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Mozilla and Google have updated their browsers with features to help developers more effectively write and debug their websites. In related news, IE maintains it's best feature: the ability to download Firefox or Chrome
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Kent Sharkey wrote: In related news, IE maintains it's best feature: the ability to download Firefox or Chrome
Hey now. Be kind!
It's also the best browser for pretty printing XML or copying tabular data into Excel.
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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Having controlled our commas for decades, Grey Lady now positioning our braces. Because when you think Objective C, don't you always think of newspaper?
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So basically, a bunch of journalists who know nothing about programming have decided on a layout of braces etc?
Oh, and don't even get me started on how they have "outlawed" that one liner if statement that is perfectly OK. Or the "use spaces instead of tabs" mentality, it just makes me want to throw a keyboard at someone.
.-.
|o,o|
,| _\=/_ .-""-.
||/_/_\_\ /[] _ _\
|_/|(_)|\\ _|_o_LII|_
\._. |\_/|"` |_| ==== |_|
|_|_| ||" || ||
|-|-| ||LI o ||
|_|_| ||'----'||
/_/ \_\ /__| |__\
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Try-Catch and Finally through your keyboard
Ranjan.D
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Yup. It made perfect sense to me. Just like I always get my news from Bjarne. No other source is worth it. OK, maybe Anders, but just for the Turbo news.
I guess it might have originally just been the internal style guide that every company has, but I really don't see their point in publishing it.
--------------
TTFN - Kent
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Apple has launched a worldwide "USB Power Adapter Takeback Program," under which it will sell discounted official Apple adapters to users who turn in third-party or "counterfeit" versions. "You're holding it wrong"
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We live in a time of chronic dissatisfaction in the workplace. Gallup's 2013 State of the American Workplace study found that as many as 70% of working Americans were unfulfilled with their jobs. How can we explain this? Certainly factors like the sluggish economic recovery and stuck wages play a role, but I think the real answer is even more straightforward: It's not clear how one designs a satisfying career in today's professional culture, especially if lasting fulfillment (as opposed to salary maximization) is the goal. "Be the ball"
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Microsoft today announced a slew of improvements for Windows Phone developers. These include the new Windows Phone App Studio in beta, the simplification of the phone registration process, and a new ‘Click to Chat’ support option. Coding without coding? That's just so zen.
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Copy machines have a relatively simple, single task so it's generally accepted that they'll function without issue and maintain 100 percent accuracy. What? You wanted an exact copy?
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I find it hard to believe that this happens with OCR turned off (as the author states).
/ravi
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From what I understand, it has nothing to do with OCR, it has to do with the lossy compression it uses (JBIG2[^]), which compares blocks of the image with other blocks, and decides to throw one away and just re-use the other if they're similar enough. Problem is, text is pretty similar to other text, especially when in a similar format (like currency strings). So the block of the image containing that string from one section is re-used in another spot that previously had a similar, but different, string.
modified 7-Aug-13 9:51am.
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Thanks for the clarification. Phew! I'm not happy, but relieved.
/ravi
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Cute, what is it doing? OCR?
Better not.
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Nope, see lewax00's great explanation above.
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TTFN - Kent
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A California startup called Crossbar is working on an alternative to current NAND Flash memory chips like those used in mobile devices and other consumer electronics products which could serve up a terabyte of storage and playback capacity on "an IC smaller than a postage stamp." Yes, please
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The TOR Project is advising that people stop using Windows after the discovery of a startling vulnerability in Firefox that undermined the main advantages of the privacy-centered network. Even though it was a Firefox hack
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Department of Homeland Security urges all website operators to review whether they're vulnerable to new crypto attack. No easy fix exists. Let's just transmit everything in the clear. That will confuse the hackers.
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Of all the members of NASA's current crop of distinguished astronauts, only two have the unique distinction of being identical twin brothers. And now NASA is using an idea proposed by the brothers, Mark Kelly and Scott Kelly, to perform a study that's been confined to sci-fi up until now. Twins... in SPACE!
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Who is thatraja?
i need reply to him
Regards
Senthil .P
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But, there has been another, even longer running constant regarding the web for the last 20 years—working with web technologies is not “programming”, not “real coding”. <div class="is_this">programming?</div>
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Web Design is the same as creating a Windows Forms app in my opinion. There is both programming and non-programming involved.
HTML and CSS = Dragging and dropping a control on a Windows Form in Visual Studio. I don't consider putting a button on the form programming. My 2 year old could do that.
PHP, ASP, ASP.NET, C#, VB.NET = The stuff behind the HTML and Windows Forms that does the work. That is the programming.
The non-programming part is "designing". I like the word "Developing" better because I think that covers both areas.
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