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22:04
@FlorianMargaine yea home brew
it's my first time
We've all ben Shmiddty'd
@Loktar the outcome of this is very similar to your jQuery plugin s.ma.tt/blog-content/plugins/jetpack/modules/holiday-snow/…
DHTML, so hardcore
@rlemon it's ok if it hurts, it feels better after
@Benjamin did Reed reply?
22:13
@JohanLarsson nope
@Zirak where you at?
@BenjaminGruenbaum ping me when he does, I want to read.
@JohanLarsson ping him about it if you see him in the C# room :D
I'm afraid of pinging him, he gets so many pings. He is there now though.
@someDoge might need to have the Catalytic Converter replaced...
> codenamed Spartan
obvious ploy to entice nerds
same with their stupid phone "ai", Cortana
Do you think of MS as evil?
> despite a new appearance (and perks like extensions), this new browser would retain the foundations of Microsoft's current web technology.
So they're just reskinning it
22:33
*rebranding
@Meredith I was about to quote that lol. I guess we're still not getting native promises in Spartan, then, either
I mean, I think rebranding IE is still a good idea. Modern IE really doesn't deserve the massive stigma that older IE has earned.
It still doesn't have promises...
Yeah IE isn't great, but it's not going to compete with other browsers if it's still IE
Promises is still part of the ES6 Proposal; I don't even think it's necessarily a confirmed part of ES6; so it seems pretty silly to start docking points for not supporting it.
22:36
promises
it's ok for things like promises to not be implemented... it's easily shimmable
@Retsam Of course it does.
I don't understand why MS needs to implement their own rendering engines and all and maintain them, when there are clearly superior alternatives out there.
All the user really cares about is the browser's UI anyway.
How easy bookmarks are and the such.
Well, competition is a good thing
@Meredith I don't think that it is in this case.
Baloney.
22:39
This competition is more costly than it is beneficial
They really should only be using their rendering engine if it's better though
You could say the same thing about Firefox having a different rendering engine than Chrome?
It forces every web developer who is in a business model to think twice before they code, endless bugs are caused either because shit doesn't work in IE, or because it was made to work in IE so it works like crap for everything else.
"Oh, Firefox sucks, it should just use the Chrome rendering engine, why are they using such an obviously inferior engine"
22:40
@Retsam I'd be a happier man if FF used Webkit, yes.
As long as an engine sticks to the spec, I don't care how good it is
A monopoly on web tech is how we got into this mess. It's sure not the solution.
@SecondRikudo not even chrome uses webkit
@SecondRikudo it is also a driving force behind innovation...
@Meredith But then they don't, and crap ensues.
22:41
So I don't care what engine microsoft uses
@Retsam a monopoly by a closed-source web tech is how we got into this mess.
I care that the engine they use doesn't stick to the spec
webkit and blink are different, really
@FlorianMargaine there is great power wielded by those who can accept pull requests
sure, but it's still forkable in the end
22:43
@SecondRikudo But really, are you really arguing "IE deserves the stigma cause it doesn't use Webkit"?
things would've been different if we could've forked ie6
@Retsam No, I'm arguing that IE deserves the stigma because it doesn't learn much from past mistake.
Even as of now, IE is a half decent browser and nothing more
@SecondRikudo Really? Did you see the ridiculously massive improvement of IE9 over IE8? How is that not "learning from past mistake"
IE11 is a definitely decent browser
22:44
@FlorianMargaine It's what Chrome was 5 versions ago
Give or take.
@SecondRikudo Oh, so you mean last month?
chrome 5 versions ago was a decent browser
@SecondRikudo so... what's missing?
@Retsam Yes I mean last month
@FlorianMargaine Decent auto update.
except promises?
22:45
That's all I ask for at the moment.
And no, "use Windows Update" is not decent by any standard.
That is the one mistake they never learned from, and that is the one mistake that will ensure that we have to support IE11 years and years after it is no longer relevant.
And any other version of IE that comes shipped as a default browser with any major version of Windows for that matter.
MLM
MLM
I find that IE takes up a unnecessary part of CPU when just scrolling around with one tab (usually with the dev tools open). I use Chrome all the time and that performance hit is never noticeable.
Sure, auto-update would be nice, but man, is that not enough reason for the constant "IE sux" circlejerk on the internet, in my book.
@Retsam In mine it is.
Auto-updates are annoying
It's the single missing feature that causes every single IE related problem on the web.
22:47
Good for noob users though
If IE auto-updated, you could lose support for IE8 and the such much MUCH quicker.
@SecondRikudo Well, cool. I'm glad your view of web browser merits is so simplistic that it can be boiled down to a single criterion.
@copy Which amounts to 80% of all users really...
More
@copy I was underestimating on purpose, but you said that not me.
@Retsam I see things very simply.
22:48
Isn't Windows update automatically yet?
my browser doesn't auto update
People don't update.
there's no auto update on linux for chrome
If I don't come to my parents' home every now and then and install updates nothing will ever be updated
Which is fine.
I cringe every time I see someone talk about how they hate updating shit
22:49
@FlorianMargaine Of course there is.
I'm using chrome for linux.
Noob users don't use Linux though
My parents use linux
my wife uses linux
A statistically irrelevant amount does
my mom uses linux
can't deny that ^
22:50
But linux is irrelevant for this discussion really
Your Mom runs on Linux
not sure if that's an insult or a compliment
My point being, offices install Win7 (optimistically) and forget about it.
sudo yourMom
22:51
Pretty sure most offices still use xp
The IT man, unless he really cares, won't update to a higher version of IE, nor will he install Chrome or any other browser
In fact, many offices and business have web software that relies on a lower version of IE to work
So even if someone wanted to upgrade it would be impossible.
The IT man will run windows security updates, sorry
And the fact that the business world runs old versions of IE says more about the buisness world than it does IE.
@FlorianMargaine Maybe, maybe not.
And your last argument is irrelevant...
22:52
But security updates won't necessarily update the browser
Especially if those updates are delivered in push from a central hub (or via CD, yeah, I've seen those too)
@Retsam The business world is run by technology illiterate people on the most part, and that's fine
You're getting in another argument there... From what you're saying, IE wouldn't be used if it had auto update, or auto update would be disabled
But the default should be to advance to newer versions, and have the ability to opt out, and not the other way around.
@FlorianMargaine I'm saying auto update should be the default, and you should have an option to turn it off.
@SecondRikudo IIRC Microsoft made that easier by shipping a legacy engine with IE11
Yes, but your whole "business world" argument is, then, entirely irrelevant to the discussion on IE's quality
@BenjaminGruenbaum If you're referring to "compatibility mode" that hardly every works right.
22:55
Does IE11 support flexbox?
@Retsam No, that's not the argument.
probably not
@FlorianMargaine IE10 does.
@SecondRikudo no not that
@FlorianMargaine an outdated spec - then again no browser does a good job at that atm.
The argument is that, especially since you're dealing with technology illiterate people, your should have good defaults in place.
That's your responsibility as a dev, not as a user.
@NickDugger that's horrible.
1 message moved to Trash can
I'm a horrible person, but the IE team is even more horrible than I
they eat babies
@NickDugger weigh your words carefully.
There are members of the team in this room.
@NickDugger we can have someone from the IE team here if you want
22:57
They should feel bad
They're dealing with legacy code, just like the rest of us.
@NickDugger quick! lets fulfill Godwin's Law while we're at it! :P
and you can suggest him your improvements.
@SecondRikudo Uhh, what exactly is your argument about the business world. It sure sounded like your argument was "It's IE's fault that the business world uses old versions of IE"
@Retsam For starters, it's not just the business world.
22:58
It's ISIS's fault
People don't update by default, because they don't really give a damn
Ah, the new Nazis
@SecondRikudo agreed
@PixnBits The IE dev team is literally Hitler
That is why the default should be to do the good thing for the user, and update his shit for him.
22:59
8 mins ago, by Second Rikudo
My point being, offices install Win7 (optimistically) and forget about it.
What, exactly was your point, then?
@Retsam Offices were just an example.
If your point was "auto-update is good for the average user" (I agree) why bring the business world into the discussion?
I assure you it happen in homes as well
@Retsam Because there's no auto update, you are required (by business model) to support older versions with outdated specs and engines
Because that's still a major part of the market
And unless these people (or their computers) die, and get replaced, there's no chance of an update
@SecondRikudo No, you're required to support older versions because IE's customers want them to support older versions. Not because there's no auto update.
@copy superb homeland patriotism?
23:00
@Retsam And why do they want to support older versions?
@SecondRikudo Because it's the business world. Because something not breaking is worth far more than a shiny new web tool.
@SecondRikudo are you a PHP user? :D
@PixnBits Humor
@Retsam No, that's not the reason.
The reason is because they'd lose money if they didn't support older versions
And that's because people are still using them
And the reason people are still using 15 year old browsers is because they don't update, and there's no one to do it for them.
@SecondRikudo Uhh, as someone who works in the business world, I'm pretty sure it is. A lot of the business world usage of older IE is for internal tools.
23:02
"I need IE7 support"
why?
"because I need it!"
do you have metrics to support this claim?
"STOP TELLING ME IM WRONG I WANT IE7 SUPPORT!!!"
multiple definitions for the word tools, lol
The IE dev people are really cool people stuck at a bad job - don't forget that.
yea the one IE guy I know is pretty cool cat
And making a browser is hard
he's on the chats quite frequently
23:03
For the record, I was joking. I absolutely know that they're way smarter than me lol
Also working with the Windows api
And C++
@BenjaminGruenbaum I have absolutely nothing against John and his team, I think they are making the absolute best of a crappy situation.
when do you want-
NOW!!
I'm talking more of the direction the browser took over the years as a whole.
Yeah, also IE has so much backwards compatibility issues.
23:04
@PixnBits BROWSERS!
And they're probably working with MSVS
Rapid release cycles are definitely the way to go but if I developed something for IE7 using a proprietary API and couldn't upgrade becasue they dropped that API I'd be pissed too.
@SecondRikudo Words! Jargon! TLAs!
@NickDugger For the record, joking about killing people is a terrible terrible idea.
I never said that I was going to kill them
23:05
@BenjaminGruenbaum This is where good software design comes into play though
Given how modern VM technology is amazing, and the fact IE is built into windows as part of the shell rather than modularized - they should just run a mini-vm with mini-windows with old IE for compatibility.
If you played your hand right, you should be able to polymorphically cut out all the proprietary API and replace it with proper one at a later stage.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't think there's a need for that given how backward-compatible Windows itself is
@SecondRikudo lol... tell me a software with great design for something >20 years old
except linux
Linux sucks
23:06
@FlorianMargaine Unix?
Why should I exclude linux?
Linux and Unix are brilliantly built
never used unix, can't tell
With tools that are proven good even after years and years of development.
@SecondRikudo already a known, might be an exception
@SecondRikudo sure, in astronaut architect land it's all magic and sunshine
23:07
@BenjaminGruenbaum sufficiently advanced science...
@copy you realize IE only has those problems because of how successful it was and the only reason that netscape didn't have them is that it died. Chrome is starting to have similar problems already.
@BenjaminGruenbaum I don't know, I tend to separate any and all proprietary APIs behind a facade when I code for IE.
my 2 cents: I thank the IE team for all of the many innovations they have brought to the web. I hate shitty clients who ask for support without justifying the need for it. I snicker when I think all of the chinese government uses IE6
@SecondRikudo I'm not sure you and I mean the same thing when we talk about proprietary APIs here - I'm not talking about AJAX, I'm talking about stuff like running XAML on web pages, ActiveX and so on.
Also, I like this principle a lot: Once and only once
23:09
Also stuff like VBScript, you can't hide a programming language behind an API
@BenjaminGruenbaum Oh, well I don't do crap to that extent, sorry :P
@rlemon not to mention to herculean effort to both preserve backwards compatibility AND advance to the new way web is doing things
@SecondRikudo that's because you weren't there - but do you know what the VBScript and XAML for web pages of today are?
@BenjaminGruenbaum Right
@BenjaminGruenbaum JavaScript?
23:11
@SecondRikudo Ugh
@SecondRikudo I don't know, it's very hard to tell - for companies who spent millions on software portals to have to spend millions more just because some internet people don't like their API and Microsoft won't support them is super shitty too.
@copy You can say what you want, but it's not gotten to be the de-facto OS for servers just because it's free
@copy lol, it's actually on my toread list
@BenjaminGruenbaum Yeah well, shit advances and gets replaced.
You can't support anything forever.
@FlorianMargaine I think I put it there
23:13
Well, banks still run COBOL for 40 years now.
JavaScript will become obsolete one day as well.
@SecondRikudo "Oh yes, Windows and IE suck, but UNIX can't be bad, because look at how many people use it!"
@Retsam Windows doesn't suck.
Windows is built for a different purpose than Linux, and it achieves its goal nicely.
IE sucks, yes.
Windows sucks and linux sucks, both have so much baggage.
The only reason IE is popular is because it's shipped as the default with Windows
23:14
Had either one been built in modern standards today things would be different.
@SecondRikudo the main reason IE is the target of so many exploits is the same
@BenjaminGruenbaum linux is actually rated as the highest quality software in the world
My two cents are that as a developer linux has a lot of cool stuff at the OS level that's fun to play with windows doesn't expose or document or have but as an architecture windows always feels more sound with lower stronger abstractions. As a user I don't really care that much which I use.
@FlorianMargaine by who?
@PixnBits many people... just google
23:15
@BenjaminGruenbaum What what? Windows feels more sound?
I don't dare open my online bank account on a windows machine XD
Google can give you the opposite results, too ;)
more the point being the rubric isn't a sure thing
@SecondRikudo As a developer, stuff like IOCP and not having stuff like "everything is a file" or string manipulation and parsing as a way to pass stuff around.
@rlemon How kind of them. I enjoy patronizing locals that take care of their employees.
23:20
@rlemon ouch
I imagine corporate said "you have to put up the sign" and the franchise owner was like "ummm... but... well, okay"
"To allow our team members to celebrate the Holidays with their families, for the following days our stores will be manned entirely by orphans"
alright, big refactoring finished... even though it doesn't work yet.
but it's 00:22 here... good night
@Retsam lol
@FlorianMargaine :-o
@FlorianMargaine not on Github or some place I could see I assume?
the refactoring
I could decrypt/encrypt messages and manage users on miaou before this commit...
now I can't manage users anymore, so you can't do anything with it
23:24
heehee
but I'll fix it tomorrow... it should be fine
JetBlue++
23:38
Gah, there are two types of questions: "hi, i'm trying to do X with [Library] and it doesn't work. anyone know why?" OR "Here's my entire source code for the project I'm working on with [Library]. Can you find my bugs for me? Thanks."
Minimal. Reproducing. Example. Please. (/rant)
or "I don't know what the next step is in solving my overall problem, so I'm going to ask a vague question in the hopes that someone can tell me"
My favorite is I recently answered one that solved their immediate problem, that they were asking about, so they comment back "thanks, but now it's not working because [other problem]" and neither upvoted nor accepted my answer.
Thanks. This solved one problem, but now the preset payment contract is not selected on page load jsfiddle.net/k6mwxq9g/14. — ctrane yesterday
@Retsam member for 2 years
should have a good feel for SO Q's by now...?
You would think..
@Zirak ^
@smokers ^^
23:54
@BenjaminGruenbaum I made brownies :)
Awesome :) Enjoy!
@BadgerGirl Ah... huh.
@SecondRikudo There's some left
yer a macguffin
@BadgerGirl Are you trying to tempt me into coming over there and eating those brownies?
23:56
Yeah, they're really good.

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