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As part of its annual environmental report that the company released yesterday, Apple declared that it had recovered nearly 90 million pounds of materials from Apple devices recycled through is program in 2015. Clear out that drawer you have all your old phones in, we'll be rich!
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iTunes for Windows is still OK, but QuickTime is serious bug bait and Apple is no longer providing security updates. It's never too late to correct a mistake like that
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Kent Sharkey wrote: iTunes for Windows is still OK
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Relatively speaking, of course.
TTFN - Kent
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That's probably the widest definition of 'relatively' I've heard in quite a while.
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Skype for Web, Outlook.com, Office Online and OneDrive can do voice, video calling without plug-ins when used with Windows 10's Edge browser. The browser no one uses, now supports the chat no one likes. Winning!
Yes, those are both gross exaggerations. Sorry for the offence, Edge team.
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The owner of a Web hosting company who claimed to have erased his entire business from the Internet with a single script command appears to have made the whole thing up. Bonus marks for those who declared shenanigans
But I am at a loss as to how this could be used for marketing: "Oh look, I advertised that I'm an idiot (and people took me seriously). Buy my services."
I suppose it's the old "There is no such thing as bad publicity"
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They are going to be in some major legal trouble there.
What idiots.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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Kent Sharkey wrote: I suppose it's the old "There is no such thing as bad publicity"
Brand recognition as goal?
The meaning of the word 'spam' has shifted, but back in the 90's, any advertisement through forums, usenet newsgroups etc. would be considered spam.
What this guy (and any viral marketer) did could be called creative spam. Creative, but it still makes him a spammer, the lowest of the lowlife to be found under internet rocks.
But if spamming didn't pay off, we'd see a lot less of it.
I clearly remember Amazon being nicknamed Spamazon, just because they took the fact that you ordered something from them as your permission to start e-mailing you their ads.
Back then it made me and a lot of people mad, but when some etailer does it today, all I do is sigh, start searching for the unsubscribe link, and hope it works.
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five-decade-long quest for quality
And he's still searching!
Marc
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Kevin
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A problem happens when you achieve high quality early on, but are pressured to keep changing things -- the quality can only decrease.
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Google Chrome version 50 was released to the browser's stable channel yesterday, and in addition to a handful of new features and security fixes, the update also ends support for a wide range of operating systems that have been supported since Chrome launched on those platforms. Windows XP, Windows Vista, OS X 10.6, OS X 10.7, and OS X 10.8 are no longer supported. Maybe that will get people to upgrade
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Gosh what will I ever do.
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Chrome 50.
Seriously Google. You've made your point. Yours is bigger than everyone else's.
Now how about some less childish version numbering?
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Physicists have just built the smallest working engine ever created. It's a heat-powered motor barely larger than the single atom it runs on. Does it run on diesel, unleaded, or premium?
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The Schroedinger team commented this news as "as for the Oxygen, there's a probability to have a V8-electrons engine..."
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Short URLs produced by bit.ly, goo.gl, and similar services are so short that they can be scanned by brute force. "Nothing was your own except the few cubic centimetres inside your skull."
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ESA planetary scientist Nicolas Altobelli and his collaborators have now analyzed the 36 interstellar dust grains detected by Cassini; the number might seem small, but it's more than five times that of previous missions. "We have the organism at Wildfire, and we continue to study it."
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More than a third of IT professionals in the UK (36 per cent) haven’t gotten any professional training through their employers in the last three years. Hopefully you have the time to read thi
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Yeah who really liked working to get that certification anyway. School sucks, making money is better.
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Kent Sharkey wrote: any professional training
I find that learning things on the job is a lot more effective. While there's been a bit of kicking and screaming (literally the latter), I've been learn Django, Python, more Javascript, and Backbone, in a (I use the term loosely) practical environment. I get the benefit (supposedly) of the experience of the person who brought all this tech into the company (I would have preferred C#, but many beers on the company owner's boat with aforementioned person convinced him otherwise, and since I'm 3000 miles away, fat chance I had of making my views heard, hence the screaming) and overall, it's useful resume fodder, but I still would never reach for Django and Python for any website that I would build. Good to learn more about Backbone though.
Personally, the most useful "professional training" I've found was, years ago, the TQM, ISO9000, and Dale Carnegie training, and more recently, the Association for Anthroposophic Psychology[^] workshops that I've been taking on my own. I find it a lot more useful to learn how to work with people than any particular tech. The former are skills that last a lifetime (and if I remember to apply them, results in less screaming), the latter typically has a much shorter half life.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: I find that learning things on the job is a lot more effective.
It is. The trick is being allowed to learn on the job rather than insisting on your already having six months' commercial experience!
Kevin
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