he's right ... doesn't stop me wanting it though ...
it's cumbersome ... also if you forget this use case, I think there is a case for wanting to cast objects to different types, it can help with integration ...
<?php
class One {
public function whatever() {
}
}
interface Thing {
public function whatever();
}
function inSomeClass(One $one) {
return inAnotherClassFromADifferentLibrary((Thing) $one);
}
function inAnotherClassFromADifferentLibrary(Thing $thing) {
}
?>
Anyone of you ever got any error like this? The "https://packagist.org/packages.json" file could not be downloaded: php_network_getaddresses: getaddrinfo failed: Temporary failure in name resolution searches on the web aren't clear on what this is :|
(Well, I can see the error, what I mean is: there's no clear way to fix it)
@zeeks kaspersky is now shit. I hate it now because it always "offers" me to register and there is no option to disable it or to say "by the hell, shut up, I don't want to register in your promos or anywhere else" .. so it pop-ups twice per day. Especially annoying if some fullscreen application is running (it minimizes all windows and shows that "offer" notification)
I logged into my online banking today, and there wasa message before I could do anything that I had to read, saying that a group of individuals are phoning people offering to solve their slow pc issues (obviously windows users), they then steal banking information and empty accounts ...
I'm so glad I don't have to worry about any of that ...
seriously most spyware does come from porn sites ... of all the computers I ever had to look at, in the days I bothered with that kind of thing for money, it was down to questionable browser history ... if you're brave enough, take a look at history ... it has to come from somewhere ...
they have no chance of attacking a banking network directly, so they trick stupid windows users into installing their shit ... it's always been like that ...
I'm just pointing out it has nothing to do with market share ... unix systems hold the keys to everything, but there is no effective way in ... so they take an easy route and attack people connecting to secure systems with their terrible operating systems ...
get a different os
it's not like your dad will need photoshop or directx
my (elderly) mum took to fedora very well ... since chrome and firefox have the same icon ...
> Architecturally, UNIX is built with a more robust permission structure that prevents unauthorized execution of software. While Microsoft Windows will try to run a program any way it can, even if a virus is redirecting things, UNIX will stop in its tracks when it detects an unauthorized redirection and limit any damage [source: Perrin].
@JoeWatkins Not actually true any more (or at least, doesn't need to be)
As with so many assertions that are made in OS wars, that's based on Win3-like architecture
Every Windows version that supports NTFS supports permissions on a filesystem level, just like *nix, in fact NTFS permission blocks could be better than *nix, the problem is that the default permission structures outside \windows are far too permissive
Don't get me wrong, Windows sucks in its own special way, but that argument just doesn't hold water
> Architecturally, UNIX is built with a more robust permission structure that prevents unauthorized execution of software. While Microsoft Windows will try to run a program any way it can, even if a virus is redirecting things, UNIX will stop in its tracks when it detects an unauthorized redirection and limit any damage [source: Perrin].
@seagoj if you think about it, serialize() and __get() are directly at odds with each other. __get() takes an arbitrary string and converts it to a property lookup, serialize() can't exactly pass every possible arbitrary string to __get()...
This is why Serializable and __sleep()/__wakeup() exist, to work around that exact problem - the recommended route would be Serializable (by me, anyway)
I had already defined a __sleep function that passed the right property names. Serialize was just complaining that the property didn't exist even though __get could figure it out.
@DaveRandom I think it does, in my experience it does ... it doesn't matter what protections the operating system has built in if they are willing to install software from anywhere and give it permission to execute, they invariably are willing to install and do give it permission ... the fact that most software for unix's is managed by clued up package maintainers and distributed by organized repositories goes a long way to ensure the same cannot happen in unix, coupled with the fact there are
only a handful of viruses for unix and most of them are the product of research ...
makes it a non-issue in unix, it will always, always be an issue on windows ... forever ...
@JoeWatkins So... the real problem is that in the general case, Windows users are basically doing the *nix equivalent of running as root, all the time. This is because it makes life easy for the average user who does not understand how their computer works (i.e. the vast majority of Windows users). However, if you set up your permissions properly this simply is not a problem - you'll find that when you go into large corporate networks, every machine runs Win, and none of them have viruses
It is a case of education, not capability
Certainly, saying that one OS is fundamentally better than another on those ground does not hold water
The difference is (more or less) that by default Windows gives everything 0777 perms - it does not have to be that way, you can have incredibly granular local control if you learn how group policies and permission cascades work and use them properly
But yeh, stuff like UAC is basically just pissing on that particular bonfire
The only way to make it work like it should is to learn how it works. Properly.
you have to do almost nothing in unix to be afforded security ... UAC, group policies ... you want to explain that to an OAP, we were talking about an OAP ...
Doesn't stop me being confident in my Windows install though, which at the end of the day is all I really care about
@JoeWatkins Uh-huh. And you are going to explain how chmod works to that person are you? Because it is inevitable that they will need it at some point very soon.
not at all, my mum is a happy fedora user for years, still on 17 iirc ...
she has a little clue about it ... but not much, when she was a windows user if she were presented with a box stopping her from spying on other family members with facebook, she would click whatever made it go away, she wouldn't understand it if she read it ...
it's not that unix is better, it's not that she wouldn't do the same in unix but nobody is targeting it ... she's afforded security because she isn't a target not because she knows how it works ...
@JoeWatkins yup, the "friendly" things that Win does are bullshit, no argument from me there
@JoeWatkins That has always sounded like a bad argument to me. The words "false", "security" and "sense" always spring to mind. It's not like the bad guys have signed up to an agreement not to target it or anything...
I'm not trying to say Windows is better (it really, emphatically is not) but saying it is fundamentally less secure just is not true.
Really the only reason I continue using Win as a desktop is UX. If someone made a desktop env for linux that I could abide by, I would switch tomorrow.
There's probably an element of comfort with the things I know as well
But since I do know it, quite intimately, I have no problem with this
I think it is true, not soley because of it's programming but because of it's position, it's prominence .. facts can change, maybe one day it won't be true ... because the position of unix will have changed ... but it has been like that for so long I feel comfortable calling it a fact, an observable one ...
a modern kde can look like windows ...
I never liked that about it ...
don't particularly welcome modern gnome or kde, but since I spend all my time in a console, on websites, or in an editor ... I'm not so fussed ...
@JoeWatkins It's not about the look as long as things work how I expect them to with minimal messing about (which, I admit, is less and less true as the Win version number increases)
I think I'm right in saying that there were no free compilers for ms either ... I could be wrong about that, but express wasn't a thing for damn sure ...
well it'll surely be an acpi feature, so the os needs to know how to configure it, but the hardware just needs sleep I think ... I could be wrong and probably am ...
the SP3 has another level called 'Connected StandBy', it behaves like a tablet, keeps connections, triggers alarms, all that kind of stuff, but Hibernate is not available by default any more.
@DaveRandom I don't remember having one, I remember having a vc98 (I think or 96 I forget) license for a year ... so I used windows for a while, and found vm's terrible and unix a much better place for me even when programming was still a thing I didn't tell anyone about ...
for the first time, a couple of days ago, my 9 year old girl said she wants to learn how to program, and I said it was hard and she'd have to work at it, and it would upset her when she got it wrong and she would get it wrong ... and she was still keen ...
anyone ever tried that with any success ??
I tried with the misses
my daughter has said before she wanted to learn but I just said "great, good for you", "I look forward to teaching you" ... or something of that nature because I couldn't imagine it ... think I can now ..
@JoeWatkins I was chatting to a guy at phpnw last year who was involved with codeclub.org.uk, he was saying that basically with the ones who are interested its not a problem, they just keep coming back for more
she's right in the middle of 9-11 ... "want to do what daddy does" comes out when she learns the name of daddy's job, pretty sure that's true for everyone ... but I think doable ...
I've seen tweets that his kids program actually yeah
no club on iow
wonder if I could stand to teach kids ...
hate the idea of teaching adults, we argue too much about everything ...
@JoeWatkins just give her a laptop and put it on a wireless network that won't give her access to anything apart from python.org, and give her a csv file full of possible keys for the actual wireless network :-P
no it is scratch ... it's installed on the rpi by default and I read a little about it before ... it seemed like a good way to turn it into the kinds of games she already plays online ...
it's not a feeling of achievement when assembly works, every time, it is surprise ...
those people love punishment, don't question it ...
the most recent books added to my collection are assembly ...
I find it hard to read about even today ... I'll get through them, a few times, maybe some will sink in ... I'll get done what I'm trying to do and probably forget most of it ... happened before ...
The thing is, assembler itself is actually pretty simple. The thing I have difficulty with is grasping how the big picture breaks down into primitive operations like that
It's more of a mathematical logic puzzle than anything else
I don't find any of it to be simple ... at all ...
simple like c is simple because it has about 10 built in functions ...
simple is relative, I know a fair bit about it, knowledge I've used in the real world, but I'm way way more comfortable thinking about objects or even pointers than addresses and instructions ...
systems got too complicated ... imagine trying to write any single thing you done in the last year soley in assembly from scratch ...
even C is getting pushed out of the way ... I don't know anyone that does C most of the time except for me ... all of my time infact if I like ... if it weren't for that, and it weren't being used in the context of PHP, I probably wouldn't get to write in C and would forget all about that ... which is a horrible thought ...
@JoeWatkins He floated an idea on list a few weeks, I'm kicking around some ideas for a new OO API, I should probably talk to him about that actually, he may be working on something as well
I see the benefit ... but but ... it'll break pthreads ability to be useful with resources in multiple threads, not just sockets but images and other stuff that you might really want ...