yeah....you know how great it was to have an adapter at work and home
and I can charge both air and pro devices?
user559633
I fail to see how this isn't a major step back to accommodate a smaller form factor that people don't care about. I think Apple has lost their charm under new leadership -- no one cares about an extra 200g or 1cm.
Was Apple really convinced in their hive that coming out with a laptop that wasn't necessarily thinner would have not been accepted by the general public?
Would it have killed them to maybe give one standard USB port?
ease the pain slowly
user559633
I don't know. They're also on yearly releases of iPhone, so I think they're overmilking their cash cows
user559633
Like the headphone jack -- definitely removed to accommodate a thinner profile, but I don't think people would make that tradeoff.
hey, Andras. I can make a deal with you. When it gets to a certain time of the night when you really want to go to bed and you're still online, I can kick you to help motivate you to bed :P
Jon, Martijn and Madara will definitely know I had it coming:P
user559633
i took a bath earlier today, got out, and felt weirdly okay. like, i didn't feel anxious or mildly sick. it then occurred to me that's what "relaxed" feels like
@idjaw I think this is what happens when you decide that designers should call the shots. Customers don't care about your ~~design film~~ or the ~~vision~~.
Designers help shape the feel of the product and sand off the engineering "technically it's better this way", and if you let them go crazy, they'll take your escape key and give you renders of a laptop that reflects creativity and ignores realities.
Ah yes, the users are used. A favorite term of Stallman's.
user559633
I think Apple has greatly benefitted from highly-productive, technical people using their hardware over the past ten years, and if culture stops seeing people in tech and business using Apple hardware, it will encourage a shift away from the prosumers and consumers.
user559633
Oh, I'm not talking about freedoms or corporate manipulation of users or anything, I'm talking in ownership of machines (in so far as you even own your own computer anymore)
magsafe has saved my laptop twice this year -- and that's just counting times i remember. three. a child ran into the power cord while i was charging it at an airport
Naw, just writing some interface code. We have a c++ api which is a little hairy, and definitely no fun to write business logic in. So I'm writing a wrapper to make the rest easier.
So I have datastreams which I'm pulling and sending into a repository (probably two stages with an in-memory cache first). This datastore needs to be interact with other users in a few ways: some procedural calls with no real return value except an error code; some request/response calls; and some streams. I've been working on handling the data vendor's API, and that's now settling down, so I need to turn again to the interaction side of things.
I can always do something manual using sockets, and might still, but I'm undecided.
That's kind of what's pulling me towards autobahn, then I can use the same approach for the rpc and for the subscription.
I experimented with it when I wanted to have some JS/Python interop a few years ago. Eventually we went in a different direction, but it's been lurking at the back of my mind for a while.
NHL; NFL; CFL; NBA; NCAA FB; and the World Series. Hell, even MLS postseason, and LargeCanadianCity's team is in play. How am I supposed to get any work done?
the problem is that people will google for any code there in the q and they'll be redirected to "sentinel is no particular value, just some end marker as explained by this java code" :D
dubious choices like using aluminium for covering material, leaving out ports, not enough extension space for that extra inch etc, and all for a hefty price with good profit margin for apple.
On this note, my next machine will be not-a-mac 32Gb RAM/i7 with a 500Gb SSD, which will come in around £950-1100 depending on which version I get. Apple burned me with their nonsense repairs policy, so I was almost totally done with them anyway, the ugly-assed new macbook was just the icing on the cake.
My laptop is my office that I carry around with me, so I justify spending maybe £1,800 on it by amortising the cost over its three-year lifetime at around £12 a week. Given the relative absence of driver issues, printing problems, failure to return from hibernation and all the other crap I put up with on (admittedly, Windows) PCs that seems like money well spent
Like I said I've not seen the specifications of anything new, but Paul Graham very clearly put the writing on the wall for Apple in PyCon 2013 (?) in Santa Clara
@holdenweb apart from the display - you can spec up a pretty awesome laptop for less than the cost of a macbook and install linux... (that's my preferred approach for dev laptops anyway...)