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I'm not a pedant on spelling and grammar but that is one of the worst bits of "journalism" I have read in a ling time. The pillock should proof read his output.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Thanks, Mycroft,
... for alerting me to "pillock" !
cheers, Bill
«There is a spectrum, from "clearly desirable behaviour," to "possibly dodgy behavior that still makes some sense," to "clearly undesirable behavior." We try to make the latter into warnings or, better, errors. But stuff that is in the middle category you don’t want to restrict unless there is a clear way to work around it.» Eric Lippert, May 14, 2008
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Microsoft today announced that Security update information will be published as bulletins and on the Security Updates Guide until January 2017. But after the January 2017 Update Tuesday release, they will publish update information only on the Security Updates Guide. Except for the ones Google reports first
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Facebook might muscle-in on LinkedIn’s recruiting business with ways for business Pages to promote job listings. As a bonus, you get to see the recruiter's pet photos
I'm actually surprised it took them this long
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LinkedIn already seems to have parked some tanks on FaceBook's "annoying meme to harvest likes" lawn.
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According to 80 percent of web developers, desktop applications are absolutely essential, and 93 percent say web technologies are critical to their strategy for desktop and mobile. In related news: duh.
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"The government fundamentally disagrees with the European Commission's analysis and the decision left no choice but to take an appeal to the European Courts and this will be submitted tomorrow" A government that doesn't want tax money? I think they might need to install a heater "down there"
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I'm thinking we may put this matter on hold for now...
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ECMAScript insiders say the new features present complicated problems but are optimistic about their inclusion in future versions of JavaScript Types? Oh, that's just crazy talk.
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Over the years Java appears to have arrived at more stable set of infrastructure and development standards than Microsoft appears to offer now. Discuss
I'll be over there putting my flame-proof underwear on
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Windows developers should follow the stable infrastructure and development environment of WinForms . Done.
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Coding like it's 2002?
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One of the overall concepts behind WPF was to make its development similar to web development and in that regard it has been quite successful.
I definitely got a chuckle out of that one. Yup. Very similar to web development. Complicated, quirky, hideous syntax...
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: Very similar to web development. Complicated, quirky, hideous syntax... And don't forget: design over content/functionality. With some beautiful animations, no one will ask about function...
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Recently I've had the "pleasure" of working with several Java apps. Of them, only CLion works well. The rest are slow as mud, unstable and all around awful. So, no thanks.
(It is pretty funny how Java borrows so much from .NET and calls it its own.)
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Microsoft is working on a new to-do style app that is currently called Project Cheshire. Because they needed something to compete with the to-do list they bought?
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My God, Cheshire, from those screenshots, looks hideous.
Marc
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Maybe they wanted it like the Cheshire Cat, so you wouldn't see it most of the time?
TTFN - Kent
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If using a feline, they should have gone with The Pink Panther.
His list goes: To do, to do, to do to do to do to dooo...dah.
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and at the same time.
TTFN - Kent
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Cheshire is a beautiful place .
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A browser extension which was found to be harvesting users' browsing histories and selling them to third parties has had its availability pulled from a number of web browsers' add-on repositories. "And isn't it ironic? Don't you think?"
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“People will have time to do other things, more complex things, more interesting things,” he told CNBC. “Certainly more leisure time. And then we gotta figure how we integrate with a world and future with a vast AI.” Including CEO?
I think he needs to stop reading Iain M. Banks. Or at least treating those books as forecasts.
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I'm more and more convinced that this will become necessary in the future. Thing keep getting more and more automated, even IT related tasks. Almost no part of society will go untouched.
But there is more to it than just universal incoming. There will always be jobs that will have to be done and there are a lot of factors that will have to be taken in to account. Also this is something countries will have to work together on if we are going to solve.
For example if the right investments were done at least 1/3 of all workers could go at where I worked with and if I consider the technologies avalible today as much as 2/3 are at risk. We are a supplier to mostly automotive industries and sooner or later there will be someone who opens a plant which is almost 100% automated with greater productivity and quality as well as precision delivery.
If you look around at all the other factories were I live its mostly true for these to. Even sales could be automated and transportation also got a clock ticking.
This means that in the coming decades society will have to adapt to this or there will be a huge increase in income disparity.
A country which successfully automates and manages to keep its industries productive and competitive will free up people to pursue other options. We might look at a possible education/knowledge boom. If a country adapts to universal income and over the time of change frees up 50% of their work force I do believe a lot of people will seek out other avenues to contribute just to have something to do which may make this country even more competitive.
Tbh I'm glad to be alive today and being able to see how the world evolves, we just have to avoid major events that set back this change.
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