> I've switched back to Windows 7 in early 2011 and, to be honest, I'm quite happy I did. Yes, because Windows 7 and OS X already have all this modern non-70s-stuff that Lennart is trying to bring to Linux.
> Except for heroic efforts by Red Hat, SUSE, and previously Sun, it's mostly a hobbyist affair. Lennart Poettering is a Red Hat employee.
Haha, "Wolfgang Draxinger" signed 28 days ago. Check out this epic battle between Draxinger and Poettering: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTdUmlGxVo0
You only think that you are not logged in. But Google doesn't forget you and tracks your footprints everywhere.
How does he support compatibility with extensions for the main line if he changes the code base?
Bruce Eckel on exceptions and Go: http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=331407
Open standard? Dart is neither a standard nor designed in an open process.
What happened to Google's motto "Don't be evil?". Obviously they are trying to balkanize the web with non-standard technologies again.
> I've switched back to Windows 7 in early 2011 and, to be honest, I'm quite happy I did. Yes, because Windows 7 and OS X already have all this modern non-70s-stuff that Lennart is trying to bring to Linux.
> Except for heroic efforts by Red Hat, SUSE, and previously Sun, it's mostly a hobbyist affair. Lennart Poettering is a Red Hat employee.
Haha, "Wolfgang Draxinger" signed 28 days ago. Check out this epic battle between Draxinger and Poettering: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZTdUmlGxVo0
You only think that you are not logged in. But Google doesn't forget you and tracks your footprints everywhere.
How does he support compatibility with extensions for the main line if he changes the code base?
Bruce Eckel on exceptions and Go: http://www.artima.com/weblogs/viewpost.jsp?thread=331407
Open standard? Dart is neither a standard nor designed in an open process.
What happened to Google's motto "Don't be evil?". Obviously they are trying to balkanize the web with non-standard technologies again.