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  3. Are we, as Developers, bored?

Are we, as Developers, bored?

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csharpc++databasesql-servercom
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  • S StevenWalsh

    How could people have missed SQL 2008... It has Upsert!!

    Einstein argued that there must be simplified explanations of nature, because God is not capricious or arbitrary. No such faith comforts the software engineer. -Fred Brooks

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    ftw melvin
    wrote on last edited by
    #46

    Insdate?

    "If you reward everyone, there will not be enough to go around, so you offer a reward to one in order to encourage everyone." Mei Yaochen in the 'Doing Battle' section of Sun Tzu's: Art of War. .

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    • C Chris Losinger

      i have no idea what the excitement over Chrome is about. it makes no sense to me eihter.

      image processing toolkits | batch image processing

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      ftw melvin
      wrote on last edited by
      #47

      Quite like the look of chrome, nice and light-weight (looking). If it will upset the morale high-ground that Firefox evangelists have camped out on I, for one, will chuckle.

      "If you reward everyone, there will not be enough to go around, so you offer a reward to one in order to encourage everyone." Mei Yaochen in the 'Doing Battle' section of Sun Tzu's: Art of War. .

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      • C Chris Maunder

        It just hit me that I've not seen so much talk and traffic over a single topic (Chrome) for a long, long time. When .NET 3.5 was released there was barely a murmor. SQL Server 2008 was released earlier this year, then actually released just last month, but if you stepped out to get a coffee you would have missed it. Is Software Development so dull these days that it takes the release of a web browser, in beta, to get us excited? Apart from giving webdevs more gray hair by forcing them to finally stop ignoring the WebKit rendering engine (we were doing so well at ignoring Apple up until now) what does it actually mean for anyone? It's a little odd.

        cheers, Chris Maunder

        CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

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        AspDotNetDvlpr
        wrote on last edited by
        #48

        I'm completely bored out of my head with my current projects lol I need a change of pace!

        Happy programming!

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        • C Chris Losinger

          i have no idea what the excitement over Chrome is about. it makes no sense to me eihter.

          image processing toolkits | batch image processing

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          KurtPW
          wrote on last edited by
          #49

          Yeah, but it's called Chrome! And Chrome is SHINY!!!!!!

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          • C Chris Losinger

            i have no idea what the excitement over Chrome is about. it makes no sense to me eihter.

            image processing toolkits | batch image processing

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            S Offline
            Syed Muhammad Fahad
            wrote on last edited by
            #50

            I think it's just a corporate thing ;) I was wonder how many articles were posted on ComputerWorld about Chrome in less than 24 hrs all aiming as if Chrome has brought a morning with BLUE MOON :doh: How can you test and justify the capability of a browser that is one day old and then posted your reviews about it :confused: I was far more disappointed by this biased attitude of reviewers at computerworld and it seems every one is actually running before $$ and it's getting harder and harder to really find true analysts that can give unbiased reviews about products. It is more becoming a matter of personal liking and disliking rather than true judgments and i believe critics should avoid this else there is no difference b/w a critic reviewing a product and a normal person who likes a company's name to review its products :mad:

            Syed Muhammad Fahad System Consultant Tyler Technologies -- TEMS Division mfahad@mazikusa.com

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            • D DaveX86

              The exitement over Chrome is partly like watching a new prize fighter enter the ring...we're all kind of curious to watch the Chrome/IE/Firefox death match. Also, it's interesting to see their strategies and tactics to win our 'hearts and minds'.

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              aubndez
              wrote on last edited by
              #51

              I second that....There hasn't been a good fight in quite awhile.

              "Is it normal to hear 'My server doesn't work. Did you rebuild the database?' " - quotes from old work places lead to the most interesting conversations....

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              • N netfed

                Where would you like to place Opera in all this? I would like to see a browser properly adressing the presentation problem, a browser that rendering pages the way we expected them to be. How hard is it just to read the CSS spesification and really TRY to implement it. A great idea would be to build a unified rendering engine. THIS is what McCain and Obama should be concerned about these days. (edited for spelling errors)

                modified on Saturday, March 12, 2011 9:51 PM

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                TestShoot
                wrote on last edited by
                #52

                I totally live with Opera and IE7. I have a whole thread on Opera love. Chrome will be so marginal in the impact, I think it is a test bed for their upcoming devices and will not really be seriously used for a browser as they don't take it so seriously themselves. I predict 15% marketshare tops in a year. It is a partial abortion. On the topic, I sit at the largest trade paper in Hollywood, Variety.com, it is powered by an ASP CMS that launched mid-dotcom boom and has not been updated in about 4 years. No way is this a smart career move for me, but I am not about to suggested the *latest* technology or to drink the MS Kool Aid, though a dotnet app is probaly the best suited. The problem is we are all cutting edge, yet highly skeptical people so when things don't progress as fast as our tirst for knowledge we get antsy, then pissy and finally... dis-gruntled. We concern ourselves with what we are missing, and then when we have it all we want something *else*.

                *--==[::tSc::]==--* www.TestShoot.com www.variety.com www.itssobig.com www.Filmsupplies.com

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                • N netfed

                  Where would you like to place Opera in all this? I would like to see a browser properly adressing the presentation problem, a browser that rendering pages the way we expected them to be. How hard is it just to read the CSS spesification and really TRY to implement it. A great idea would be to build a unified rendering engine. THIS is what McCain and Obama should be concerned about these days. (edited for spelling errors)

                  modified on Saturday, March 12, 2011 9:51 PM

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                  GuyWithDogs
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #53

                  The interest isn't the _what_, it's the _who_. People love Google, for some reason. I'm not sure if it's some sort of "David vs. Goliath" thing, because neither Google nor Microsoft qualify as a "David". But there's a lot of interest in the MSFT vs. GOOG battle, be it the new browser war or the previously insanely-covered "impending search war" when MSFT was going to buy Yahoo!.

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                  • C Chris Losinger

                    i have no idea what the excitement over Chrome is about. it makes no sense to me eihter.

                    image processing toolkits | batch image processing

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                    KodeCowboy
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #54

                    Mostly Chrome offers the typical standard way of managing content from the web, but also a way to extend this management to other forms of content in a real-time manner.

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                    • C Chris Maunder

                      It just hit me that I've not seen so much talk and traffic over a single topic (Chrome) for a long, long time. When .NET 3.5 was released there was barely a murmor. SQL Server 2008 was released earlier this year, then actually released just last month, but if you stepped out to get a coffee you would have missed it. Is Software Development so dull these days that it takes the release of a web browser, in beta, to get us excited? Apart from giving webdevs more gray hair by forcing them to finally stop ignoring the WebKit rendering engine (we were doing so well at ignoring Apple up until now) what does it actually mean for anyone? It's a little odd.

                      cheers, Chris Maunder

                      CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

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                      L Offline
                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #55

                      Software is just a tool, like a machine shop lathe, it's not the tool that matters, its what you make with it that matters and is the interesting bit. If you are bored then try making things, who cares what version the tool is?

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                      • C Chris Maunder

                        It just hit me that I've not seen so much talk and traffic over a single topic (Chrome) for a long, long time. When .NET 3.5 was released there was barely a murmor. SQL Server 2008 was released earlier this year, then actually released just last month, but if you stepped out to get a coffee you would have missed it. Is Software Development so dull these days that it takes the release of a web browser, in beta, to get us excited? Apart from giving webdevs more gray hair by forcing them to finally stop ignoring the WebKit rendering engine (we were doing so well at ignoring Apple up until now) what does it actually mean for anyone? It's a little odd.

                        cheers, Chris Maunder

                        CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

                        H Offline
                        H Offline
                        Himanshu Verma
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #56

                        No, As a Developer I never get Bored, Even I always look forward to see more new techniques to be used on windows and Web Applications both in .net.

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                        • C Chris Maunder

                          It just hit me that I've not seen so much talk and traffic over a single topic (Chrome) for a long, long time. When .NET 3.5 was released there was barely a murmor. SQL Server 2008 was released earlier this year, then actually released just last month, but if you stepped out to get a coffee you would have missed it. Is Software Development so dull these days that it takes the release of a web browser, in beta, to get us excited? Apart from giving webdevs more gray hair by forcing them to finally stop ignoring the WebKit rendering engine (we were doing so well at ignoring Apple up until now) what does it actually mean for anyone? It's a little odd.

                          cheers, Chris Maunder

                          CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

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                          M Offline
                          meaningoflights
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #57

                          Yes I am bored. Microsoft is losing its marketing muscle, with quiet product launches and crappy Jerry Seinfled ads! I'm glad Chrome woke us all up..

                          1 Reply Last reply
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                          • N netfed

                            Where would you like to place Opera in all this? I would like to see a browser properly adressing the presentation problem, a browser that rendering pages the way we expected them to be. How hard is it just to read the CSS spesification and really TRY to implement it. A great idea would be to build a unified rendering engine. THIS is what McCain and Obama should be concerned about these days. (edited for spelling errors)

                            modified on Saturday, March 12, 2011 9:51 PM

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                            T Offline
                            TasMot
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #58

                            netfed wrote:

                            just to read the proposed CSS spesification

                            Since McCain and Obama are too busy promoting themselves for a job, they won't do anything about anything (even after the election too much OTJ training to do). On the other hand, just reading the specs and getting it right is much harder than spelling all the words right in your post.

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                            • T TestShoot

                              I totally live with Opera and IE7. I have a whole thread on Opera love. Chrome will be so marginal in the impact, I think it is a test bed for their upcoming devices and will not really be seriously used for a browser as they don't take it so seriously themselves. I predict 15% marketshare tops in a year. It is a partial abortion. On the topic, I sit at the largest trade paper in Hollywood, Variety.com, it is powered by an ASP CMS that launched mid-dotcom boom and has not been updated in about 4 years. No way is this a smart career move for me, but I am not about to suggested the *latest* technology or to drink the MS Kool Aid, though a dotnet app is probaly the best suited. The problem is we are all cutting edge, yet highly skeptical people so when things don't progress as fast as our tirst for knowledge we get antsy, then pissy and finally... dis-gruntled. We concern ourselves with what we are missing, and then when we have it all we want something *else*.

                              *--==[::tSc::]==--* www.TestShoot.com www.variety.com www.itssobig.com www.Filmsupplies.com

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                              D Offline
                              Daniel Ward
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #59

                              Well said. I couldn't agree more. :rose:

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