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Not surprised, falls right in line with the rest of MS half assed frameworks and products.
Wout
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You could apply that comment to pretty much anyone. I'd be happy to sit down and go on for days about Apple. And Google. And pretty much any man-bun smashed-avocado powered $300 connected device whose software I've had to deal with lately.
cheers
Chris Maunder
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I stay far away from all consumer sh*t. I've been very happy with using HP business notebooks (elitebook/zbook) for about a decade, very robust products that don't break down after 6 months of use.
Wout
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So, clueless idiots lie to a slightly less clueless idiot. Big surprise.
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Incidentally, I use a Surface [3?] tablet daily as part of a project. Not impressed, especially with the moronic screen aspect ratio it uses. Then again, I'm not a fan of most tablets.
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While it's notoriously tough for enterprises to find skilled developers for mobile and data science initiatives, a new report from Canonical indicates a skills gap is also affecting recruitment for the growing Internet of Things (IoT) space. Time to learn things, people!
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Personally, the things that makes IoT hard to learn is the hardware part of it. GPIO's, SPI's, bizarre funky WTF I'm going to guess mapping of pins to memory locations, picking a good library for direct I/O to said devices, and of course the awkwardness of command line and learning *nix, if you don't know it already, which is pretty much a must learn -- I haven't tried .NET Core yet on my Beaglebones. Other things that we take for granted (tons of disk space, tons of memory, tons of CPU performance) are all things most people will have to learn how not to take for granted, particularly when writing to a SIM card with a limited read/write lifetime. And of course, probably a new programming language (most likely Python) and if you want to do anything at the bare metal level, dust off those old "C" books!
Thankfully, there's tons of open source libraries and examples and some decent books to learn from.
It all reminds of the wild west days of homebrew computers, PET's, Apple II's, Z80, and so forth. Smaller package, more I/O, faster processors, more memory, and decent high level languages, otherwise, it's pretty much the same cacti, dessert sand, and barroom brawls.
Marc
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It is easily argued that invasive technologies such as IOT are primarily designed to benefit surveillance states - the US being the largest of them! My suggestion to software developers is to invest in a few ethic courses before even thinking about updating your skill set.
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It's not a skill gap, it's the pay gap.
A productive embedded developer is worth as much as SQL beginner. And he or she has to understand cutting edge, difficult to master GNU tools (C compiler, linker, assembler, make, OpenOCD), system programming (operating system, CPU, sometimes GPU, real-time, kernel level), a bunch of low level protocols, electronics, debug weird physical defects emanating from overheating or a spike, work with obscure IDEs, with little skill upgrade in years, and similar...
I do embedded at home, have written my operating system, but am not crazy to leave the business apps for half the pay. At present, the bang for the buck just isn't there. Perhaps, when I'm older and without plans and a mortgage. Cause it's fun.
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I seriously doubt that there is a true "skills gap" here. I suspect it's more like most so-called "shortages" of qualified people : the only shortages are of people willing to work at the rate those employers want to pay. There ARE plenty of people who can do the job but the employers don't want to pay the going rate for people with experience. They often throw up their hands, write their congressmen and/or immediately donate to their campaign(s), and then go the H1B route. I have seen this sequence of events first hand more than once.
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Fatal error leaves customers scrambling for fixes that can take a week or longer. It's a lock. It's locked. Where's the problem?
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The article states door-locks - in which case one has to ask whether or not one would call the carpenter for an 'update' on the door.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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C++17 offers several "big" language features that should make our code nicer. Today, I tried to pick seven things that make your code more compact right off the bat. Is one of them, "install C# or Java"?
Or "python"?
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A plague on your house!
Surprised you didn't go for "Rust" or "Javascript", the two finest languages ever. (Where was the sarcasm icon again?)
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APL? It uses fewer punctuation characters
TTFN - Kent
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Ruby.
Marc
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NASA and HPE are launching supercomputers into space -- using off-the-shelf hardware. Now they can figure out where they're going?
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They are being replaced by HP ZBook 15s which will run the same mix of Linux distributions and Windows 10.
I wonder how long a W10 update takes to, um, "upload" to the ISS.
Marc
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Seeing as how the Fail Crater Update took about five hours on my machine, it might follow Skylab before they get everything patched.
TTFN - Kent
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They still think digital watches are a pretty neat idea.
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Star Trekking
Across the Universe
Boldly going forward
'Cause we can't find reverse
If you have an important point to make, don't try to be subtle or clever. Use a pile driver. Hit the point once. Then come back and hit it again. Then hit it a third time - a tremendous whack.
--Winston Churchill
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The atomic clock, invented in 1948, paved the way for GPS It's about time
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Lu believes Microsoft and Google “made the same mistake” of focusing on the phone and PC for voice assistants, instead of a dedicated device. "Hubris is one of the great renewable resources."
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Great quote!
'PLAN' is NOT one of those four-letter words.
'When money talks, nobody listens to the customer anymore.'
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