And it does seem that there's been a recent rise in the percentage
That's optimistic, I think it's just a temporary lowering of the percentage of brainless cretins on the Cabinet who think it's still the 1800's.
4136 publicly visible posts • joined 19 Oct 2011
Going by this almost underhanded and measly rejig, it'll fall foul of European standards again.
Don't know why the current UK gov is bothering to negotiate with Europe for security and other cooperation on the back of equivalent legislation if they intend to botch it up by becoming the offshore extremist banana kingdom
Some real engineers* still use FORTRAN too. I have to use a "FORTRAN-like" language for some thermal modelling every now and then, but I'd far rather be using Python.
Congrats, A/C on replying to dismiss assertion of Real programmers with Real Work to do use FORTRAN - really wasn't necessary, it's an old joke.
Clearly being a Rocket (or at least Aerospace) Engineer isn't necessary for some tasks after all, that actually makes me feel better about my job.
they're abandoning the good ship Theresa, and readying the torpedoes.
Yes indeed, and twenty years down the line the bounty hunters will be despatched to hunt them down and bring them back for fraud, misleading the public, and generally prancing about the political stage overacting badly.
Recent carrying on is the worst sort of political pantomime and tantrum toy flinging I've ever seen, and I grew up in N.I.
Doctor Frankenstein strikes again - not long after intentionally or unintentionally killing the form factor by convincing OEMS to ram windows on netbooks, suddenly a reanimated corpse is unveiled.
£300-£400 used to get you a good netbook, this thing is just a (still expensive) tablet minus the keyboard, and the pen is an extra too I notice.
Hold it. Did you miss the memo? In the "Surveillance-economy", there is no reservation. That's because you're not the customer, you're the product.
You're right it's not a reservation. it's more a zoo or petri-dish, at best a river with fishing rights to any corp that can manage to cast a tracking line into the water or tempt the fishies with an IOT morsel.
It's well passed time the fish bit back.
Where was the outrage when Canonical thought it was such a great idea to bundle your File Searches with Amazon results?
I seem to remember quite a bit of outrage. Too much, considering how easy it was to switch off (and stayed off once off, unlike Windows, which I hear tends to get reactivated on updates).
I thought it was potentially an interest feature, but it never returned anything useful (probably because the results were not matched out against your shopping profile and hence totally anonymous result wise), and embedding it in file search was certainly the wrong place - you search for files, you want files, not lipstick offers and other bargain bucket tat from amazon.com.
By the logic of 'genie already out, give it up' - we might as well not try to fix any of societies woes and just retreat to our castles if we have them and let civilisation burn - people have looted raped and pillaged for centuries, why fight it? People have pick-pocketed and corps have ripped off consumers and abused their positions of power - we just let them continue?
Am I the only one to get the HHGTTG reference?
Spotted it at once - some heretic downvoted the quote though - we need Donald Sutherland to come do his Invasion of the Bodysnatchers bit and identify the dangerous pervert.
Joke icon - 'cause those without a sense of humour are breeding and bound to start the accusations on my language if attempts at humour are not easily labelled as such....
Timothy would be spending the next few days at the golf club - it didn't even sound like they paused for breath the whole time!
You want to pick up an imaginary phone and have a long one side Python Pepperpot type conversation 'lotos she'll be much better now she's 'ad 'er leg off' stuff.
See if you can shut them up so they can lisiten in (old dears like to overhear juicy gossip more than passing it on).
Depends whether you can talk for fours hours straight without pausing to rawing breath.....phew
Mr Bean Michael Gove (damn, strikethroughs should be the other way round) - 'people are fed up with experts' - is that his expert opinion on the matter then? The thought that some think he should be next prime minister is truly scary.
I think it's idiots who think they have expert opinion but don't claim to be experts are the ones people are fed up with - the most recent government dictates on alcohol consumption for example smell more like the waffle of 1920's american temperance league.
The second is that we just don’t know all that much about how humans interact
Is that the collective 'we' of humanity or the ditto scientists who carried out this waste of time.
Open plan desks sounded like a great idea when my first job decided to go open from the higgldy-piggle cubicles in the mid-nineties - halfway into the first day we all knew it was a horrible mistake.
Same with those motivational posters - sounded like a great idea during the planning stage, when all you had to look at was yellowy walls - as soon as they are up it's like being confronted with the worst sort of happy patrol dystopia.
Back to the trees and or oceans lads, we're going to give this evolution thing another bash in a couple of hundred centuries.
I was about 9 when I stopped labelling books. Was I a prodigy?
Earlier - not by choice - the school insisted all pupils books have a cover - the really really horrible wallpaper I had to use wouldn't take even a permanent marker and any taped labels slid off within a day leaving a slimey sticky patch.
Well I remember using win 3.11 - and I'm impressed someone went to the bother with the theme, but to me the old grey look reminds me of the early 2000's and frequent theme breakdowns.
Last time I had one of those was first time I tried out Snaps and the app was so sandboxed it couldn't pick up the ui theme.
I'm not a fan of flat either. To me the height of ui is some of those old KDE 4 Bespin themes.
Knowing you are being watched all the time is stressful - any cost savings in (let's cut to the nub, this is intimidation - cut the safety etc. excuses, it's surveillance) would surely get eaten up by increased employee stress levels.
As to the customer eagerly tracking the delivery of, say a pet fountain (? shakes head sadly), that's also a stress factor. Sitting watching the progress of the blip as it moves erratically closer, then away, then closer. I did that once on a package delivery, it sat at a parcel warehouse for two days mid week - drove me near to insanity (well, OK, closer, cheep cheep cluck, cluck).
Every time someone implements things like this it shaves another day off the time 'til the fall of civilisation.
After this there is only one answer
Cleansing as they are, such answers are not the answers you want. The US one ended with Civil War eventually, the French and Russian ones didn't have good outcomes short and long-term respectively and the English civil war ended with a period under a tyrant.
Honestly forgot all about hotmail, what with the attention on Gmail in the news of late - at first I confused it with Yahoo and wondered if it wasn't already dead.
Then I thought the name was kind of a good name for a porn I'm sorry, dating hook-up service.
Seriously, Hotmail - totally forgot about it. Not thought about it in years, don't know anyone who uses it (oddly enough).
Don't you just love being considered to be a criminal by your .gov, just for having the damn gall to be born British?
The British Empire has been collapsing for nearly a century. Clearly some in government think it's not going quickly enough and have ramped up the program in the last ten years.
Break up of the UK by 2050, probably (although Wales might need poking with a sharp stick).
That's one of the reasons most of our ancestors bailed out of Europe.
The first waves bailed out as they were religious extremists, persecuted or merely prevented from practising their strange religious leanings*, later waves were fortune seekers, and then finally the destitute and the desperate.
* Quite right too, usually the next step from being allowed to practise as they wish is becoming increasingly vociferous on the opinion that everyone else should practise as they do, by the sword if necessary.
most folks on the "less savage" side, as bad as they were, tended to stop short of doing certain things including but not limited to collecting skin off the heads of their vanquished foes
Not unheard of in "less savage side" for soldiers to collect trophies. Likely frowned upon, but once you turn men into serial killers for political gain, it's not a surprise that serial killer behaviour often results.
I'm not also 100% that the 'scalp' thing wasn't overblown as a form of propaganda to justify no quarter - best to make your enemy as inhumane as possible, don't want your troops sympathising, they might make friends in a sticky situation - death or glory and all that.
The colonists 'were' french or english - not by nationality, but inherited mindset.
As far as I remember from my history, the English got higher emigration, the French got better native cooperation, but it was the Spanish who got an attach bonus against natives.....
...No, wait, that was Sid Meiers Colonisation.
What you can't do is mix 32 and 64 bit applications in the same wine prefix.
Not so sure that is accurate (or at least I have had few problems doing it).
I've Hexagon (32bit) on the same prefix as DazStudio (64bit) - a necessarily if I want to use the bridge to send objects from Studio to Hexagon for modelling.
I've not come up against any issues (at least yet).
It's not recommended though, but then mostly Wine support recommended "a clean 32bit prefix" only for best results not long ago.
Wine Staging drop
As far as I can recall, something about having too much to do, at which point some others decided to manage it.
Need or want, same thing - I'm on Arch, there seems little difference between Wine and Staging versions for my use case.
Interesting how WINE is viewed somehow as necessary on Linux?
By some. To me it's a nice to have (otherwise I'd have to settle for dual-boot or a another machine).
I didn't see any use for Wine for a long time either.
If you do find a program that happens to be windows only, and you can get that program to run in Wine (even with a few flaws) - it's a positive boon - otherwise you might have to go back to dual boot or install Windows. think what a drag that would be.
WineHQ is, unfortunately badly maintained (so is Crossovers list, now I come to look into it).
If you are expecting thorough and professional testing, it's filled out when people can be bothered, and mostly by testing amateurs.
Why would you expect Windows 3.1 to be polished til it shines (like a shaft of gold, when all around is dark) - it has been mostly irrelevant (except for a few fringe cases) for at least twenty years.
Wine staging was dropped a while back, but it's too useful for those little (often unstable) patches that gamers need, so it continues (or some such, never did get the whole drama around it straight).
Not to mention the licence issue (as someone already has)
Virtualisation isn't always the answer, maybe something a little more containerised, but run the entirety of Windows with [telemetry] and bloat just to run one of it's programs????
Also, with the likes of VirtualBox or VMware, your sometimes don't get true throughput to the hardware, resulting in OpenGL version issues which stop graphic intensive programs running. Maybe with the right hardware or BIOS setup, and perhaps in the future (when running todays Windows bloat is no more stressful than running a C64 emulator to play Who Dares Wins II).
Surely you could run each from its own script that sets the appropriate value of WINEPREFIX.
Yup, that works.
!#/usr/bin/sh
WINEPREFIX=[path-to-prefix] wine [path-to-prefix+pathinsidewineprefixtoexe]/program.exe
Wine also puts a .desktop file together (and links in DESKTOP folder in native .desktop file and windows .ink).
Could always use PlayonLinux
Has a nice simple GUI based setup* (or buy Codeweavers Crossover - who are based on the Wine source and contribute back and also have a nice user friendly interface).
* or used to, I'm not a fan of their new version in java, but there'e a Qt version as an alternate coming.
Don't think the killall is necessary.
I've been using Wine to run Daz Studio for a year (yes, Blender is fun too).
Both the 32bit and 64bit versions run (and Nvidia Iray renders run rather well on Wine, for the 3Delight renders I use the linux native version).
Start of 2017, you would have struggled to run the 64bit version, but the 32bit version worked, it's been mostly improving as Wine matures.
I have the 32bit version and the 32bit installer for the Daz shop on a 32bit prefix, and the 64bit on a separate (64bit) prefix with the recent 64bit version of the installer + Hexagon modeller, which is 32bit, runs ok on the 64bit prefix (has to be on the same prefix for the bridge from Daz studio to Hexagon to work).
Yes, I might have a better experience running the program on the native Windows, but (run Windows, are you mad?).
Oh Wait we don't. so much for being in control!
Wrestling control away from the corrupt oligarchs in Europe just means handing it to a smaller, more amateurish group of corrupt oligarchs in Westminster.
It's amazing though, that Banks need to be told what seems like the obvious to anyone with even half a grasp of IT.
Kind of like don't hand your lifesavings to someone who's likely to leave them on the bus and just shrug and deny any culpability when confronted.....
wait, sub-prime? - perhaps Banks do need to be told how (and probably have their laces tied by a responsible adult).