"Visual C++ provides a powerful and flexible development environment for creating Windows Metro-style applications as well as desktop applications in native C++ or based on Microsoft .NET–based applications."
It amuses me how they put Metro-style crap in front of desktop applications
"as well as desktop applications" - like that is a thing of the past
At least there is some direct targeting for x64 platforms, no more necromancy involved in order to support something that has been available for the better part of the last decade.
Chrome creates multiple processes for every tab with one additional primary which holds key components prone to error. Something goes woosh in one of the tabs, the primary dies and Chrome dies. I don't like their selling point of separate failsafe process per tab methodology.
@Jeremy Benefits of a render architect. :D i7, 16 GB of DDR3 RAM, 2xHD6990. Sure, sometime it makes noise that would put the Concorde to shame, but it's well worth it. :D
I prefer respect for standards, if Microsoft gets their shit straight with Internet Explorer (and from what I hear, IE 9 tries hard), I'll be willing to support it in my further development.
web standards are a mess. I swear I was working on a project with CSS, I had to do many hacks to get it working cross-browser. Mind you, I am not a good web-developer.
I actually detect whether there is IE~6 on the machine with JS and output a little box on the page that they should upgrade their browser to the newest version or better yet, try Chrome, Firefox or Safari.
@DeadMG True enough, with today's IDEs, it's almost pointless. But still, it's a habit. Hard to get rid off. Though, I seem not to use it on Apple platforms, well at least when Obj-C is concerned
It's more of a necessity on Apple platforms, I tend to do only the boilerplate with it and interconnect it with C++ (and the crap Apple forces my hand remains in Obj-C)
It has a cute syntax though, [object message] style