Yeah, I know. The entertaining use cases. I understand that entertainment is the dominant use case for computers and networks globally. Well, if one can't live without gaming or video streaming, (s)he might just accept…
It's about time to realize that ancient Chinese were оnto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
I'll stop as soon as dysgraphic flaggers stop. The true abuse is muting a comment that doesn't offend anyone, just calling to contemplate a philosophy so different from the current mainline it hurts. Or does it? Are…
People should realize that ancient Chinese were оnto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
People should realize that ancient Chinese were onto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
Me being a caveman who believes that technology is a hammer that still can be used to drive nails into building materials instead of our own heads, I'm longing for an Intermesh of simple networked 8-bit machines running…
I would have labeled the article a piece of defeatism disguised as satire, if not for this: Security research is the continual process of discovering that your spaceship is a deathtrap. However, as John F. Kennedy once…
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Windows ecosystem doesn't forbid e.g. Java applications to use the same system-wide JRE, which has to be installed once, manually. It would be a nightmare if every Java app installed its own…
In the light of 290MB of scattered DLLs mentioned above, I believe that this is more than elegant way to advocate the guy who made this false claim - if you read carefully enough, you'll notice that it wasn't me. Care…
> if you want to take that chance No, I don't think I want, now that you've sown a seed of doubt in my mind.. It's just occurred to me that he well might be a covert princess who'll jump out of my laptop, disguised as a…
> he'll almost certainly fall victim to the Great Garbage Collection Algorithm In The Sky at some point, and now all of a sudden you're tied to a library that now literally nobody can legally maintain Don't worry, you…
Instead of paying $350 to a security analyst, I'd better pay them to an independent closed-source developer who makes a living from his software. Why would I trust some analyst more than the guy who works on his project…
I believe 50MB is an exaggeration, but not too far-fetched one. More of a problem is the proliferation and duplication of these DLLs all over the storage when many Qt-based apps are installed. A quick Everything query…
> I don't know why Qt takes 50MBs or more for hello world or why anyone would use electron at all You have all my sympathy here :) Well, it should also be noted that 5MB is the size of Sciter's dynamic library. Compiled…
That separate language can be learned in a few days and leave you wondering how one guy managed to make things more logical than a crowd of people around JS. If 5MB is a con, what do you say about 30MB for Qt and ~100MB…
Sciter is fantastic, and honestly I don't get it why being closed source is a con. In fact, both 'commercial license / closed source' statements are not quite true - one may link against the precompiled dll for free,…
What bothers me is the fact that everyone seems to be accepting the usage of these newspeakish romantically sounding euphemisms that are completely opaque about the purpose of things they stand for. "Normandy"... What…
>The UI knob is > Options -> Privacy & Security > Allow Firefox to install and run studies Well it's a half-assed knob then, because it was unchecked and still I had app.normandy.enabled = true somehow.
Yeah, I know. The entertaining use cases. I understand that entertainment is the dominant use case for computers and networks globally. Well, if one can't live without gaming or video streaming, (s)he might just accept…
It's about time to realize that ancient Chinese were оnto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
I'll stop as soon as dysgraphic flaggers stop. The true abuse is muting a comment that doesn't offend anyone, just calling to contemplate a philosophy so different from the current mainline it hurts. Or does it? Are…
People should realize that ancient Chinese were оnto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
People should realize that ancient Chinese were onto something when they told that all phenomena shall evolve only so much before they tip over the peak of maximum development and inevitably rumble downhill into…
Me being a caveman who believes that technology is a hammer that still can be used to drive nails into building materials instead of our own heads, I'm longing for an Intermesh of simple networked 8-bit machines running…
I would have labeled the article a piece of defeatism disguised as satire, if not for this: Security research is the continual process of discovering that your spaceship is a deathtrap. However, as John F. Kennedy once…
Correct me if I'm wrong, but Windows ecosystem doesn't forbid e.g. Java applications to use the same system-wide JRE, which has to be installed once, manually. It would be a nightmare if every Java app installed its own…
In the light of 290MB of scattered DLLs mentioned above, I believe that this is more than elegant way to advocate the guy who made this false claim - if you read carefully enough, you'll notice that it wasn't me. Care…
> if you want to take that chance No, I don't think I want, now that you've sown a seed of doubt in my mind.. It's just occurred to me that he well might be a covert princess who'll jump out of my laptop, disguised as a…
> he'll almost certainly fall victim to the Great Garbage Collection Algorithm In The Sky at some point, and now all of a sudden you're tied to a library that now literally nobody can legally maintain Don't worry, you…
Instead of paying $350 to a security analyst, I'd better pay them to an independent closed-source developer who makes a living from his software. Why would I trust some analyst more than the guy who works on his project…
I believe 50MB is an exaggeration, but not too far-fetched one. More of a problem is the proliferation and duplication of these DLLs all over the storage when many Qt-based apps are installed. A quick Everything query…
> I don't know why Qt takes 50MBs or more for hello world or why anyone would use electron at all You have all my sympathy here :) Well, it should also be noted that 5MB is the size of Sciter's dynamic library. Compiled…
That separate language can be learned in a few days and leave you wondering how one guy managed to make things more logical than a crowd of people around JS. If 5MB is a con, what do you say about 30MB for Qt and ~100MB…
Sciter is fantastic, and honestly I don't get it why being closed source is a con. In fact, both 'commercial license / closed source' statements are not quite true - one may link against the precompiled dll for free,…
What bothers me is the fact that everyone seems to be accepting the usage of these newspeakish romantically sounding euphemisms that are completely opaque about the purpose of things they stand for. "Normandy"... What…
What bothers me is the fact that everyone seems to be accepting the usage of these newspeakish romantically sounding euphemisms that are completely opaque about the purpose of things they stand for. "Normandy"... What…
>The UI knob is > Options -> Privacy & Security > Allow Firefox to install and run studies Well it's a half-assed knob then, because it was unchecked and still I had app.normandy.enabled = true somehow.