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Terry Myerson gets the promotion that eluded Steve Sinofsky, and Scott Guthrie's move up starts the Salesforce rumors swirling again. Another look at the cheese movement
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A cup of joe wards off depression following chronic stress. Oh coffee (tea/cola/Red Bull), is there nothing you won't do for me?
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I'd answer your question but it's fodder for the SoapBox.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein | "As far as we know, our computer has never had an undetected error." - Weisert | "If you are searching for perfection in others, then you seek disappointment. If you are seek perfection in yourself, then you will find failure." - Balboos HaGadol Mar 2010 |
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In the morning it's either coffee or a defibrillator to get me going!
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.1 new web site.
I know the voices in my head are not real but damn they come up with some good ideas!
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Microsoft’s C# programming language first appeared in 2000, over 15 years ago, that’s a long time in tech. Soon we'll be forced to ration compile time, and only the rich will be able to use long LINQ statements
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Not according to the number of recruiters still calling begging me to switch jobs and refer friends for the 20 positions they can't fill.
Hogan
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That is about as stupid as saying c++ has peaked.
(my opinion) In reality, more experienced c# developers exist, with less need to get answers to questions from tech sites.
The job market for C# fluctuates and is still the number 2 language in my area next to Java.
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Should we trust a blog written by some one wearing a bowler hat?
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ed welch wrote: some one wearing a bowler hat
What? Have we heard from DD?
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Some idiot wrote: first appeared in 2000
Nah, 1999. And, yes, I partied.
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IMHO, the peak will move higher over time. In effect, the peak, at any point of time, will be quite lofty for a sizeable proportion of programmers.
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Security researchers have uncovered a flaw in the way thousands of popular mobile applications store data online, leaving users' personal information, including passwords, addresses, door codes and location data, vulnerable to hackers. This is why I rely on the tried-and-true pig latin to encrypt all communication
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SAFe is a programming framework that aims to enable you to apply lean-agile practices at enterprise scale. Will it take your development projects where they need to go? Because the consultants needed a new way to define agile
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a programming framework that aims to enable you to apply lean-agile practices at enterprise scale They've either read too much or too few Dilbert me thinks
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A couple of rants I'm afraid....
#1 - Agile is a business process / people management idea - not a programming framework.
#2 - In the article they make much of the "release train that pushes code to production on a schedule....every ten weeks". That is so anti-agile it chills my soul.
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Duncan Edwards Jones wrote: #2 - In the article they make much of the "release train that pushes code to production on a schedule....every ten weeks". That is so anti-agile it chills my soul.
I dunno, at my company, we have an "agile" project that has been in development for 2 years, and it still hasn't delivered working software yet. So 10 weeks sounds pretty agile from this side of the fence.
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That first slide made my eyes bleed.
As a plus, the current trend of wrapping all sorts of meta-processes into software development is keeping all kinds of middle-managers and consultants employed!
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Ow!
Sarcasm - it's not just a verbal skill - it's a lifestyle!
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After 6 months you can’t really say someone is a beginner since, well, 6 months later is not the beginning. Everyone has to start somewhere
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The Ecma General Assembly has officially approved ECMAScript 6, the latest standard edition of JavaScript.
I have seen the future, and its name is ES6.
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So how many years do we have to wait until we can use it as "standard" in web apps?
cheers
Chris Maunder
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2025?
WIn10 LTS will keep IE11, and until they state otherwise I'm assuming the life cycle policy for business versions will remain at a decade.
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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Christopher Shields wrote: and its name is ES6X
Christopher Shields wrote: has officially approved
Good, that'll kill it.
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It’s no secret that Google often builds its own custom hardware for its data centers, but what’s probably less known is that Google uses custom networking protocols that have been tweaked for use in its data centers instead of relying on standard Internet protocols to power its networks. There you go: now you can build your own copy
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Google, Microsoft, Mozilla and the engineers on the WebKit project today announced that they have teamed up to launch WebAssembly, a new binary format for compiling applications for the web. Because it worked so well the other times people tried
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