Apr
12
2009
Chris Shiflett writes “There’s a new proposal (‘URL shortening that doesn’t hurt the Internet’) floating around for using rev=”canonical” to help put a stop to the URL-shortening madness. In order to avoid the great linkrot apocalypse, we can opt to specify short URLs for our own pages, so that compliant services (adoption is still low, because the idea is pretty fresh) will use our short URLs instead of TinyURL.com (or some other third-party alternative) replacements.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Can rev="canonical" Replace URL-Shortening Services? | tags: developer, google | posted in technical news
Apr
12
2009
Negative Gamer is running a story discussing the need felt by the major game developers to create the next huge blockbuster, which often leads to innovation and change for their own sake rather than simply focusing on what makes a game fun. Quoting: “There seems to be this invisible pressure to create something that is highly ‘intuitive’ and incorporates the highest level of innovation that we have ever seen. The problem is that the newest ideas put into games are either gimmicky, terrible in execution, or blatantly ripping off another title. On the other hand there are series that feel the need to completely revamp a game that played perfectly fine before into something completely new that falls flat on its face. … There’s a critical problem with popular, mainstream video games that isn’t as large with other mediums; they are expensive to make and require a lot of time and effort put in to create something masterful. With that, games must take cautious paths. I fully understand the risks, but adding unneeded material to certain games is not justifiable.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on The Perils of Pointless Innovation In Games | tags: developer, games, google | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
Death Metal writes with this excerpt from a story about COBOL’s influence as it approaches 50 years in existence: “According to David Stephenson, the UK manager for the software provider Micro Focus, ‘some 70% to 80% of UK plc business transactions are still based on COBOL.’ … Mike Gilpin, from the market research company Forrester, says that the company’s most recent related survey found that 32% of enterprises say they still use COBOL for development or maintenance. … A lot of this maintenance and development takes place on IBM products. The company’s software group director of product delivery and strategy, Charles Chu, says that he doesn’t think ‘legacy’ is pejorative. ‘Business constantly evolves,’ he adds, ‘but there are 250bn lines of COBOL code working well worldwide. Why would companies replace systems that are working well?'”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on COBOL Turning 50, Still Important | tags: developer, google, IBM | posted in technical news
Apr
11
2009
An anonymous reader writes “It’s been a long-talked-about but never fully realized aim of developers, publishers and format holders to create a game that runs on multiple platforms, but connects and exchanges assets between them — e.g. you play a game as an FPS on a console/PC but control it as an RTS on mobile devices. Now, Rockstar Games seems to have cracked it, on a small scale, with news that a new Flash game will allow PC gamers to generate in-game cash — true to form for GTA-creator Rockstar, it’s through ‘money laundering’ — that is then transferred to its new Nintendo DS title, Chinatown Wars. GameSpy’s online technology seems to be responsible for this latest gimmick, but most interesting is the idea that this could allow an interface between platforms like the iPhone and consoles as well. How long until an indie developer creates an MMO that has different interfaces for PC and mobile?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Rockstar Games Develops Connection Between Flash Gaming, Nintendo DS | tags: china, developer, games, google, iphone, mobile, news, Phone, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
Counterfeiters have moved from selling cracked iTunes gift codes to trying to draw iPhone developers into a scam to defraud Apple of thousands of dollars. Apple may need to look into making its codes harder to crack sooner than later.
Comments Off on iTunes gift code crackers try luring iPhone devs into scam | tags: Apple, developer, iphone, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
aleph60 writes “A German researcher is about to resurrect the first fully electronic general-purpose stored-program computer, the Manchester Mark 1 (1948). The functional replica will run the source code of an original program from 1952 by Christopher Strachey, whose sole purpose was generating love letters; it is historically interesting as one of the first examples of a text-generating program. The installation will be shown at an art exhibition in Germany at the end of April.” Here is researcher David Link’s Manchester Mark I emulator home, which generates a new love poem on each page load. When the Mark I had been used to search for new Mersenne primes in 1949, a press account coined the phrase “electronic brain” to characterize it.

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Comments Off on Researcher Resurrects the First Computer | tags: developer, google, program | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
In response to the report I posted a few days ago that the Openmoko FreeRunner phone had been discontinued, Pat Meier-Johnson writes on behalf of Openmoko to say that this isn’t so. “Some bloggers have been misinterpreting a presentation by Openmoko CEO, Sean Moss-Pultz last week in Switzerland to think that the company is getting out of the phone business. That’s not true. In fact, the Openmoko FreeRunner (their current model) is alive and well. (Also in Switzerland, Sean announced another project — not a phone — that they are calling ‘Project B.’ No details yet.) The next version of the phone, codenamed GTA03, has been suspended and there were some associated layoffs, but the GTA03 was in constant flux as a design. So the company is being prudent and focusing on the FreeRunner which has lots of open source community and most recently, embedded developer support.” Glad to hear this, because the FreeRunner is an interesting phone.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on Openmoko Phone Not Dead After All | tags: developer, google, mobile, open source, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
snydeq writes “Fatal Exception’s Neil McAllister believes Oracle is next in line to make a play for Sun now that IBM has withdrawn its offer. Dismissing server market arguments in favor of Cisco or Dell as suitors, McAllister suggests that MySQL, ZFS, DTrace, and Java make Sun an even better asset to Oracle than to IBM. MySQL as a complement to Oracle’s existing database business would make sense, given Oracle’s 2005 purchase of Innobase, and with ‘the long history of Oracle databases on Solaris servers, it might actually see owning Solaris as an asset,’ McAllister writes. But the ‘crown jewel’ of the deal would be Java. ‘It’s almost impossible to overestimate the importance of Java to Oracle. Java has become the backbone of Oracle’s middleware strategy,’ McAllister contends.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Comments Off on What If Oracle Bought Sun Microsystems? | tags: database, databases, developer, google, IBM, mysql, sql | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
Over the last several years, developers have moved from table-based website structures to div-based structures. Hey, that’s great. But wait! Do developers know the reasons for moving to div-based structures, and do they know how to? Often it seems that people are moving away from table hell only to wind up in div hell.
Comments Off on Table Layouts vs. Div Layouts: From Hell to… Hell? | tags: developer, web | posted in technical news
Apr
8
2009
A new version of Boxee brings an app store and API, allowing developers to expand the increasingly popular open source media center software in entirely new ways. Apps for Pandora and RadioTime, as well as a Mozilla-based browser for (once again) accessing Hulu.
Comments Off on Boxee gains an app store, to appear on hardware in 2010 | tags: developer, open source | posted in technical news