bstar | 14 years ago | on: Apple Files Patent for In-App Purchases
bstar's comments
bstar | 14 years ago | on: John Carmack coded Quake on a 28-inch 16:9 1080p monitor in 1995
bstar | 14 years ago | on: John Carmack coded Quake on a 28-inch 16:9 1080p monitor in 1995
This machine would be running WinNT 3 or 4, most definitely not the MIPS build.
bstar | 14 years ago | on: New Boston Globe website design
Something doesn't need to be difficult to implement to be extremely useful.
bstar | 14 years ago | on: New Boston Globe website design
<script src="/js/lib/rwd-images.js,lib/respond.min.js,lib/modernizr.custom.min.js,globe-define.js,globe-controller.js"></script>
bstar | 14 years ago | on: What technologies are under your site
bstar | 14 years ago | on: Fixes to memory footprint and garbage collection arrive in Firefox 7
bstar | 14 years ago | on: Fixes to memory footprint and garbage collection arrive in Firefox 7
bstar | 14 years ago | on: One month with Android
First off, for both devices I needed to run cyanogen mod. The devices were completely unusable for me without it. The only acceptable Android devices are the Nexus' or ones with custom roms.
I have not purchased an iPhone, but I do have a 3g touch and an iPad 2. I have to say, I believe Apple's multitasking is vastly superior to Androids. The reason being is stability. "Real" multitasking is great and all, but if you can't make it stable then it just plain sucks. My experience is that apps open in the background frequently FC, take up too much memory and slow the device down. Sometimes finding the errant process is near impossible and forces me to reboot.
Apple's suspend style multitasking ALWAYS ensures that every app is getting the full resources of the device. The other day I was playing Dead Space on the ipad and downloading 6 other apps I just bought... the game never hiccuped, slowed don't or degraded in any noticeable way. I see why some people don't care for it, but for me the benefit in performance makes it vastly superior. On the topic of downloading, I could have 50 apps queued up in the app store and it will never fail. The android fucking market always fucks up the downloads. It's completely maddening.
Dealing with device support just plan blows. Nvidia has their own freaking market for their 'optimized' games. Netflix is rolling out only on select devices because they don't know how the fuck it will work on everything out there- fortunately the G2 was supported early. Amazon has the best market by far, but I still don't know how the hell to use it.
Talking about openness... I have to install cyanogenmod to get any semblance of open, and that's not even the case. Recently someone had a patch to spoof a phones personal data so that apps that steal your info and sell it would be grabbing junk. It appears that Cyanogen is playing nice and not including the patch to not piss off Google and the carriers. This is only as open as what the carriers and google will put up with. It's no different than jailbreaking the iphone (aside from that fact that you can actually build "some of" android from the source, but what normal person can do that?).
In the end I still have an android device for one simple reason... economics. I'm on t-mobile and my rates are far below att & verizon. I got my g2 for free as well. I tether my data connection (to the iPad) with no issues. Even though the G2 kinda sucks, it is good enough. Justifying paying $299 for a 32gb iphone and paying the jacked up rates of verizon comes down to simply not caring enough for a gadget. The iPad is a phenomenal value, the iPhone just isn't. I'll re-evaluate the situation when my contract ends in a year and a half. For now I'll be content with amazing turn-by-turn gps, decent browser, tethering, a few 3rd party apps and a pretty good phone experience- it's the best value out there. Boils down to taking a dirt cheap "7" over an expensive "10".
bstar | 14 years ago | on: Learn Python The Hard Way 2nd Edition Released
...Oops, I thought this was Learn Ruby the Easy Way with an introduction by DHH and Ryan Bigg. Sorry.
bstar | 14 years ago | on: What the hell is happening to rails?
If you are having trouble with rails, it's for two possible reasons... 1) you won't accept that it's opinionated software and throw out your preconceptions or 2) you're just not trying hard enough. The amount of books, screencasts, tutorials, podcasts out there for rails is just insane. I'm completely jealous these things weren't around in '06 when I started.
Edit: Should have mentioned that he did the Michael Hartl screencasts/tutorial (http://ruby.railstutorial.org/)
bstar | 15 years ago | on: The Dangerous Mr. Khan
I've been studying Egyptology for about 6 years now and it's amazing what perspectives have changed in that time. We're even starting to see stories now that are challenging the "Out of Africa" theory. Whenever I hear a teacher/lecturer describe something historical as fact, it makes me cringe because so much is left to interpretation.
Khan doing history in this manner is dangerous. But at the same time, the ways our schools do history is dangerous as well. Presenting singular perspectives and presenting them as fact only breeds misinformation.
I believe khan academy is superb for math and sciences, especially for quick overviews of concepts. But the format is absolutely terrible for presenting historical topics. Understanding history requires reading from many resources and coming to logical conclusions. A copy/paste job from wikipedia is simply pathetic.
bstar | 15 years ago | on: I just released an eBook about exceptions and failure handling in Ruby
bstar | 15 years ago | on: Motorola Xoom Looking Like Epic Flop
Their support has been atrocious, it generally takes 2-3 weeks for a response. When I do get a response they ask for a screenshot despite the fact I've given them the error message verbatim, with error code.
I had to buy x-code4 through the app store because this issue is going on 3 months- still waiting on a refund.
This isn't meant to be an apple bashing post. I'm pissed about these issues, but I don't think it's because Apple doesn't care. I think it's because they are trying to cope with enormous amounts of support tickets and are probably having trouble hiring qualified people to address them. I'm guessing that Google is experiencing a similar problem x10. There's a market demand to get these products out asap, but the infrastructure just isn't ready yet.
bstar | 15 years ago | on: Play by Play: Zed Shaw
With that said, the aggressive side makes him a very unique individual that many of us highly respect. I don't aspire to be like the guy, but he sure does motivate me to step up my standards and accomplish more. Zed's just way more interesting than Professional.
bstar | 15 years ago | on: Microsoft's quarterly profit drops below Apple's for the first time in 20 years
bstar | 15 years ago | on: Man Unveils Interactive Toothpick Sculpture of SF That Took 35 Years to Create
bstar | 15 years ago | on: A personal Dropbox replacement based on Git
An uber simple interface that supported on every major platform is what makes it so awesome.
bstar | 15 years ago | on: Rubular: a Ruby regular expression editor and tester
bstar | 15 years ago | on: What math (and programming) teachers should know about memory
My 10th grade geometry/trig teacher did this to us. Confidence issues I had as a result of this class lasted many years. I got over it and have done well for myself, but I still have some resentment.