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More or less exactly what I'm thinking.
Documentation for WinRT is a pain. Something as simple as reading a file, although simple now, took a bit of figuring out how to do. Just to get an app running with a database is a pain (going XAML/C#/VB), SQLite is kinda supported, but not out of the box. You need wrappers, but then from what I've found those wrappers are specifically compiled for x86 or ARM and so fourth.
I just want to write an app - and get it out there or even just distribute to friends. There does seem to be a lot of hurdles I have to go through to do that.
As for Windows 8 Metro vs Desktop - developing an application I intend to run on a desktop - I'd go Windows all the way until the market changes. As for developing any kind of mobile device - I wouldn't pick a Microsoft platform.
When the Surface and the Samsung tablets come out - I will go down to the shops and see where people flock to. Right now I just go into random shops selling devices, act like a doofus (well, more of one) and see what the general consensus is right now.
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Meh. It's a fondle slab platform; I can't use those without RSI pain.
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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Article from Times of India
California took the fast lane to the future on Tuesday when Governor Jerry Brown signed a law that lets self-driving cars onto public roads.
Brown rode to the signing ceremony at Google headquarters in the passenger seat of a vehicle that steered itself, a Prius modified by Google. Google co-founder Sergey Brin and State Senator Alex Padilla, who sponsored the bill, were along for the ride. An engineer for the technology company, Chris Urmson, sat in the driver's seat, but the car drove itself.
"We're looking at science fiction becoming tomorrow's reality," Brown said just before signing the bill.
Google has been working on self-driving technology since 2010, including testing a fleet of self-driving cars along California roadways.
Google's driverless cars rely on video cameras, radar sensors, lasers and a database of information collected from manually driven cars to help navigation, according to the company.
The new law goes into effect next year and establishes safety and performance regulations for testing driverless cars, provided an operator is ready to take control if necessary.
However, it will likely take years before a fully self-driving autonomous vehicle hits the road, industry official say.
"I think the self-driving car can really dramatically improve the quality of life," said Brin, who pointed to uses ranging from aiding the blind, ferrying revellers who drank too much, to simply making better use of commuting time.
He added that by driving closer together more safely than human-driven cars, self-driven cars might cut congestion.
But Google has no plans to build its own driverless cars.
"We have had great conversations with a variety of automakers," he said. "Anything we do is going to be in partnership with the industry."
The technology has been in the works since the 1950s, when General Motors showed off "dream cars" with features such as autopilot. Recently, car makers have started incorporating into today's models some elements based on the innovations in those early vehicles, including adaptive cruise control or traffic-jam technologies that can slow the car automatically.
Carmakers developing autonomous technologies include BMW, Ford Motor, General Motors, Honda Motor, Hyundai Motor, Mercedes, Nissan Motor, Toyota Motor, Volkswagen and Volvo, as well as suppliers, technology companies and universities.
Chip company Intel created a $100 million fund in February to invest in future auto technology.
Nevada and Florida have already passed laws allowing self-driving cars.
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Here. Only 2 threads down.
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Article from Times of India
With hackers revealing that they can hide a code in a web page that will trigger a full factory reset of Samsung's best-selling Galaxy S III smartphone, swiping away contacts, photographs, music, apps and other valuable data, security researchers are under pressure to counter it.
The code, now circulating freely online, comprises of just 11 digits and symbols, and was first revealed at a computer security conference in Argentina.
Ravi Borgaonkar, a researcher based at the Technische Universitat in Berlin, demonstrated how the code can be embedded in malicious text message, or called up in the web browser by a QR code or NFC tag. If an unsuspecting Samsung Galaxy S III owner visits such a page, their smartphone will be restored to its factory settings without permission or any input from them, The Telegraph reports.
Borgaonkar said the whole attack takes just two or three seconds, and once launched, there is nothing a Samsung Galaxy S III owner can do to stop it.
Samsung is now facing calls to issue an immediate software update to address what experts described as a "major security vulnerability".
It has also been revealed that the code can trigger a factory reset on Galaxy S II and other devices that use the Korean firm's version of Google's mobile operating system, Android. All use Samsung's "TouchWiz" interface, the paper said.
Devices from other Android manufacturers will not to be unaffected by the code, Borgaonkar confirmed.
The Galaxy S3 III, introduced in May, is the main rival to Apple's iPhone and Samsung's flagship, with global sales of more than 20 million, the paper added.
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Possibly the same vulnerability covered on Sophos[^]?
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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Finally, a way to get to 127.0.0.1 safely
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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That is awesome!
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Technically speaking, they aren't explicitly illegal anywhere (to my knowledge)...so that makes them OK!
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Super. We're getting back to the days when your horse could take you back home no matter how drunk you are. Progress!
Psychosis at 10
Film at 11
Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it.
Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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Most code doesn’t trigger doomsday devices, nor deals with lethal enemies at the gates. When most code messes up, garbage appears on the screen or in log files, and a programmer shows up to debug the problem. With exceptions, it’s easier for the programmer to figure out why this garbage appeared, because the failure occurs closer to the point of the error. Error codes or exceptions - which is better? Here’s my answer.
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It fails to mention the major distinction between "expected" and "unexpected" exceptions.
A error-code is merely an ID for an exception
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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IMHO, the author's example indicates a lack of programming skill.
open_the_gate();
wait_for_our_men_to_come_in();
close_the_gate();
Clearly one would instead write:
try {
open_the_gate();
wait_for_our_men_to_come_in();
}
finally {
close_the_gate();
}
/ravi
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Ravi Bhavnani wrote: Clearly one would instead write:
Or one could use a language with deterministic destructors and the problem goes away.
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I was working on a mapping application for Windows 8 – HTML using the Bing SDK and needed to pass the latitude and longitude into it. I began searching for a straightforward way to get the location and had to read through pages of documentation before finally finding it. Here it is in case you want to use it in your own apps. When you're finished, help iOS 6 maps find its way home.
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Terrence Dorsey wrote: When you're finished, help iOS 6 maps find its way home.
of course home according to Apple's mapping may well be 100 miles from where you think it is.
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In 2014, more people will be using mobile devices to access the internet than desktop PCs. Accessibility for mobile devices has become a huge priority for web developers. Responsive design is seemingly universally accepted as the way forward, but I am far from convinced. Today I am going to explain why I believe that responsive design is not always the optimal solution for web design. Responsive design is not a cure-all for poorly designed.
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"But do you know what is even cheaper than responsive design? Non-responsive design."
- S
50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
Code, follow, or get out of the way.
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If it does not respond, reboot.
Bastard Programmer from Hell
if you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Just as Feedburner was the flagship feed stats clearing house, Google Reader is the dominant feed aggregator on the web. Millions of people spend large amounts of time in Google Reader, yet the app has only received visual downgrades over the past two years. Google Reader is feeling its age in a time when iOS feed readers are pushing the limits every day. Yet, there is still no real competitor. Feeds and feed readers are outside of Google's advertising space. So why should they care?
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There were lots of reactions to my blog post Everything's broken and nobody's upset. Some folks immediately got the Louis CK "Everything's Amazing and Nobody's Happy" reference. Some folks thought it was a poorly worded rant. Some folks (from various companies) thought I was throwing developers under the bus, accusing them of not caring. Others saw a meta-goal and started a larger discussion about software quality. Is it easy for your users to report a bug?
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