, of course), the blue bar on the bottom is the same, the colors are the same, overall look and feel is the same...
It even supports "VS Code Extension protocol" so I wouldn't be surprised if this were a copy of VS Code and then ported to the browser.
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