Please create an account to participate in the Slashdot moderation system

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror

Comment Wasn't Win32 written in C ? (Score 2) 183

Isn't Win32 written in C in any case? Does anyone really USE all that COM+ stuff for anything useful? It's hard to imagine even an AI could write a worse COM layer than what is currently in Windows.

I kind of welcome a new version of Notepad.exe written in Rust as long as it doesn't have tabs. Maybe it'll only have half as many bugs as the original version?

PS - Sorry if I'm just skimming the surface here, I was never smart enough to understand much C++. I barely managed to get my head half-way around Java where everything was descended from java.lang.Object instead of some mix of new char[] and void* using RAII.

PPS - Can I PLEASE hope for a web-browser that wasn't written by Google (like MS Edge)? (No offense to that one company but I can only put so many eggs in one basket)

Comment American Express (Score 3, Insightful) 159

If you want a credit card with great rewards but a chance at not being carried, don't they already call that American Express? Or Discover.

Diluting your own standard seems like a great way to endanger your core business. But, I guess arrogance, greed and incompetence is the current business trend.

Comment Re:Good. Steam is a CHILDREN FRIENDLY platform. (Score 1) 123

Control of money (credit cards) is one great way to limit that... Steam is probably one of the safer places online. (They at least require payment for full features making alternate accounts harder to gimmick)

Compare that with a web nanny proxy's effectiveness for the internet at large.

Comment Re:Meh? (Score 1) 150

> What's more impressive is with a product that's GIVEN AWAY FREE

When's the last time you paid for Windows? (usually comes free on integrated laptop / desktop, or non-activated free ISO installation)

Comment Re:Congrats to Linux Devs and Distros! (Score 1) 150

> Not everyone is a full geek, and not a lot of people understand what you mean when you tell them to type in a command in the terminal.

Every user should know what a directory tree is and how to save a file someplace "safe to them". Trying to avoid this creates "software insanity".

Not every user needs to know how to use a command line, but most should have a vague idea that "the dark place" exists and other people use it. That said, anyone who installs an operating system from scratch should probably be able to make the leap of "finding the dark place" and typing a few simple commands. Pre-installing an OS so most people don't need to do this, that gets a bit trickier and partly explains why things are wonky even today. Either the hardware integrator or the phone company seem to be the only folks in a position to do this now, and phone companies are especially bad at house keeping afterward. Frankly, UNIX / Linux hasn't had a good track record with pre-installation for some reason. Probably due to the tiny difference between GPL and BSD licenses. Corporate vendors just can't give up the illusion of "licensing power" and it goes strait to their head every time.

Comment Re:Looks like critical mass to me. (Score 1) 150

> ChromeOS and Android are signs of the things to come and Windows isn't even on the radar with those usage patterns.

The future is an OS that can't save files, doesn't know where to put files, and can't even properly send email? An OS crippled to not allow installing software unless it is "blessed" in a store front? An OS where editing text files and documents are difficult after thoughts?

Windows may have a lot of problems, but at least it was originally meant to be a general purpose computing platform. Not some gimmicky appliance for making phone calls (blackberry++).

Slashdot Top Deals

I have a theory that it's impossible to prove anything, but I can't prove it.

Working...