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I never saw the handover ceremony. Did Javascript win by any chance?
Q. Hey man! have you sorted out the finite soup machine?
A. Why yes, it's celery or tomato.
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I'd like to point out that there are still a large number of LOB-apps that are written in VB6. I doubt that COBOL is dead.
..but yes, it was time for another article claiming that everything we're doing today will no longer be relevant tomorrow.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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ADA and OCCAM are probably dead.
Assembler most likely never will go away.
Q. Hey man! have you sorted out the finite soup machine?
A. Why yes, it's celery or tomato.
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Well who woulda thunk it?
Never personally met or heard of anyone using it. I thought it was primarily used by US military.
Q. Hey man! have you sorted out the finite soup machine?
A. Why yes, it's celery or tomato.
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It never will, it is what native code compiles to.
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Never liked the thing anyway! ^^
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Since TypeScript generates plain JavaScript code you can use it with any browser. Additionally, TypeScript is an open source project. TypeScript offers many features of object oriented programming languages such as classes, interfaces, inheritance, overloading and modules, some of which are proposed features of ECMA Script 6. Overall TypeScript is a promising language that can certainly help you neatly write and organize your JavaScript code base making it more maintainable and extensible. Still can't find the Java in JavaScript, but they did find the types for TypeScript.
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Github has become the corner stone for all things open source software. Developers love it, collaborate on it and are constantly building awesome projects through it. Apart from hosting our code, Github’s main attraction is using it as a collaborative tool... In the world of software projects, it is inevitable that we will find ourselves working in a team to deliver a project. For this tutorial on Github and team collaboration, we will be exploring some of the most common tools that we generally need when working with software teams. Handy tricks for working with Github and a few other popular collaboration tools.
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Here's one of the fundamental rules of programming. You're at the end of your day, you've gotten a lot of stuff done, and you have one more thing to get right before the feature is complete, and you're searching for the answer, trying all kinds of ideas, thoroughly confused, not wanting to get up until it's done, just slogging away and not getting it. Do you slog away, or try again another day?
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I am actually not doing any work one hour before my out.
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Any software maker will tell you the same thing; provide detailed steps and a test case if possible to make isolating your issue as easy as possible. If you simply type, “My site doesn’t render in IE9″, you’re making things more difficult. Take the time to really isolate the problem and provide detailed, concise information so that the IE team can properly determine if it’s a bug and even if there’s a workaround. Rey Bango explains how to do it.
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Er, wtf is this error reporting service for?
Q. Hey man! have you sorted out the finite soup machine?
A. Why yes, it's celery or tomato.
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For many of us developers, WebKit is a black box. We throw HTML, CSS, JS and a bunch of assets at it, and WebKit, somehow.. magically, gives us a webpage that looks and works well. But in fact, as my colleague Ilya Grigorik puts it... "WebKit isn’t a black box. It’s a white box. And not just that, but an open, white box." So let’s take a moment to understand some things. What's shared by all WebKit ports, and what you can tweak during compilation.
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Over the year and some, since I've been publishing ebooks, various people have asked about my publishing tools. I've given a few responses via email, or links via Twitter, but never laid everything out in one place. In December of 2012 I published an update to one of my books, here I'll lay out the steps (and tools) involved in writing, editing, and distributing an update to my ebooks. Let's start with the writing. Gutenberg's press, circa 2013.
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"I've seen more information on a frickin' sticky note!" - Dave Kreskowiak
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The consequences are being played out in the market right now where it would appear that the traditional PC, desktop or notebook is a market that has peaked and is now starting its slow decline. Like any evolutionary platform change, this will not be immediate or quick and will play out over at least a decade. During this period I predict that the mass of computing will move to systems that are deemed good enough for most people, but that drive expert users crazy. What does an increasingly tablet-centric PC market mean to Word, Powerpoint and Excel?
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it means those who need to author excel spread sheet will continue to do so under traditional desktop using a mouse+keyboard!
dev
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Quote: drive expert users crazy Happening already.
- Life in the fast lane is only fun if you live in a country with no speed limits.
- Of all the things I have lost, it is my mind that I miss the most.
- I vaguely remember having a good memory...
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A 30-second video of a newborn baby shows the infant silently snoozing in its crib, his breathing barely perceptible. But when the video is run through an algorithm that can amplify both movement and color, the baby’s face blinks crimson with each tiny heartbeat. The amplification process is called Eulerian Video Magnification, and is the brainchild of a team of scientists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory. They caught you on tape and you still got away with it? Whoa!
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Friendster is a social network that was founded in 2002, a year before Myspace and two years before Facebook. Consequently, it is often thought of as the grand-daddy of social networks. At its peak, the network had well over 100 million users, many in south east Asia. In July 2009, following some technical problems and a redesign, the site experienced a catastrophic decline in traffic as users fled to other networks such as Facebook. Friendster, as social network, simply curled up and died. Asps... very dangerous. You go first.
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Now that we can navigate a computer screen through gestures, could a three-dimensional interface that recognizes gestures be far behind? According to Jinha Lee, who created a 3D desktop when he interned at Microsoft’s Applied Sciences Group, the future could be closer than you think.
Image what we can use it for...
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I've been a 100% remote worker at Microsoft for just about 5 years now. My last two jobs were both 7 year long gigs, so this isn't the longest I've worked somewhere, but clocking in at a half-decade, it's the longest I've worked remotely. Given that I haven't yet been fired, it's fair to say that I'm a pretty good remote worker. Some tips for making remote working work.
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Fantastic post. Thank you Scott.
Marc
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I wonder if having some sort of avatar to represent you in the office would help others feel like you are more a part of the team. There was recently some tech conference where one of the products being presented was essentially a camera/screen atop a pole with wheels. Looked a bit like the screens from the conference room in Demolition Man. The screens show the face of a remote worker (or whoever), and the remote worker can "drive" the screens around to chat with people.
And I just found an old video of something similar: VGo. Basically, video conferencing on wheels.
And an article of another one: iPad on wheels.
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