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Computer silicon can move electrons fast, but researchers want to make something even faster. A team at Oregon State University has been working for several years now on a new type of electronics that could transport electrons "almost instantaneously." They say that it could ultimately mean the creation of "extremely high-speed computers" along with improvements to cellphones, TVs, displays, and microelectronics at large. "There once was a fellow named Bright. His speed was much faster than light. He set off one day, and in a relative way, returned the previous night."
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Today we’re unveiling a new kind of Chrome App, which brings together the speed, security and flexibility of the modern web with the powerful functionality previously only available with software installed on your devices. They've escaped from the browser!
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Wow. What an innovation.
Opera's been doing this for a couple of years, and Maxthon allows you to save any web page as a desktop app (great for "cloud" programs).
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Chrome's had that for a while as well - I think the "innovation" here is that they'll supposedly run native. And the offline bit, or did Maxthon have that as well?
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TTFN - Kent
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Kent Sharkey wrote: And the offline bit, or did Maxthon have that as well?
Maxthon turns a page into a pseudo desktop app, but you need to be on-line if you have to log in or fill out forms, if the page contains a cloud app, or if you want to navigate to different pages (i.e. it doesn't download the entire site or any databases; you need something like WinHTTrack for that).
Where does the Chrome one stop? If it downloads linked pages, its storage requirements can get pretty big, pretty fast (esp. if it downloads off-site resources, like advertising guff, which I imagine google would give a high priority to).
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Mark_Wallace wrote: Where does the Chrome one stop?
They seem to target items that fit into the "one page" philosophy more: Pocket, Wunderlist, some games. The only one of their apps currently enabled is Keep (their Evernote "clone"). It lets you add items to your list, and syncs them when connected. I imagine at some point they'll add Docs as well, probably just for new or selected documents.
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TTFN - Kent
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A play in 4 acts. Please feel free to exit along with the stage character that best represents you. Take intermissions as you see fit. Click on the stage if you have a hard time seeing it. If you get bored, you can jump to the code. Most importantly, enjoy the show! !enos ihtkc arcre venll iwuoy
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Kent Sharkey wrote: !enos ihtkc arcre venll iwuoy
V penpxrq vg, V penpxrq vg!!
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PHP is not going to disappear soon, but its position is being undermined even further by the nascent Node.js. When the Internet exploded in the 2000′s, PHP was the thing ”all the cool kids” did. "Two men enter, one man leave!"
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If you're looking for a job in corporate IT, you might want to think again. While there are plenty of jobs at technology companies, startups, and smaller businesses, the classic enterprise IT department is laboring under what can only be called a perfect storm that's blowing away full-time positions at a frightening rate. If you don't have to be there, odds are your company doesn't think you need to be there
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I bet that article was originally written in 2001
Recycling at its best.
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Aw, that's harsh
Then it was external jobs, now internal. He *did* a search/replace since then.
This was moderately big news a few months back[^] here when the Royal Bank moved their IT work to Bangalore.
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TTFN - Kent
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It might not be 10 years stale, but even outsourcing internal IT jobs is old news. I have a friend who worked for a fortune 500 company until his division was sold at the start of the recession. For a few years prior to that time his internal project passed code back and forth with an outsourced team daily to with the intend of getting an 80 hour effective work week. Shortly after his division was sold the company decided to outsource the rest of their internal development except for a handful of people to supervise/etc the outsourced team.
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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Edward Snowden’s revelations about the NSA’s mass internet surveillance is driving development of a slew of new email tools aimed at providing end-to-end encryption to users, and it has boosted interest in existing privacy tools too. "Three may keep a Secret, if two of them are dead."
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“Can we talk?”
That’s what Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer said in a late January call to Nokia Chairman Risto Siilasmaa. But for the lack of a clumsy oaf...
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The world of video games has gone through many changes in the relatively short time it’s been around. First it was cutting-edge with Pong and Pac-Man. Over time, it became nerds-only, then boys-only, and now people from all demographics are enjoying games that range from mobile gaming to Flash gaming to competitive gaming. But recently, there’s been a growing popular trend towards developing video games, not just playing them. "Discovering the object of the game *is* the object of the game."
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CINT is an interpreter for C and C++ code. It is useful e.g. for situations where rapid development is more important than execution time. Using an interpreter the compile and link cycle is dramatically reduced facilitating rapid development. CINT makes C/C++ programming enjoyable even for part-time programmers. There's always something about a C/C++ interpreter that makes me smile
And these make me break out in giggles:
- CINT makes C/C++ programming enjoyable even for part-time programmers.
- CINT is written in C++ itself, with slightly less than 400,000 lines of code.
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Adobe announced today that, for a limited time, it will offer a $9.99 per month subscription package to Creative Cloud as a part of its Photography Program. In related news: GIMP still free
edit: fixed the URL, thanks to Pete
modified 5-Sep-13 11:01am.
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The link you linked to isn't the link you think you linked to.
This[^] is the link you think we should link to, shrink wrapped just for you.
modified 5-Sep-13 10:55am.
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Ta.
Too many tabs open at that point. Sorry about that.
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TTFN - Kent
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Most of the time, teaching computer skills to children requires the use of a computer. But a new board game that conveys programming concepts without a screen rocketed through Kickstarter yesterday, securing its $25,000 minimum goal from hundreds of backers in just five hours. "Give me a child until he is seven and I will give you the man"
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There are plenty of valid ways to create an HTML5 game, and quite a bit of material on the technical aspect of each, so for this article I’ll be giving more of a broad overview of HTML5 game development. How “HTML5″ can be better than native, where to start with the development process, where to go when you’re stuck, and how to monetize and distribute games. Let's get some angle brackets in those angry birds
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Android still claims slightly more than half of US smartphone sales, says research firm Kantar Worldpanel ComTech. But look at Windows Phone leap up the charts!
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only 0.5% increase,but hope for the better with MS latest announced news of Nokia take-over!
Shuvro
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Microsoft shrewdly opted not to buy Nokia's mobile patents, thereby enabling another massive patent troll to prey on Android. "You've got a nice army base here, Colonel. We wouldn't want anything to happen to it."
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