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1 year ago

in Mono Embeds Nabble - Miguel de Icaza on Miguel de Icaza's blog
Great news, I never liked mailing lists but i always liked forums.

And I am a VERY long time user as well. So it is not always true that old people like mailing lists. ;-)

I never managed to handle with the amount of message that really gets by. A forum is much nicer... I dont need to collect
it in any way, can look at what I want to do, and look at my email only for things to buy, family and friend connections etc... which
are really more interesting and important than the spam and noise mailing lists generate IMO.

1 year ago

in Ideas vs Judgment and Execution: Climbing the Mountain on Paul Buchheit
But the bottom line still is true - ideas alone are not useful.

It is what one makes _out_ from ideas is what is worthwhile

1 year ago

in Announcing Ninja-Patching! on Virtuous Code
But i must agree somewhat :-)

I think whenever someone mentions monkey patching from now on, I will refer to ninja patching. Sounds a lot better.

1 year ago

in Announcing Ninja-Patching! on Virtuous Code
"I suppose this was meant as a joke"

LOOK AT THE DATE MAN!!!!!!!!!!

1 year ago

in Stop Wine From Beating Your Windows Apps With The Ugly Stick | Tombuntu on Tombuntu
cool thing!

but i guess it will take some more time before we can enjoy nice themeing

without the ugly grey look of windows as forced option for everyone

1 year ago

in RussellBeattie.com - IRSeeking trouble... on Russell Beattie's Blog Forum
its not true, there is data that is useful in IRC logs

and often, on the "better" channels, a longer conversation is a melting pot for new ideas

yes it is rare compared to the noise out there, but it exists. and we all know how data mining can be profitable

1 year ago

in Testing Misconceptions #1: Exploratory Programming on James on Software
Well putting things together into OOP/classes is also splitting concerns, and you can hardwire tests into this all as well. I still believe the biggest factor is the human factor.

1 year ago

in Testing Misconceptions #1: Exploratory Programming on James on Software
Well putting things together into OOP/classes is also splitting concerns, and you can hardwire tests into this all as well. I still believe the biggest factor is the human factor.

1 year ago

in Testing Misconceptions #1: Exploratory Programming on James on Software
Well putting things together into OOP/classes is also splitting concerns, and you can hardwire tests into this all as well. I still believe the biggest factor is the human factor.

1 year ago

in Please backup your hard drive now… twice! on goodCRIMETHINK
hahaha ignore the comments with idiots

i myself had a lot and long time with backup problems

after i lost 2 weeks of work, i now backup to

a) second hdd installed on stand-top PCs
b) backup on external USB hdd


i need to find a c to backup some data remotely

i hope data storage continues to get a lot cheaper...
i heard about the crystal storing devices via nano-technology, its now about 3 years old, they can easily store around 50 terabytes in 1 cubic-cm

but unfortunately its just prototype.... and who knows if that ever breaks through (monopolies dont want innovations to kill them.....)
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