Hiya guys. I'm doing some schoolwork and I was wondering if you could help me out. I have a simple cpp program and my prof is asking me to include the minimum hardware and software requirements... which is just bull because even an arduino capable of running dos on a screen could support this program.
> 1. Do an **svnadmin dump** (which can be done only on the host). 2. Use **svndumpfilter** to filter out the unwanted revisions. 3. Create a new repository and use **svnadmin load** to load into the new repository.
"Any requirements to run the program on my comp?" "Yeah, you're keyboard *must* have 104 keys otherwise it won't work. It might go terminator on your ass"
@StackedCrooked I think a sufficient number of students just plagiarized their senior's work for long enough that what seemed to be the best computer in the 90s ended up the minimum hardware requirement...
That's more than 20 academic generations of plagiarism!
@StackedCrooked Btw, how do I test the ram requirement? That knowledge will come in handy I guess.
> Will Bill Gates ever make up for the billions of damage he caused humanity by using underhand tactics to destroy his opposition? Maybe. But while everyone praises him at the moment, I can't help but think he deliberately held the internet back for 6 or 7 years for his own profit. You almost can't start calculating the damage he caused precisely because it is so mind boggling.
If Bill Gates wasn't at the top somebody else would have been
You can't speculate on how things would be if he didn't exist.
Well, its "I define my own internet standards" war microsoft has been going under for the past.. what? 10 years? definitely didn't help "the internet".
@StackedCrooked Insomuch as some war between some countries was inevitably going to happen at some point between the start of the 20th century and the heat death of the universe, sure.
the only reason Microsoft defining their own standards for a long time even meant anything is because nobody else was competing with them in the Internet space.
@Jefffrey It's highly debatable to suggest that Microsoft's moronic practices with IE caused any real harm, and even more so to suggest that in this Microsoft were a net negative despite the fact that they basically single-handedly ushered in the home computing age.
@sehe Seems to me like this round, they got bitchslapped repeatedly by the EU for trying to use their dominant OS position to try to win. So did the EU just not care first time around? I admittedly was not really taking much part in it, being only like, 8 years old.
@StackedCrooked From what I understand, Netscape had a massive dominant position, then they threw it away by from-scratch rewriting and asking people to pay for the browser.
meanwhile Microsoft implemented new features instead and gave IE away for free.
@Puppy Yes it took the EU a long time to react. They did not understand the technology nor its implications, nor did they really care because the "internet in homes" concept was still brand new and not really ingrained.
Its add-ons system, themeability, customisability, perceived security, and general "coolness" (peoples' parents were starting to use IE) were Firefox's greatest assets.
@sehe Well, I'm too young for this, of course, but I remember my early days with web dev and it was awful to say the least. Basically there were this 5-6 common things that you had to hack in to make IE work. Firefox, Opera and all worked just fine. With IE, either they didn't have such a feature or they the hack that you had to use was terrible and didn't work similarly anyway.
I remember in the early days of IE you could visit a site and a popup would appear "This site requires a ActiveX plugin. Click yes to install.". How insanely insecure it was.
Just my old experience, though. I don't have anything to prove anything, but I'm pretty sure that if you ask such a thing to a professional web dev, he will tell you something like that.
@Jefffrey The only reason you could even try to develop that site is because Microsoft changed the landscape so that browsers were free, and all the new features offered by Firefox and Opera were iterations on what IE brought to the table to stomp Netscape.
IE and Firefox of the Chrome-emergence period both had terrible UIs.
@Jefffrey So I'm saying you're bitching about having trouble developing for IE, and therefore IE is bad, when the whole situation would never have arisen without IE.
yeah there's no point second-guessing what would or wouldn't have been without IE. in our timeline, it was responsible for the growth of free and easy web browsing. fact.
my point is that sure, Microsoft could have done better, but it's hardly convincing that just because they could have done better therefore they were a bad thing.
@Ell meh cba to do an analysis, but it's all over the fracking place and even less native-looking than Chrome
it's like they saw Chrome's paradigm, and IE's new paradigm, and Windows' ribbon interface, and rushed into pushing it all together so that they didn't get left behind
@Jefffrey "it was awful to say the least" - can you be more vague? What was? The internet? IE? Microsoft? Also, still it might have been awful, but it could still have helped the internet by making it a commodity.
I honestly don't know what was it like before, but when firefox came out and opera came out, IE had no reason to complicate the life of everybody for the sake of having their own standards. And at that time the idea of a "common web standard" was very strong.
@Jefffrey Rephrased, Opera and Firefox had no reason to complicate the life of everybody for having their own standards, instead of imitating the market leader with all the users.
Clang in particular is the golden boy of how to enter a market dominated by one or two existing technologies.
CSS originally provided two layouting mechanisms: everying fixed or everying "percent"-based. This sucks so badly because in reality you nearly always need a fixed part (on this page it's the starboard and bottom) and make the rest flexible.