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I'm so sick of these Android malware studies and reports and statistics. They're all skewed by the fact that it's the most open and forked mobile OS out there, and that the overwhelming majority of malware instances come from international markets where they're running independent versions of Android out of third-party marketplaces with zero security updates or support for Google.
This topic has become one of the biggest worthless piles of tech article fodder, and publications just keep shoveling it.
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All true. I have actually been trying to avoid putting these in for just those reasons. This one I couldn't resist as it actually showed just how small the problem is (5 million out of 1 billion install base), and for the WP shot.
I will now go back to trying to avoid these stories.
TTFN - Kent
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Fair enough, I'll admit that on first read I only skimmed the article out of frustration. On a second pass-through it's not quite as bad as most...and a good WP dig indeed.
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In the field of software development, the Pareto Principle can be summarized by saying that most problems are caused by a small number of bad coding practices. Eliminate them and your work will be very much easier and more productive. Bonus #11: basing your code standards on a listicle.
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If eliminating those 20% was that easy, the principle itself would not have existed.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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> Avoid words such as receive, which easily be misspelled receive without being obvious.
Certainly not obvious to me...
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For a while now, many of you have been asking for a better way to access data to build apps that integrate with Gmail. While IMAP is great at what it was designed for (connecting email clients to email servers in a standard way), it wasn’t really designed to do all of the cool things that you have been working on, which is why this week at Google I/O, we’re launching the beta of the new Gmail API. Bu-bye IMAP?
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Why don't they introduce a better IMAP library?
Oh yeah, right. Others would benefit from that, too. Sometimes I think this box-thinking (not only Google, but also many others, my former employer included) ruins a lot of great opportunities and slows any progress down.
The console is a black place
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Exactly. I had to integrate the import of attachments from emails received via IMAP into our software. It was a very terrible job, I can tell you. No really good .Net libraries available, the messages from Exchange Server may differ between versions, problems with emails without date field, missing delimiters after a multipart-part, ...
Just waiting for the next bug to be reported by a customer.
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In an interview with the IEEE Computer Society, the Linux founder lays out the philosophy behind his and his OS's success. Introduce yourself to your code. Maybe wear a nametag.
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The phrase “Facebook at work” usually suggests people frittering away the day on the social network and not actually doing their jobs. But according to an anonymous source inside Facebook, the company is working on a way to put the social network into a more positive light in the office. It is building an at-work version of Facebook. The only thing we need less is a zombie apocalypse
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Kent Sharkey wrote: “Facebook at work”
Isn't that the definition of Yammer[^]?
A positive attitude may not solve every problem, but it will annoy enough people to be worth the effort.
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Except that no one uses Yammer
TTFN - Kent
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No one uses Facebook either - the relationship is the other way around...
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Good point
TTFN - Kent
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Looking for top compensation, matchless benefits, projects with punch, and full control over your career? "You've achieved success in your field when you don't know whether what you're doing is work or play." (sorry, US only)
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Thanks for sharing...
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With generational change, however, comes a generational challenge: The baby boomers that brought us the computer revolution, developing the products and programs we now rely on, are retiring. Are we running out of 50 year-old developers?
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Kent Sharkey wrote: Are we running out of 50 year-old developers?
Being one myself (OK, 51), what we're running out of is the recognition that 50 year old developers actually have some usable knowledge and wisdom. The sage developer community is being replaced with knee-jerk programmers applying quick-and-dirty refactoring and agile methodologies which, in projects I've seen, throw out design, planning, heck, actual thinking, replacing those "ancient" techniques with video-game-like immediate green-light gratification.
Marc
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Your developers would be at least 70, not 50!
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..and to think I'm complaining about companies that do not upgrade their VB6 code, here comes a list of old COBOL and FORTRAN code. Who manages these kinds of companies?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Meh. Every generation thinks they are the "be all and end all". Every generation is wrong...
Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. ~ George Washington
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Google Drive has grown to attract more than 190 million users, for work and play, to date. Now the cloud service is taking a new turn to draw in more businesses. Google sees Microsoft's 1TB, and raises them (unlimited?!)
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Eclipse Luna includes official support for Java 8 in the Java development tools, Plug-in Development Tools, Object Teams, Eclipse Communication Framework, Maven integration, Xtext, Xtend, Web Tools Platform, and Memory Analyzer. One week ago I found another preview update for Android Studio[^]
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woohoo
I had to Google how to open an existing project in the IDE. And then what really shocked me was how many other people have asked that question, completely befuddled by the UI, where, under the Projects menu, "Open Project" is grayed out. Like, WTF, duuude. Not to mention the complaints about how obfuscated the IDE is, only to have people respond with "it's been like that since it's inception." The take-away from that: don't let programmers design UI's, even for other programmers.
The only reason I'm looking at Eclipse is for cross-platform development work for the Beaglebone Black, but I will have to say, there's a $500 package that integrates with Visual Studio, and it's probably well worth the money.
Marc
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