dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: This mom gave her son an 18-point contract with his iPhone
I don't know. I find (as an adult) I pretty much follow those same rules in my normal day-to-day usage of my phone (not exactly of course, but close). And I do that because of what I find to be emotionally healthy (connect with live people, not digital icons), polite (don't bug people too late) and reasonable (I have to pay to fix my own phone). It's called parenting, and it's pretty hard. It seems like society needs more of it, not less.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: This mom gave her son an 18-point contract with his iPhone
I don't think she was saying never take videos, just be measured. I read an article a while back where the mom said her kids merely lived life as a source of content for their Facebook feed -- and I see the same thing around me. This parent is just trying to help her kid come out well-rounded and balanced (which is not necessarily what we see with kids who are buried in screens all day). Kudos to this mom.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: We The People petition: Star Wars
It's stupid crap like this that will result in a some-what useful tool like the petition system to eventually be completely ignored.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Why I’m uninstalling Windows 8
Do you work for Microsoft? Your comment:
"Valid concern if adding an extra mouse click here and there bothers you"
sure makes me think so. Yes, adding an extra click here and there is annoying, especially when it didn't add any extra functionality.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Changing My Mind On Microsoft
In my case, I sell my own software. So having a market that will buy my software is first priority. Providing support all day is not how I prefer to make a living. (that's fearful me talking)
I'd love to know the percentages of independent Windows devs that make a living selling software vs percentage of Linux devs that can make a living selling software. Sure, big companies will employ both, but how does it work out for the small guys?
Edit: I will admit Linux and its ecosystem are looking more and more attractive all the time...
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Changing My Mind On Microsoft
Thanks for that -- a bit surprising really (current stats show Linux users out giving the other two). Is that because they are more willing to pay for software as Linux goes mainstream, or desperate for games? (honest question)
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Changing My Mind On Microsoft
The great thing about propietary software and one OS (Windows specifically, OS X too though) is people using those operating systems expect to pay for their software. I'd love to come out with a Linux version of my software, but I'd then be competing with 10 free versions, and worse, a mindset that expects everything to be free. I gotta eat!
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Changing My Mind On Microsoft
His attack on using developer tools was harsh, but I'm over 30 so it didn't apply :)
But seriously, I'm afraid he is close to the truth. As a career Windows programmer, I have great fear for the future after having tried the 2012 preview -- I've never felt so lost on a computer in my life. For my own selfish sake, I keep praying they'll make some changes before final release.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Still running strong after 1,532 days without a code change.
This is one of the biggest things I'm grateful my mentor drilled into me: Never make a quick and dirty solution that anyone else (especially management!) sees -- it will become the final solution.
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Hashable is shutting down
My friend was in the right place at the right time, had a small company that made millions. He figured it was all him, so he spent all of his money on a second attempt. It failed, and he's back working a j.o.b. now.
I wonder: If we could track enough of these cases where a successful entrepeneur started a second company (and then track whether it succeeded/failed), could we come up with a measurement of how much luck has to do with overall success rates?
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Chrome now the most popular browser
dneb7
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13 years ago
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on: Google to launch Amazon, Microsoft cloud competitor at Google I/O 2012
> Hopefully it will not be just a half-assed experiment again
And that sentiment is _exactly_ why I won't trust my business to whatever they come up with. There's no knowing how seriously and committed they are. Sure, Amazon could do an about face, but they don't have that history, so I'm more comfortable trusting them.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: What to do when Google PR0s Your Business
If users can't find you, you won't be getting any more of them. Engineering is fantastic, but not much use without people knowing about your hard work.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: Yahoo Axis
I'm running it here in Firefox for Linux (Mint) and it's working fine.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: Microsoft to charge customers $99 to remove OEM 'crapware'
As mentioned in the article, the PCDecrapifier is a really nice bit of (free) software -- I run it on all new Windows PCs (if I don't just format and rebuild from scratch). And the name is brilliant :)
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: GM Says Facebook Ads Don't Work, Pulls $10 Million Account
I certainly didn't have a $10MM spend, but I also had dismal results for my B2B campaign. My takeaway is FB is purely a social place where people unwind and don't want to do any 'work' -- whether that is considering a product for their job, or the effort involved in considering a large purchase as rio517 mentions.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: 3x faster linux boot with e4rat
I saw a demo of this at Intel Labs on a Windows machine about 15 years ago and it was very impressive. I don't think they optimized startup, but application launch was incredibly fast with their disk layout optimization.
Isn't this essentially what DiskKeeper does on Windows?
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: Ask HN: My wife needs something to do from home to make money...
I'm getting ready to start an online forum, but I don't relish the prospect of having to monitor it for spam/abuse. It seems like having one person casually scan 10, 20, 50? forums throughout the day could easily keep the spam at bay, and each of those forums owners would probably be quite happy to pay $100+? per month to keep their forum spam free.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: Software Engineers Will Work One Day For English Majors
How long ago was 1992? Anyone that was working as a developer as recently as 1992 is now almost guaranteed to be 40+.
dneb7
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14 years ago
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on: Pricing in reverse: use a product's price to figure out what you need to build
Although a good little starting point, this just helps you break even when considering your advertising expense. Are there other expenses? Do you hope for any actual _profit_??