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CP to rally behind MS?

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  • K Kevnar

    Isn't this how "The Empire" got started in Starwars? Shifty trade practices? Perhaps Emperor Bill will take on a Sith apprentice one day... (Cue "Duel of the Fates...") :eek: Why not throw away a dime? I throw away ten pennies all the time.

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    Navin
    wrote on last edited by
    #35

    kevnar wrote: Isn't this how "The Empire" got started in Starwars? Shifty trade practices? Perhaps Emperor Bill will take on a Sith apprentice one day... (Cue "Duel of the Fates...") It's already hapenning! :) recursive adj. See RECURSIVE.

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    • M Martin Marvinski

      You know what we should do? We should start a campaign here at codeproject to help Microsoft in its antitrust fight by writing letters to our elected officals telling them to back off. Maybe Chris could get in touch with MS, and they could tell us who to contact and provide us with strategies and insight. I believe in fair competion and I think what Oracle and Sun are doing is just wrong. Also, Chris could set up a forum here where we could discuss ways to prevent Oracle and Sun from harming our livelyhoods. Remember they are attacking us, as well as Microsoft with their sneaky tactics. MS has the most developers. What happens to the economy when we loose our jobs thanks to the states? We need to be more vocal in our support of Microsoft.

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      Kevnar
      wrote on last edited by
      #36

      My two cents: A lot of people want to see Microsoft completely destroyed. I used to be sort of nuetral, but after reading posts on CP I'm a lot more informed. I don't want to see MS destroyed, but I do agree that other companies should be given a fighting chance. Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about. Inevitably people start to get exploited. Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then? Will we switch from a democracy to a corpocracy? And what will become of the children? :eek: (JJ) I'm wondering if the technical failures Martin pointed out in competing OSes were possibly a result of Microsoft's aggressive marketing campaign on some level or other. It's not impossible... :suss: Why not throw away a dime? I throw away ten pennies all the time.

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      • C Chris Losinger

        Tim Smith wrote: MS/Linux/FreeBSD true. but put Mac into that mix and the answer's not so easy. i've wanted a mac for a long time, but i have too much invested in MS apps to make the switch. -c


        A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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        Alvaro Mendez
        wrote on last edited by
        #37

        Not to mention that middle finger (for the right button click).... what would you do with it? :-O Wait, don't answer. :-D Seriously though, I wonder if adding a second button to the Mac mouse would have made a difference. A while back I was working for a company that contemplated porting to the Mac and one of the complaints was: only one button on the mouse. Needless to say, the project was canned along with the manager who suggested it. Regards, Alvaro Intellectuals solve problems; geniuses prevent them. - Albert Einstein

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        • T Tim Smith

          OS/2 failed because of IBMs own mismanagement. But I have to agree that the IBM/MS-DOS contract probably did more for MS than anything else. I just don't agree that people use MS because they are too stupid to know better. If given a choice for a home computer between MS/Linux/FreeBSD, MS would win out. It is much easier to install than L/F. There is also the application support for MS. Not to mention the real deciding factor, GAMES. :) Tim Smith I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?

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          ColinDavies
          wrote on last edited by
          #38

          Tim Smith wrote: But I have to agree that the IBM/MS-DOS contract probably did more for MS than anything else. Just as an observation, from memory, MS slipped in a clause that they could allow MS-DOS to used on non IBM machines, and this initiated the whole PC- Clone industry. At the time IBM didn't appear to realise the significance of that clause. Regardz Colin J Davies

          Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

          I think it's interesting that we often qu-ote each other in our sigs and attribute the qu-otes to "The Lounge". --- Daniel Fergusson, "The Lounge"

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          • K Kevnar

            My two cents: A lot of people want to see Microsoft completely destroyed. I used to be sort of nuetral, but after reading posts on CP I'm a lot more informed. I don't want to see MS destroyed, but I do agree that other companies should be given a fighting chance. Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about. Inevitably people start to get exploited. Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then? Will we switch from a democracy to a corpocracy? And what will become of the children? :eek: (JJ) I'm wondering if the technical failures Martin pointed out in competing OSes were possibly a result of Microsoft's aggressive marketing campaign on some level or other. It's not impossible... :suss: Why not throw away a dime? I throw away ten pennies all the time.

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            ColinDavies
            wrote on last edited by
            #39

            kevnar wrote: Will we switch from a democracy to a corpocracy? I think we already are, although I'm unsure what a corpocracy is 100% still. kevnar wrote: And what will become of the children? Paid slavery, I guess. :-( Regardz Colin J Davies

            Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

            I think it's interesting that we often qu-ote each other in our sigs and attribute the qu-otes to "The Lounge". --- Daniel Fergusson, "The Lounge"

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            • K Kevnar

              My two cents: A lot of people want to see Microsoft completely destroyed. I used to be sort of nuetral, but after reading posts on CP I'm a lot more informed. I don't want to see MS destroyed, but I do agree that other companies should be given a fighting chance. Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about. Inevitably people start to get exploited. Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then? Will we switch from a democracy to a corpocracy? And what will become of the children? :eek: (JJ) I'm wondering if the technical failures Martin pointed out in competing OSes were possibly a result of Microsoft's aggressive marketing campaign on some level or other. It's not impossible... :suss: Why not throw away a dime? I throw away ten pennies all the time.

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              Martin Marvinski
              wrote on last edited by
              #40

              Ok. Why don't those OEMs just install OS/2? Becauase Windows is better!!!!! They can just say screw you MS. I'm sure IBM will be happy to license OS/2 to them. They don't want too because OS/2 is crap that no one wants. The OEMs are using the government to get windows more cheaply. They are trying to steal from MS. They already get a steep discount, but they are still not satisfied!! MS has a right to give the more helpful OEMs a better deal because they do more for MS!! kevnar wrote: Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about Not true. Natural Monopolies are allowed by law. MS is a natural monopoly IMHO. Its just that lousy SUN and Oracle decided to bribe government to hurt MS, but SUN and Oracle don't even make products for consumers!!! Of course MS has a monopoly if no one else makes a consumer OS!!. kevnar wrote: Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then SUN is the villan here. It is trying to get the national ID cards going, so is Oracle. They want to run the software that monitors you and your children. MS just wants to sell consumer software.

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              • M Martin Marvinski

                Chris Losinger wrote: they did not. they marketed better than everyone else If the average person couldn't use Windows becuase it was too complicated, then it wouldn't sell no matter how much it was marketed(word of mouth). If the consumer can't figure out how to do basic things they can't use it!!! They shouldn't be expected to have a CS degree to check their email or type a document. BTW Apple's only problem was that they priced their products too high. Linux/Unix is only good for experienced Pros with CS degrees. Windows allows people who need computers but aren't programmers to do their work with a minimal learning curve.

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                Chris Losinger
                wrote on last edited by
                #41

                all basically true. but, MS has been out-marketing (legally, or otherwise, depending on who you believe) since before Windows - remember DR-DOS ? i really can't think of a single case where their products have won on their own merits, when there's been real competition. MS-DOS ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. Windows 1 sucked. Windows 2 sucked. Windows 3.1 was useable. and by the time Win95 came along, they had driven off all competition in the OS market - people stopped trying to make an OS, knowing they couldn't get it bundled on new PCs. IE ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. the whole browser-is-part-of-the-OS story was nonsense. Office ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. when real competition shows up - MS just bundles. i like having a nearly universal platform to develop on, but MS itself sucks. -c


                A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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                • R Ric 0

                  Do you work for Microsoft or something?

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                  Martin Marvinski
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #42

                  No. Read my bio.

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                  • M Martin Marvinski

                    Ok. Why don't those OEMs just install OS/2? Becauase Windows is better!!!!! They can just say screw you MS. I'm sure IBM will be happy to license OS/2 to them. They don't want too because OS/2 is crap that no one wants. The OEMs are using the government to get windows more cheaply. They are trying to steal from MS. They already get a steep discount, but they are still not satisfied!! MS has a right to give the more helpful OEMs a better deal because they do more for MS!! kevnar wrote: Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about Not true. Natural Monopolies are allowed by law. MS is a natural monopoly IMHO. Its just that lousy SUN and Oracle decided to bribe government to hurt MS, but SUN and Oracle don't even make products for consumers!!! Of course MS has a monopoly if no one else makes a consumer OS!!. kevnar wrote: Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then SUN is the villan here. It is trying to get the national ID cards going, so is Oracle. They want to run the software that monitors you and your children. MS just wants to sell consumer software.

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                    Ric 0
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #43

                    Do you work for Microsoft or something?

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                    • M Martin Marvinski

                      Ok. Why don't those OEMs just install OS/2? Becauase Windows is better!!!!! They can just say screw you MS. I'm sure IBM will be happy to license OS/2 to them. They don't want too because OS/2 is crap that no one wants. The OEMs are using the government to get windows more cheaply. They are trying to steal from MS. They already get a steep discount, but they are still not satisfied!! MS has a right to give the more helpful OEMs a better deal because they do more for MS!! kevnar wrote: Monopolies are bad news no matter what field you're talking about Not true. Natural Monopolies are allowed by law. MS is a natural monopoly IMHO. Its just that lousy SUN and Oracle decided to bribe government to hurt MS, but SUN and Oracle don't even make products for consumers!!! Of course MS has a monopoly if no one else makes a consumer OS!!. kevnar wrote: Eventually if computers start running more and more of our lives for us, and Microsoft is running more and more computers, what happens then SUN is the villan here. It is trying to get the national ID cards going, so is Oracle. They want to run the software that monitors you and your children. MS just wants to sell consumer software.

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                      Mike Nordell
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #44

                      Ok. Why don't those OEMs just install OS/2? Becauase Windows is better!!!!! I could say that you are either a blatant liar, or you are so firetrucking stupid you are a shame to humankind. It could also be that you are under the age of 15 (12?) and don't know what you're talking about, and therefore should not have been let near a 'net connection to comment on this issue. Suffice it to say, you're both too clueless and ignorant to write what you just wrote. /Mike

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                      • M Martin Marvinski

                        Chris Losinger wrote: they did not. they marketed better than everyone else If the average person couldn't use Windows becuase it was too complicated, then it wouldn't sell no matter how much it was marketed(word of mouth). If the consumer can't figure out how to do basic things they can't use it!!! They shouldn't be expected to have a CS degree to check their email or type a document. BTW Apple's only problem was that they priced their products too high. Linux/Unix is only good for experienced Pros with CS degrees. Windows allows people who need computers but aren't programmers to do their work with a minimal learning curve.

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                        ColinDavies
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #45

                        Martin Marvinski wrote: If the average person couldn't use Windows becuase it was too complicated, then it wouldn't sell no matter how much it was marketed(word of mouth). Marvin, I dispute that, as I personally know people who have purchased a PC with Windows and are unable to operate it. Mainly senior citizen type people. But they were sold a PC an OS and Internet package. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies

                        Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                        I think it's interesting that we often qu-ote each other in our sigs and attribute the qu-otes to "The Lounge". --- Daniel Fergusson, "The Lounge"

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                        • C Chris Losinger

                          all basically true. but, MS has been out-marketing (legally, or otherwise, depending on who you believe) since before Windows - remember DR-DOS ? i really can't think of a single case where their products have won on their own merits, when there's been real competition. MS-DOS ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. Windows 1 sucked. Windows 2 sucked. Windows 3.1 was useable. and by the time Win95 came along, they had driven off all competition in the OS market - people stopped trying to make an OS, knowing they couldn't get it bundled on new PCs. IE ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. the whole browser-is-part-of-the-OS story was nonsense. Office ? no. there were better products out there, but MS managed to get their stuff bundled with new PCs. when real competition shows up - MS just bundles. i like having a nearly universal platform to develop on, but MS itself sucks. -c


                          A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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                          ColinDavies
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #46

                          Chris Losinger wrote: i like having a nearly universal platform to develop on, but MS itself sucks. My feelings as well Chris, I can't be bothered now trying to make stuff multi paltform. SO I actually hope MS stays at the head of the pack as a monopoly. Regardz Colin J Davies

                          Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                          I think it's interesting that we often qu-ote each other in our sigs and attribute the qu-otes to "The Lounge". --- Daniel Fergusson, "The Lounge"

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                          • C Chris Losinger

                            Martin Marvinski wrote: Remember they are attacking us are you a programmer or a Microsoft Programmer? i'm a programmer. -c


                            A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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                            Bill Leibold
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #47

                            Chris Losinger wrote: are you a programmer or a Microsoft Programmer? I am proudly a Microsoft programmer!

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                            • M Mike Nordell

                              Ok. Why don't those OEMs just install OS/2? Becauase Windows is better!!!!! I could say that you are either a blatant liar, or you are so firetrucking stupid you are a shame to humankind. It could also be that you are under the age of 15 (12?) and don't know what you're talking about, and therefore should not have been let near a 'net connection to comment on this issue. Suffice it to say, you're both too clueless and ignorant to write what you just wrote. /Mike

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                              Martin Marvinski
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #48

                              Who do you work for? Sun, IBM, or Oracle. Why don't you start an OEM online and sell PCs with OS/2. You'll see how many orders you get. Just register a domain name, Install linux and PostgreSQL and buy the parts as the orders come in(If you even get any:-D ). Just leave me and MS alone. I won't butt into your buisness, and you just stay out of MS's. Remember its you UNIX guys who are starting this antitrust Sh*t.

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                              • M Martin Marvinski

                                Jamie Hale wrote: This is utter crap. Perhaps you and I "instinctively" know what to do, but I've spent many hours pulling my hair out trying to explain/demonstrate a doubleclick. I don't belive this. Any eight year old can figure Windows out. You turn it on, and then point and click. Jamie Hale wrote: Personally, I think PCs should be for CS grads and nerds like us Thats the attitude that SUN and Oracle have. Thats why they have to resort to lawsuits. Jamie Hale wrote: I've moved to a geek platform. I code for Windows to pay the bills - I code for Linux because I'm cool.) Don't get me wrong. I use Linux internally for a mail server, web server, and as a LDAP server. But I also use SQL Server. I run a consulting buisness, and many times I put Linux on the client's servers(I bid for most jobs, and if I save on license fees, its more money for me), but I *always* make sure Windows is on the desktop. Jamie Hale wrote: And I think it's up to MS and others to come up with a truly "instinctive" machine for the general population. Windows most definitely is NOT for everyone. MS did that with "BOB". No one bought it because it insulted their intelligence.

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                                Christian Graus
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #49

                                Martin Marvinski wrote: I don't belive this. Any eight year old can figure Windows out. You turn it on, and then point and click. I'm sure tracking an animal and killing it with a spear is instinctive to Kalihari Bushmen as well. you're presuming what seems simple to you is simple. Yes, a child can pick up point and click, *if* someone is there to explain it. Double clicking, dragging an outline, etc. is a bit harder. I have a 6 year old, so I can speak from experience. Martin Marvinski wrote: MS did that with "BOB". No one bought it because it insulted their intelligence. No-one bought it because it was crap and ran like a dog. If it was because it insulted their intelligence, no-one would have bought OFfice since the BOB code got turned into Office Assistant. Christian The tragedy of cyberspace - that so much can travel so far, and yet mean so little. "I'm somewhat suspicious of STL though. My (test,experimental) program worked first time. Whats that all about??!?! - Jon Hulatt, 22/3/2002

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                                • C ColinDavies

                                  Chris Losinger wrote: i like having a nearly universal platform to develop on, but MS itself sucks. My feelings as well Chris, I can't be bothered now trying to make stuff multi paltform. SO I actually hope MS stays at the head of the pack as a monopoly. Regardz Colin J Davies

                                  Sonork ID 100.9197:Colin

                                  I think it's interesting that we often qu-ote each other in our sigs and attribute the qu-otes to "The Lounge". --- Daniel Fergusson, "The Lounge"

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                                  Daniel Ferguson
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #50

                                  ****Colin Davies wrote: So I actually hope MS stays at the head of the pack as a monopoly I don't want them to continue their monopoly. Having real competition would much better for the users of computers. "There is a fine line between lunacy and genius; it is my goal in life to keep them guessing just where the line lies..." -- Unknown

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                                  • C Chris Losinger

                                    Tim Smith wrote: MS/Linux/FreeBSD true. but put Mac into that mix and the answer's not so easy. i've wanted a mac for a long time, but i have too much invested in MS apps to make the switch. -c


                                    A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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                                    Richard Stringer
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #51

                                    You saved youself some money. Richard If a packet hits a pocket on a socket on a port, and the bus is interrupted at a very last resort, and the access of the memory makes your floppy disk abort, then the socket packet pocket has an error to report. If your cursor finds a menu item followed by a dash, and the double-clicking icon puts your window in the trash, and your data is corrupted 'cause the index doesn't hash, then your situation's hopeless and your system's gonna crash!!!

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                                    • M Martin Marvinski

                                      You know what we should do? We should start a campaign here at codeproject to help Microsoft in its antitrust fight by writing letters to our elected officals telling them to back off. Maybe Chris could get in touch with MS, and they could tell us who to contact and provide us with strategies and insight. I believe in fair competion and I think what Oracle and Sun are doing is just wrong. Also, Chris could set up a forum here where we could discuss ways to prevent Oracle and Sun from harming our livelyhoods. Remember they are attacking us, as well as Microsoft with their sneaky tactics. MS has the most developers. What happens to the economy when we loose our jobs thanks to the states? We need to be more vocal in our support of Microsoft.

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                                      C Offline
                                      Christian Graus
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #52

                                      Martin Marvinski wrote: You know what we should do? We should start a campaign here at codeproject to help Microsoft in its antitrust fight by writing letters to our elected officals telling them to back off. Yeah, that'll work. We'll, um, write letters. Martin Marvinski wrote: Maybe Chris could get in touch with MS, and they could tell us who to contact and provide us with strategies and insight. I believe in fair competion and I think what Oracle and Sun are doing is just wrong. Read that again. You obviously know nothing of Microsoft's history. What comes around, goes around. Martin Marvinski wrote: Also, Chris could set up a forum here where we could discuss ways to prevent Oracle and Sun from harming our livelyhoods. I know, let's kill Scott McNealy and Larry Ellison. Larry is in my sights already, because the tools that come with Oracle are so very, very bad. Sitting around talking is probably the most constructive thing we can do, it will at least create the illusion we can do something to affect what Sun or Oracle are doing. Christian The tragedy of cyberspace - that so much can travel so far, and yet mean so little. "I'm somewhat suspicious of STL though. My (test,experimental) program worked first time. Whats that all about??!?! - Jon Hulatt, 22/3/2002

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                                      • J Jeremy Falcon

                                        Martin Marvinski wrote: BTW Sun doesn't make a user friendly OS. I have to ask... Have you ever used Solaris? It's straight GUI, and compared to other Unixes it *is* friendlier. Don't get me wrong, I don't like Java much and I think Sun is full of crap for the suit, but a lawsuit doesn't make an OS any worse IMHO. Jeremy L. Falcon "The One Who Said, 'The One Who Said...'" Homepage : Feature Article : Sonork = 100.16311

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                                        R Offline
                                        Richard Stringer
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #53

                                        rm -r If a packet hits a pocket on a socket on a port, and the bus is interrupted at a very last resort, and the access of the memory makes your floppy disk abort, then the socket packet pocket has an error to report. If your cursor finds a menu item followed by a dash, and the double-clicking icon puts your window in the trash, and your data is corrupted 'cause the index doesn't hash, then your situation's hopeless and your system's gonna crash!!!

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • C Chris Losinger

                                          Tim Smith wrote: MS/Linux/FreeBSD true. but put Mac into that mix and the answer's not so easy. i've wanted a mac for a long time, but i have too much invested in MS apps to make the switch. -c


                                          A man usually falls in love with a woman who asks the kinds of questions he is able to answer.    Ronald Colman Smaller Animals Software, Inc.

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                                          C Offline
                                          Christian Graus
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #54

                                          It's funny how arguments on ease of use always side step the Mac. I'm with you. I'd LOVE a notebook running OSX, but I have too much invested in M$, and I doubt I could find work on the Mac, so why invest time and money in it ? The Mac comes with a C++ compiler that is more standards compliant than VC6. Christian The tragedy of cyberspace - that so much can travel so far, and yet mean so little. "I'm somewhat suspicious of STL though. My (test,experimental) program worked first time. Whats that all about??!?! - Jon Hulatt, 22/3/2002

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