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Living Room / Re: Earthquake
« Last post by Gothi[c] on April 18, 2008, 08:44 PM »for some reason, if you stick "habanero savina" into google, with the quotes, this post ends up #1
<@mouser> i think sham is trying to kill me finally.

I can't speak for Compiz, but I rely heavily on AERO anymore to keep my workflow going (open ~15+ windows and try to talk to 5+ people online at once and see how far you go before you ponder insanity).Several applications I use rely on the AERO interface to run (Switcher, for example). I hate having to use an XP machine anymore because I lose not only the "feeling", but also the capabilities that I have to utilize. No little pop-up images of programs in alt-tab or over taskbar buttons. No 3D window flipping. ObjectDock window previews don't work without AERO. The list goes on. And plus, it is just way more eye-catching than a big blue taskbar (or the gray one on Xubuntu).
-wreckedcarzz (April 14, 2008, 06:40 PM)


it's pretty irrelevant if you're doing web apps or database clients, etc. Heck, even in native C++ you can go a long way without needing to use (or at least know much about) pointers.

dont start with assembly. don't stop at assembly, just keep on walking past masochism alley. find a high-level language you like and start there.I'm all for high level languages, I'm just not sure if they are good to start with. I think it is very important to know what's behind them. Maybe the ideal would be to do both a high level and a low level language at the same time.-mouser (April 10, 2008, 08:31 PM)
(it's great to add scripting functionality to c++ applications, but I wouldn't write the actual application in it.)
though i was kind of unprepared for how fast it makes you chose, and how small the map is.
that's kind of bad, for how much of this stuff was crammed into my mind in school
]

I've started using it again as a breakdown tool / personal todo list alongside the bugtracking tool we use.

Unfortunately it will be a piece of crap that is as slow as molasses as it is hacked out in Python. Why don't you use a real language like C++.-tinjaw (March 27, 2008, 08:58 AM)


You're complaining about people who are trying Linux ... In a thread that's about "Why You Should Try Linux".I wasn't complaining about people trying GNU/Linux. I was complaining about people who don't have the time to spend to learn a new way of doing things, and instead of just saying they are just used to the OS they have been using and don't have the time to learn something new, they immediately dismiss the alternative as 'crap' because they aren't used to it.
yes, wasting!, since it doesn't give much real benefitIt does give real benefit, but the benefit isn't useful to your average joe user.
So, I just don't use windows. As simple as that.

). Especially now that cross-platform applications are becoming more common and widespread, there is no reason for that not to be possible.DC member gothi[c] has been working on a really promising and very cool tool that does this kind of stuff and more -- he should post a progress report and some screenshots.

