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  3. Enough Chrome already!

Enough Chrome already!

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
htmlcomadobetoolscareer
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  • M MidwestLimey

    Bah! Give me good ol' pewter


    I'm largely language agnostic


    After a while they all bug me :doh:


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    John M Drescher
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    :laugh: :)

    John

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    • D Dave Sexton

      You're a cold, raw fish away from this[^] bloke :)

      But fortunately we have the nanny-state politicians who can step in to protect us poor stupid consumers, most of whom would not know a JVM from a frozen chicken. Bruce Pierson
      Because programming is an art, not a science. Marc Clifton
      I gave up when I couldn't spell "egg". Justine Allen

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      Pete OHanlon
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      It's FireFox my precious.

      Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

      My blog | My articles

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      • P Pete OHanlon

        And yet the shine seems to be going from it already.

        Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

        My blog | My articles

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        Paul Conrad
        wrote on last edited by
        #26

        Seems so, from this ZDNet[^] email I just received. Haven't had a chance to go in depth with it.

        "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham

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        • R Robert Royall

          What idiot would pay $100 for an Ubuntu CD?

          Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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          Paul Conrad
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          No kidding. :laugh: There's a 5 for you :)

          "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham

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          • P Pete OHanlon

            Robert Royall wrote:

            What idiot would pay $100 for an Ubuntu CD?

            Shhh. We were calling it BlueOrb. Don't let him in on our secret.

            Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

            My blog | My articles

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            Paul Conrad
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            I was wondering if one could just slip Windows Mojave at the guy in the original post from the other day :rolleyes:

            "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham

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            • R Robert Royall

              For two days the Lounge has been nothing but Chrome this and Chrome that. Chrome is not going to be the "Web OS" of the future, because I am already working on it[^]! Take that suckers! ;P

              Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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              David I Hunt
              wrote on last edited by
              #29

              Robert, your sig is the single most enlightening description of corporate IT that I have ever read. Kudos to you, good sir. David

              I have nothing against VB or .NET; all programming languages are respectable. It just seems that some languages attract one echelon of programmers, and other languages attract another echelon of programmers. :P

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              • R Robert Royall

                For two days the Lounge has been nothing but Chrome this and Chrome that. Chrome is not going to be the "Web OS" of the future, because I am already working on it[^]! Take that suckers! ;P

                Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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                Pawel Krakowiak
                wrote on last edited by
                #30

                Budget: $ 20-100 I think it's missing six zeros..? :laugh: Where do such people come from?

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                • R Robert Royall

                  For two days the Lounge has been nothing but Chrome this and Chrome that. Chrome is not going to be the "Web OS" of the future, because I am already working on it[^]! Take that suckers! ;P

                  Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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                  Pawel Krakowiak
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  I picked the new browser for a test drive yesterday and actually like what I see. I can't vote and emoticons are clipped on the right side. :P I haven't had any problems with other websites, though, that must mean CodeProject has bad markup/CSS, right? ;P When there's a new browser I usually take it for a ride and try browsing my usual daily sites with it for an hour or so. I am a Firefox user and no other browser was able to keep me for longer than an hour (OK, I use IE8 for debugging in VS), but I actually like Chrome. It has a very clean UI (the whole window consists mostly of the page area), is very fast and responsive and has some smooth animations ;). It has not broken yet, I'd like to see how this process separation works (sad tab). Currently I am missing AdBlock (I have it turned off on CP to support you guys), I also need Firebug for work.

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                  • P Paul Conrad

                    I was wondering if one could just slip Windows Mojave at the guy in the original post from the other day :rolleyes:

                    "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham

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                    Pete OHanlon
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    Sounds like a plan to me.

                    Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                    My blog | My articles

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                    • P Paul Conrad

                      Come on, Chrome is the newest thing ;P

                      "The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham

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                      Sidneys1
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      Oh really[^] :-\ You people need to try Mojave...

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                      • D David I Hunt

                        Robert, your sig is the single most enlightening description of corporate IT that I have ever read. Kudos to you, good sir. David

                        I have nothing against VB or .NET; all programming languages are respectable. It just seems that some languages attract one echelon of programmers, and other languages attract another echelon of programmers. :P

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                        Robert Royall
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #34

                        Why thank you! Your sig quite succinctly sums up the way most people feel about Visual Basic (but won't admit it in public).

                        Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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                        • P Pete OHanlon

                          Sounds like a plan to me.

                          Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.

                          My blog | My articles

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                          yuvalyer
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #35

                          The only problem is that 'Mojave' costs more then 100$... Plus it don't have all the features XP Pro has. Have you ever tried to search for files that contain some string in them with Vista? :confused:

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                          • R Robert Royall

                            For two days the Lounge has been nothing but Chrome this and Chrome that. Chrome is not going to be the "Web OS" of the future, because I am already working on it[^]! Take that suckers! ;P

                            Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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                            jinkkazama
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #36

                            doesn't support java too...

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                            • Y yuvalyer

                              The only problem is that 'Mojave' costs more then 100$... Plus it don't have all the features XP Pro has. Have you ever tried to search for files that contain some string in them with Vista? :confused:

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                              el delo
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #37

                              Not that I'm a fan of Vista (I'm not), but findstr still seems to work fine even on Vista (though I'm surprised it doesn't first pop a few security dialogs, then want to hit MS's site to verify licensing, then pop more dialogs asking you to upgrade, and then finally crash or hang... like so many other Vista features...)

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                              • E el delo

                                Not that I'm a fan of Vista (I'm not), but findstr still seems to work fine even on Vista (though I'm surprised it doesn't first pop a few security dialogs, then want to hit MS's site to verify licensing, then pop more dialogs asking you to upgrade, and then finally crash or hang... like so many other Vista features...)

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                                yuvalyer
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #38

                                LOL. I'm not talking about an API feature... When you want to search for files via "Start"->"Search"->"For files and folders", you can't search for "a word or a phrase in the file", which leaves you to rely on external search tools.

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                                • Y yuvalyer

                                  LOL. I'm not talking about an API feature... When you want to search for files via "Start"->"Search"->"For files and folders", you can't search for "a word or a phrase in the file", which leaves you to rely on external search tools.

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                                  el delo
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #39

                                  findstr is a command line utility available at the CMD prompt, not an API. Just type "help findstr" in the CMD shell and away you go. However since the whole thread is supposed to be in jest it's probably not important...

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                                  • Y yuvalyer

                                    The only problem is that 'Mojave' costs more then 100$... Plus it don't have all the features XP Pro has. Have you ever tried to search for files that contain some string in them with Vista? :confused:

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                                    Programmerman1
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #40

                                    Yeah, Windows' desktop search engine is supposed to have full-text indexing. Sadly, it doesn't have ifilters for most programming-related plain-text files, but that can be overcome by using a command-line tool (findstr works great).

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                                    • R Robert Royall

                                      For two days the Lounge has been nothing but Chrome this and Chrome that. Chrome is not going to be the "Web OS" of the future, because I am already working on it[^]! Take that suckers! ;P

                                      Imagine that you are hired to build a bridge over a river which gets slightly wider every day; sometimes it shrinks but nobody can predict when. Your client provides no concrete or steel, only timber and cut stone (but they won't tell you what kind). The coefficient of gravity changes randomly from hour to hour, as does the viscosity of air. Your only tools are a hacksaw, a chainsaw, a rubber mallet, and a length of rope. Welcome to my world. -Me explaining my job to an engineer

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                                      vwspeedracer
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #41

                                      I'm reading this forum in Chrome, so I am really getting a kick out of all these replies.

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