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7076
General Software Discussion / Re: What Android Apps Do You Use?
« Last post by Renegade on July 28, 2011, 04:30 PM »
I just started using Andricious - a Delicious client that integrates with Android. Works very well.

https://market.andro...m.sherbert.delicious

The integration is good and I can use it in Opera. So... Happy. :)
7077
Living Room / Re: Do You Want Your Searches Monitored?
« Last post by Renegade on July 28, 2011, 03:54 PM »
well,
I just heard some commonsense spoken in the radio news by some Europol person (European international police) saying that basically if this kind of thing was implemented the perpetrator would simply work around it....

(dont know was that a spokesperson or not)

SSL, VPNs, proxies... It's not hard to get around. They'd only end up persecuting regular people.
7078
Living Room / Re: Do You Want Your Searches Monitored?
« Last post by Renegade on July 28, 2011, 07:21 AM »
On-topic:
Wouldnt the first search then be:
> how do I search anonymously?

Immediate arrest please !!


Pretty much... That's where it could head. :(

On the autocompletion topic:

Screenshot - 2011-07-28 , 10_12_52 PM.png

It's popular enough for autocompletion! And it has lots of results!

About 19,000,000 results (0.20 seconds)

And from what I understand, it's also illegal in the US. Not sure about other countries though.

7079
Living Room / Re: Do You Want Your Searches Monitored?
« Last post by Renegade on July 28, 2011, 06:16 AM »
Oh, and by the way, since 76 people were murdered in Norway 6 days ago, almost 90,000 children under 5 have starved to death. Just to put a little perspective on things...

...there's really no need to put perspective on this Renegade: it is good that you make us aware of what's going on in the world and I understand that you are upset about the media coverage imbalance and the reactions you quote.

But if you were related to any of those people, or if you were closer geographically, you wouldnt want to hear this.
Neither is on. Hunger or murder. No need to compare imo.

Off topic
I knew that was coming at some point. And to some degree I deserve a tongue lashing for it.

And you're right. It's not a fair comparison at all. It's something that we're simply going to be in disagreement on.

But knowing people isn't going to change my perspective. In other news, 44 people were killed in floods in Korea where I have a lot of friends. And 15,000 kids starved to death today.

I'm going to hammer on the "media tragedy hype" with the non-news-worthy starvation deaths of kids under 5.




I'm always torn when it comes to these issues. It sucks having big brother breathing down your neck. OTOH, I also can't stand libtards whining about security checkups. We live in f#ed up times, there's no perfect solution.

It is a hard issue. But surveillance on everyone won't solve anything. It's hard to know who the bad guys are until things go south. But any determined bad guy can use SSL, VPNs, encryption, proxies and other measures to conceal their tracks. So is it worth spying on everyone? I rather doubt it. It's all too easy for good intentions to lead to bad places.


7080
Living Room / Do You Want Your Searches Monitored?
« Last post by Renegade on July 28, 2011, 05:00 AM »
Well, more police-state nonsense:

http://www.smh.com.a...17r.html?from=smh_sb

Speaking to the website, Charles Sturt University computer science lecturer Craig Wright said he expected people in European countries to call for search engines to monitor user behaviour as a result of the attacks.

...

Nigel Phair, a former Australian Federal Police officer who is now a private security consultant, said real-time monitoring of search queries would be a welcomed "additional intelligence tool for national security agencies". Google could theoretically be a "good citizen" and report users it has identified as potentially high risk.

It seems like every tragedy is an excuse to tighten the noose of control in the modern western police state.

Oh, and by the way, since 76 people were murdered in Norway 6 days ago, almost 90,000 children under 5 have starved to death. Just to put a little perspective on things...



7081
Living Room / Re: Cute jokes' thread
« Last post by Renegade on July 27, 2011, 06:55 AM »
I just got this from my mom:


Q: Doctor, I've heard that cardiovascular exercise can prolong life. Is this true?
A: Heart only good for so many beats, and that it... Don't waste on exercise. Everything wear out eventually. Speeding up heart not make you live longer; it like saying you extend life of car by driving faster. Want to live longer? Take nap.

Q: Should I reduce my alcohol intake?
A: Oh no. Wine made from fruit. Brandy distilled wine, that mean they take water out of fruity bit so you get even more of goodness that way. Beer also made of grain. Bottom up!

Q: How can I calculate my body/fat ratio?
A: Well, if you have body and you have fat, your ratio one to one. If you have two body, your ratio two to one.

Q: What are some of the advantages of participating in a regular exercise program?
A: Can't think of single one, sorry. My philosophy: No pain...good!

Q: Aren't fried foods bad for you?
A: YOU NOT LISTENING! Food fried in vegetable oil. How getting more vegetable be bad?

Q : Will sit-ups help prevent me from getting a little soft around the middle?
A: Oh no! When you exercise muscle, it get bigger. You should only be doing sit-up if you want bigger stomach.

Q: Is chocolate bad for me?
A: You crazy?!? HEL-LO-O!! Cocoa bean! Another vegetable! It best feel-good food around!

Q: Is swimming good for your figure?
A: If swimming good for figure, explain whale to me.

Q: Is getting in shape important for my lifestyle?
A: Hey! 'Round' is shape!

Well... I hope this has cleared up any misconceptions you may have had about food and diets.


AND..... For those of you who watch what you eat, here's the final word on nutrition and health. It's a relief to know the truth after all those conflicting nutritional studies.

1. The Japanese eat very little fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

2. The Mexicans eat a lot of fat and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

3. The Chinese drink very little red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.

4. The Italians drink a lot of red wine and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans...

5. The Germans drink a lot of beer and eat lots of sausages and fats and suffer fewer heart attacks than Americans.


CONCLUSION: Eat and drink what you like. Speaking English is apparently what kills you.
7082
General Software Discussion / Re: Google Apps vs. MS Office 365: Your Choice
« Last post by Renegade on July 26, 2011, 11:05 PM »
OT: They locked you out before?  Did you ever find out why?  And how did you get it back?

Yea, they locked me out of my account last year and wouldn't tell me why, nor could I get back in to retrieve my data. They "liberated" it. More than three weeks later, I got a note from Google saying they suspected Chinese hackers were using my account to spam others and shut it down. Nice of them to give me a warning, NOT! I just opened another account and about a month later they gave me back my old account, spam and all. Tried to delete it several times but it's still there. Jeez. Can't fix it, can't reason with it. There's your cloud.

I've had horrible luck with Google's login system. It's very broken. And the ruins of it are scattered across Youtube as well. It's a MAJOR effort for me to login and get anything done. I need to set aside an hour, minimum.  >:(
7083
Living Room / Re: Want to see impressive numbers?
« Last post by Renegade on July 26, 2011, 07:15 PM »
It's like George Carlin said, we live in a country where the rich have most of the money, pay none of the taxes; the middle class pays most of the taxes and has a little of the money; the poor are there ... just to scare the shit out of the middle class!

Hahahah~! I LOVE George Carlin! His comedy was simply brilliant. The world lost something precious when he died.


But I think I'm missing something... Looking at the World Debt Clock:

Screenshot - 2011-07-27 , 10_08_57 AM.png

Check the US numbers, then look at France, the UK, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Italy... THEY'RE WORSE!

Europe seems to be in far worse condition than the US, and the US is pretty close to bankrupt. They're discussing defaulting on their debt!!!

Is that right? Is Europe in far worse a position than the US? If so, how? How could anyone be so grossly irresponsible to get debt soar to such insane levels?

Australia and Canada are the only 2 "western" countries that seem to have debt levels that could just possibly on a crazy day... warrant letting them out of their straight-jackets. Still bad, but nothing near the levels in Europe.

Am I missing something? If so, what?

7084
Living Room / Re: Android tablets to rival iPad
« Last post by Renegade on July 26, 2011, 06:36 PM »
2 points...
1. I don't think I'd consider a tablet without a usb port. I have an iconia (A500) and I can, and do
- plug a logitech mini receiver for a mouse into it  when needed
- when i bring it to work, I can grab a usb keyboard lying around to plug into it
- connect my olympus camera directly to it to transfer photos
- record tv programs from my tv onto a usb drive and then plug that into the tablet to watch
- plug in an external hard drive containing pics or music
2. Does it rival the ipad2? I grabbed this list from somewhere.

RAM  512 MB iPad2 vs 1 G Acer
No USB port iPad2 (need external sd/usb adapters *) vs USB port Acer
No SD Card slot iPad2 (need external sd/usb adapters *$29) vs SD Card slot Acer
No HDMI output port iPad2 (need external adapter $39) vs HDMI output port Acer
No Camera flash “bulb” iPad2 vs Camera flash “bulb” Acer
Camera Rear less than 1 MP (0.92) iPad2 vs 5 MP Acer
Camera Front less than 1 MP (0.7) iPad2 vs 2 MP Acer
Speaker 1 iPad2 vs 2 Speakers Acer
No Browser Tabs iPad2 vs Browser Tabs Acer
No Adobe Flash Player iPad2 vs Adobe Flash Player Acer
Requires iTunes even for file transfers iPad2 vs Normal file transfers – USB, SD card, etc. Acer
Wifi Price $567 iPad2 vs $449 Acer Iconia A500
Screen 1024 x 768 iPad2 vs 1280 x 800 Acer
GPS iPad2 3G Only vs Acer GPS w/Wifi


Acer wins!

 Fatality.png

Fatality!

:)
7085
Living Room / Re: Android tablets to rival iPad
« Last post by Renegade on July 26, 2011, 09:42 AM »
and in the first comment the amazing:

http://www.android-tablet-comparison-world.com/


DAMN~! That's one WICKED COOL site!

3 clicks to this:

Screenshot - 2011-07-27 , 12_37_47 AM.png

THAT is how things should work! F**K! I am inspired again! I've regained my faith in the web's potential to not just be total crap, and to excel in actually intelligent functionality!

JEEZ! Seriously! I'm impressed! Every time I try to shop at some site, I'm bombarded by 100 trillion miles of shit that I just don't care about and forced to dig through it all to find what I want. I'm so sick of that. That site seriously has some serious mojo there! :)


7086
LOL, when I first read the subject line, I got an image in my head of some weirdo trading crack for freeware.  :o

"Hey kid! How 'bout a couple rocks for that Screenshot Captor you got there?"   ;D

Hehehe~! That's awesome! :D

If it were LSD, the likelihood would be a bit higher. :P
7087
Living Room / Re: BoingBoing Update on Bitcoin Alternatives
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 10:13 PM »
It all seems insane to me.  But I'm probably misunderstanding some essential economic concepts.

Yes. The markets will take care of themselves. If we try to interfere, then we're evil socialists, and should be shot.

Nope. I don't think you're missing anything important.

To further add to the insanity...

http://en.wikipedia....onal-reserve_banking

Particularly, check the table:

http://en.wikipedia....posit_multiplication

I utterly fail to understand how anyone that understands that system can be oblivious to its inherent insanity. It's printing money from nothing. With nothing to back it up. It's just NOT stable. Recalling enough debt would cascade disastrously. It's very similar to a pyramid scheme.

"Belief" isn't a foundation. Heck, there are still wackos that believe the earth is flat! That doesn't make it true. It doesn't even make the belief useful.

If software were written like the banking system, nothing would even run.
7088
Living Room / Re: Are we allowed to avoid the "My Docs" mess in Win7?
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 01:15 PM »
My point is that those directories should not be created in the first place. If you insist on setting the Save Dialog on my Documents folder by default, fine. Why put folders that are by default empty in there to clutter things up? If I have some sort of project I am working on, I'll usually use multiple programs. Should I be coaxed to save every program-specific file in a folder specific to that program followed by the project? No! Let me find my project and make a directory suitable for this new aspect, such as 'help', 'manual', 'icons', 'graphics', 'sounds', etc nd I'll dump this new programs files in there. Giving such default directories only wrongly potty-trains users to dump everything in their Documents\ProgramX directory.

Half the other folders will contain 'program information' that the user can do nothing with. They can't doubleclick it or anything. It's just junk to them. Saved games are a fair number of them.

Also, Windows 7 has a Saved Games directory. I'm not sure about Vista, but either way that's an improvement.

Someone should set up a Hall of Shame website that lists software that appropriates the Documents folder for its own uses. Or maybe a more general one with sub-sections for common UI annoyances. There are some Hall of Shame websites out there that are about computer programs, but many of them are from the W95 era. The web could do with a new one. :)

Btw, Raymond Chen hates these programs too.


That's not really an answer to the problem. That answer seems to be, "Let's let users clutter the 'My Documents' folder with a trillion files."

Not all software works on a file basis. Some software works on a folder/project basis, and that really needs to be cleaned up in a project folder.

I can understand what you're driving at as I have the same problem, but I just don't see a solution, and you're not offering one.

What you SEEM to be saying (if I'm reading you right) is that there are 2 basic folder philosophies:

1) File in program folders
2) File in semantic folders

But that really means nothing as you can't read the user's mind. How is any programmer supposed to know that? It's unknowable. (A framework could solve that though.)

I think were' stuck with meaningful folder names until such a time as semantics becomes a bigger part of computing. That will be a while...

I just can't see any alternative. Right now the only logical solution seems to be to roll with what we have. :(
7089
General Software Discussion / Re: Dynamic Firewall?
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 01:02 PM »
The usual AdBlockPlus + NoScript (in whitelist mode) trick? There's some more specific social-media-backtrack-blocking addons available as well, but I have no experience with those.

I don't run Firefox anymore because it's just way to heavy. So... That limits things... But a blanket solution is still bad. I'd like an intelligent solution, but I fear that's probably too esoteric.

7090
General Software Discussion / Re: Google Apps vs. MS Office 365: Your Choice
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 11:36 AM »
For what I do, it's MS Office or nothing. Period. Nothing else can do what MS Office does. I don't say that with joy. I'm tied to Microsoft, and am working my ass off to try and free myself so I can work on any platform I choose. Right now, that's just not possible. :(

(I work on documents with added markup that only MS Office supports -- the markup is from a third party, and not from MS Office.)
7091
Living Room / Re: BoingBoing Update on Bitcoin Alternatives
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 11:31 AM »
Am I the only person who gets the feeling that the entire world economy is one big confidence game sham?

Nope.
7092
General Software Discussion / Dynamic Firewall?
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 11:29 AM »
Does anyone know of a simple firewall that can block Facebook in a browser from constantly calling home?

I leave my browser open with a million tabs, and just can't see any reason for Facebook to incessantly call home non-stop.

I'd just want to block it while the tab isn't active (best case), or block it while my browser isn't active (worst case).
7093
Living Room / Re: Am I alone in not using or wanting to use the "Cloud" ...
« Last post by Renegade on July 25, 2011, 06:53 AM »
You know you're a masochistic geek when...

Did I mention that I run my own mail server.

Yeah... I'm in the same club...

On topic -- My wife just got burned by Yahoo. She had a blog with Yahoo and they axed it all. She lost a couple years worth of writing. (Pulse)

I've been there too many times.

The cloud (originally had a typo -- COULD -- rather ironic) is great if you PAY for it. Free s**t is exactly that. S**t. But worse. Dry s**t. Y'know. Like as in buffalo chips. Dried elephant poo. Y'know... The stuff that BURNS and people use for FUEL! Ya gotta expect that you're gonna get burned. You don't roll around in gasoline then light up a cigarette and complain that it was not fun.

I think News Corp. got burned too. To the tune of about 550 million times. Hahahahaha~! :P

Mind you, some pay services have suddenly dumped people too. But, it's less frequent.

Other than a few things that you can't purchase, like a Facebook or Twitter account, pretty much everything I use "in the cloud" (whatever that means -- they're just servers with a "cooler" name) is paid. That's actually not much, as I don't have much faith in anything.

Ok. Time to go get non-cynical. Without stinky fuel. :) :P
7094
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 10:35 PM »
Y'know... It just occurred to me... I never hear about breakage on Linux upgrades...  :o

Ummm...it happens. It was the reason why I removed Ubuntu from my system and went for a fresh install. Too much broken stuff. Every upgrade broke more.

Maybe as steeladept points out, it's just that Linux users are better equipped to deal with it, and don't make such a big deal out of a few breaks here and there.

I suppose that when you pay a large premium for something like a Mac, you just expect more, and hence, have a higher disappointment factor when things go wrong. Unless you're a fanboi, and can find the silver lining in the burning ruins. :P
7095
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 08:55 PM »
OMG! A new version of an operating system doesn't have complete support for partially outdated software! I have never saw that issue in any other system.

It's not like the software is outdated though.

We're talking about CS 5 and CS 5.5. They're pretty new. CS 5 came out a little over a year ago. It's most certainly not legacy software by any means.

I did a quick search for Office 2000 on Windows 7, and it looks like it runs. They're 10 years apart but they still work together.

There's a very big disconnect between what MS does and what Apple does.
7096
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 08:45 PM »
As John Siracusa has already published his massive review on Ars Technica, I'd say no other review is necessary.

There are 2 words that never occur in the same sentence in Cupertino: backward compatibility.

http://www.pcworld.c...n_mac_os_x_lion.html

OMG! A new version of an operating system doesn't have complete support for partially outdated software! I have never saw that issue in any other system.

Massive? Would you care to understate that a little bit more? :P JEEZ! It's, well, hyper-detailed, like this:

Table of Contents
Installation
Reconsidering fundamentals
Lion's new look
Scroll bars
Window resizing
Animation
Here's to the crazy ones
Window management
Application management
Document model
Process model
The pitch
The reality
Internals
Security
Sandboxing
Privilege separation
Automatic Reference Counting
Enter (and exit) garbage collection
Cocoa memory management
Enter ARC
ARC versus garbage collection
ARC versus the world
The state of the file system
What's wrong with HFS+
File system changes in Lion
File system future
Document revisions
Resolution independence
Applications
The Finder
Mail
Safari
Grab bag
System Preferences
Auto-correction
Mobile Time Machine
Lock screen
Emoji
Terminal
About This Mac
Recommendations
Conclusion

It needs a table of contents for christmas sakes!

I did forget about this though:

http://arstechnica.c...rs/4#window-resizing

THAT is the single feature that would make me consider upgrading. I've found that to be the single most irritating thing about the Mac. It makes it very hard to work with when you can't easily resize anything. I just can't figure out why it took them so long to get such a fundamental feature into the OS.

It's so utterly insane. This is touted as a "feature"? The most basic of things you'd NEVER think of in the Windows or Linux or Solaris or any other world? Is a FEATURE? Worthy of mention in a major review? It's simply BIZARRE!

Mail has become more capable, as well. Simple rich text editing capabilities have finally been added.

Ummm... I don't use Mail on my Mac, but it's no wonder! It JUST got RTE? Stunning. Simply stunning. I really had no idea that OSX was that far behind the curve. Outlook Express had that, what? Like 15 years ago? Man... I really don't know much about my Mac. Then again, seems like there's not much TO know... :(

Another thing that's irked me on my Mac is Finder... Need I say more? No? Well the article goes on at length:

http://arstechnica.c...x-10-7.ars/15#finder

The Finder's destructive mix of browser and spatial behaviors remains in Lion. The tradition of subtly changing the rules that govern when, where, and how view state changes are applied and honored also continues. Just in case anyone thought they had finally figured out how the Snow Leopard Finder decides what view to show when displaying the contents of a folder in a particular window, Lion changes the rules again.

The controls at the top of the view options palette now include a mysterious sub-checkbox labelled "Browse in view," where view is the window's current view style. This appears to govern the view used when opening sub-folders from a window where the toolbar is visible, but a little experimentation will reveal that the setting is overridden by any "Always open in view" setting of a sub-folder. The end result is the same as it has ever been: an inscrutable system that users quickly give up any hope of understanding, resigning themselves to manually correcting view styles as needed during every interaction with the Finder.

Well... So much for that.

He details some improvements, but overall, it sounds like Finder is still a complete disaster to use. (My pet peeve is how Finder crashes and forces a reboot before you can do anything. Not good behaviour for a file browser.)

He also goes on at length about HFS+:

http://arstechnica.c...7.ars/12#file-system

It's a long read. The sound byte from there is, "HPS+ still sucks, so deal with it."


At the end of the day, the review is simply insanely detailed. However, a lot of the focus is on things that I would normally take for granted. Basic usability like window resizing... Jeez... This is news? Here's another example: Preferences

http://arstechnica.c...7#system-preferences

System Preferences have been shuffled, consolidated, and renamed in every major releases of Mac OS X. Lion doesn't disappoint.

The preference formerly known as Appearance is now called General, and it includes a checkbox to globally disable application state restoration. The Exposé & Spaces preference is now called Mission Control. Security becomes Security & Privacy. Accounts is now Users & Groups—a welcome change because, in my experience, most people don't know what an "account" is. Universal Access moves to the top row. And on and on. Dance, icons, dance!

That is really annoying. Apple UIs are like a desert - constantly and unpredictably shifting under your feet. Can't they just leave it alone? Or attempt to get it right? For once?

Much of the review highlights annoyances. There are few things that I'd say are really worth much of a mention at all, except if you're being hyper-detailed, like the review is, or if you're a fanboi. Not many of the topics would ever make it into a review of any other OS. File system? Who cares? The command line is worth mentioning? Seems almost desperate for something to talk about... Especially as it's transparency and 256 text colors that are new.

Still, the window resizing thing though does have me thinking about whether or not I should upgrade. That really would make my Mac much friendlier and easier to use. Right now my Mac is little more than a $2,500 paper-weight that takes up far too much space. Lion sounds like it might make it tolerable now.

Thanks for posting that review though -- it was most certainly detailed! Almost too much detail! :)

To upgrade or not? Hmmm... I very well just may do that...
7097
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 07:47 PM »
Beats me why Adobe don't simply tell Apple to sort out the compatibility issues or they will withdraw from producing future Adobe products for the Mac and start porting to Linux. Now that would certainly provoke a response - especially after the mobile Flash debacle!

Strikes me Apple need Adobe far more than Adobe need Apple given that Adobe produce one of the main software ranges used by the majority of corporate Apple products.

Interestingly it also seems to be affecting third party audio studio products too - now if they joined forces with Adobe there could be some serious fireworks!
-Carol Haynes (July 24, 2011, 07:32 PM)

It makes me wonder how user allegiances would shift. Who would they love more? Would they rather move from Mac to Windows? Or move from Photoshop to the GIMP or something else?

Photoshop is generally more responsive on a Mac, so that's a definite plus there. However, the Windows paradigm is easier to work with than the Mac paradigm. It's a trade-off. I find I'm much more productive in Photoshop on Windows. Windows just seems cleaner to me. (It's mostly got to do with arranging windows in Windows is much easier than on a Mac.)

7098
Living Room / Re: Are we allowed to avoid the "My Docs" mess in Win7?
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 07:40 PM »
This topic is exactly why I don't use any of the default Windows folders. It's sad, but true. My documents are my documents, don't dump files or directories there without my asking!

It's kind of hard to avoid though... I have the same thing going on. Some of those folders:

  • Donation Coder
  • Image-Line
  • MAGIX
  • MAGIX Downloads
  • My HelpAndManual Projects
  • My Kindle Content
  • My Shapes
  • My Web Sites
  • Replay Telecorder
  • Visual Studio 2005
  • Visual Studio 2008
  • Visual Studio 2010

A few others as well...

But WHERE else can you put them by default?

/users/login/AppData/Roaming/company/product isn't the kind of place that normal people would ever think to look. It's remote at best.

Allowing people to set a location for files is an advanced feature that many users simply wouldn't understand or care to bother with.

In general, I try to use the Roaming directory for most things, or the working folder, but I can't really think of anything else that "works" for most people by default other than to put it in the obvious "Documents" folder.

If you have any insight into what would work, I'm all ears. I just can't see any decent default alternatives.

7099
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 07:31 PM »
Y'know... It just occurred to me... I never hear about breakage on Linux upgrades...  :o
7100
General Software Discussion / Re: Mac OS Lion opinions
« Last post by Renegade on July 24, 2011, 07:27 PM »
Well I didn't want to turn this into an anti-apple rant thread ;) but while you brought up backwards compatibility this quote from the article I linked seems extraordinary to me-

It's kind of hard not to rant a little bit when they consistently miss some major things, like backwards compatibility. (I think you're right about it being hard for Apple to ever make it into the Enterprise market.) (I'm not trying to be anti-Apple here -- but they kind of ask for it with stunts like this.)

For anyone that's ever used different SDKs/APIs, you invariably come across something like:

MethodName  - blah blah
MethodName2 - blah blah

It might not be the prettiest way to keep things backward compatible, but it works. And it's not that difficult a concept to grasp. Except if you're in Cupertino. :P

Right now my Mac is only used for browser testing, so I have no motivation to upgrade the OS.

I remember when Vista was in beta - I had a few people email me about my software UI breaking. I replied that Vista was still early beta, and that those sorts of things happen. When it reached RTM, well, lo and behold, all those problems went away and it worked perfectly with zero code changes. (Quite a few of my customers are developers.)

Mind you, all that backwards compatibility in the Windows world comes at a price. Macs have it better there because they simply drop support for some things and move on without that baggage. Good and bad there. Basically, it comes down to whether or not you're willing to accept having everything break completely with a major upgrade, or whether you want to endure small, occasional hiccups. Neither is particularly pleasant.

I've heard good things about Windows 8. I kind of wonder if there will be any breakage there though. I rather doubt it, but we'll see.

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