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For developers, discovering NuGet packages can be a daunting process. The best way to do so is either via word of mouth or online search. However, your friends aren’t always available when you’re looking for a new package at 3:00 in the morning. You could try to search online, but you’d need to spend unnecessary amounts of time sifting through the results before finding a package that may be helpful. We recognize that this time is better spent actually developing software. We wanted to create an accessible service to deliver package recommendations using real world data about how developers use packages. Do you want fries with that?
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Passage of new patent law marks end of years of debate and lobbying. I was unaware there was a lot of software patenting going on down there
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Kent Sharkey wrote: I was unaware there was a lot of software patenting going on down there
That must be the reason why such a law could be passed I guess. If the lobby against such laws isn't powerful enough there is a chance that the lawmakers can push it through.
Cheers!
"I had the right to remain silent, but I didn't have the ability!"
Ron White, Comedian
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A DARPA director argues that the end of the Moore's Law could come about because of insurmountable economic challenges. Reduced speed ahead
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Tried the link, but it took me to a blank page. It is CNET, so that is an improvement over having some type of content.
Kent Sharkey wrote: A DARPA director
Sounds like a manager of some sort...
Common sense is admitting there is cause and effect and that you can exert some control over what you understand.
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Hmm. I just tried it, and it worked for me. Maybe you have an ad blocker (so it blocked all of CNet?)
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TTFN - Kent
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A good ad blocker should do just that for CNET. Sadly I dont have one. No big deal.
Common sense is admitting there is cause and effect and that you can exert some control over what you understand.
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Better in the lounge than here...
This is almost not a new: no link, no extra information apart from the fact we know you will get one iPhone soon
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Sorry to say that I don't like iOS7, it looks worse than Android or Windows Phone. Sigh...
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Using a non-invasive brain-to-brain setup, a researcher in one lab was able to send a signal from his brain to control the movements of a second researcher in a lab on the other side of campus. "My mind to your mind... my thoughts to your thoughts..."
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Message Removed
modified 28-Aug-13 14:05pm.
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Collin Jasnoch wrote: Never mind. Looks like the subject is requires a brain for the control to work.
Yeah, they just use the old time-tested, "insert money to purchase opinion" method.
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TTFN - Kent
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Cracking really long passwords just got a whole lot faster and easier. I'm *so* glad their job is getting easier...
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A friend of mine uses passwords longer than 20 characters. Recently he failed to change it for a specific web site: on the page for changing the password, the field for the old password was limited to 15 characters (I saw that in the HTML source), while on the page for creating the initial password, no limit was set.
How did the site's security team react when they were told about that error?
They said: use the "forgot password link" on the login page, you'll receive an email with a link to a page where you can create a new password.
Actually a case for the daily WTF or for the Weird and Wounderful...
Hashcat's new abilites were not required for that site, as 15 characters was the old limit. Perhaps now they are willing to allow for upto 55 characters?
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Bernhard Hiller wrote: security team
Bernhard Hiller wrote: They said: use the "forgot password link" on the login page, you'll receive an email with a link to a page where you can create a new password.
Security Team? I think not. That is a rather 'I don't really care about this' attitude towards getting major security holes like that.
brisingr_aerowing@Gryphon-PC $ rake in_the_dough
Raking in the dough
brisingr_aerowing@Gryphon-PC $ make lots_of_money
Making lots_of_money
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Microsoft's latest boneheaded move is to prevent developers having early access to Windows 8.1 and Windows 8.1 RT... "Yeah, well, that's just like, your opinion, man."
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S Douglas wrote: Do they even research what they are talking about or just make it up?
Well...
Quote: Matt Baxter-Reynolds is a mobile software development consultant and technology sociologist based in the UK. His next book, "Death of the PC" is out in September.
I'm going with #2 there.
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TTFN - Kent
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Like when they said years ago that soon there would be no more desktop OS as everyone would just have a browser and nothing else on their machine. Sure, there are chrome books available, but regular PCs with desktop operating systems (whatever the flavor) don't appear to have gone anywhere
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Yeah, the people that miss their VT-100s keep saying we're going back that way again. I guess they think if they keep predicting it, when/if it does happen, they look like a genius.
Tablets and browsers are nice, but I don't see everyone using them for most tasks (especially creation-related).
Like others have said, the author seems to want to create some cred for himself by poking at Microsoft, while ignoring the fact that people have had access to the preview for a while. Or maybe he's just sore that XNA got axed.
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TTFN - Kent
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That guy sounds like a Microsoft Hater that just wants Microsoft to burn in hell.
In other words, he is an idiot.
Windows 8.1 Preview is out. Devs can get the RT version on their devices.
And I have seen that "author's" (I use the term loosely here) Windows 8 Development book, and it is terrible.
brisingr_aerowing@Gryphon-PC $ rake in_the_dough
Raking in the dough
brisingr_aerowing@Gryphon-PC $ make lots_of_money
Making lots_of_money
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How do you find all of this stuff ?
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IIRC he has over 9000 RSS feeds to every tech blog under the sun.
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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wow thats allot of reading
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