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A lot of us didn't


Glad to know that's solved now


That was well covered in another episode.


Anecdotally, I seen many of my coworkers switch from Dell to Mac and we're almost exclusively a dotnet shop. The only thing stopping me from 11 is low disk space but it's really just a matter of time. Pretty sure I'll follow on to mac


Our IT “standardized” the orderable laptop SKUs to the extent that the “developer” PC laptops are now gimped with worse specs than the equivalent base model MacBook Pros that can be ordered.

Any reasonable spec machine requires an “Equipment Council” to approve via an exceptional process (a.k.a not happening if your manager can’t be bothered).

It’s a joke.

They’ll pay developers $250k+ a year but can’t spend the peanuts to get them decent hardware.

So people twiddle their thumbs, rest and vest.


What happens to the IP when this happens? If the product works but wasn't supported by the right company how does it not get picked up by someone more competent?


You wait 20 years, then work on it once the patents have expired. This happens to lots of technologies, which aren't properly license while under patent protection, then take off once the protection expires.

Probably the most well known is animated GIFs, which had some popularity in early web pages, but quickly died off, then had a huge upsurge after the patent expired in the 2000's, when anyone could add animated GIF outputs to any program or web service, without licensing.


I would imagine the IP was sold, especially if there was bankruptcy.


I think the question was why whoever picked it up didn’t do anything with it, which points towards it not just being an issue of incompetence, but maybe an underlying issue of the technology.


It's super common for UP to be sold for $1 to someone who has no intention to use it, just to have a larger defensive IP portfolio.


Or a commercial blood bank bought it. Since this was based on cow hemoglobin and thus a thread to their business model.


Or a patent troll, who are now busy working out how they can sue the Japanese scientists.


Spelling out columns can help the query optimizer too


Consumer reports is a non-profit last I checked


And, of course, you can site a reference for those statistics. That aside, I don't agree with your overall sentiment.


I'm interested because it isn't chromium


Not an expert, but as a veteran of the Browser Wars, I’m curious as to why?


Google is evil, and Chromium has too many Google-isms. Also, monocultures are bad.


Let me guess, you wrote this on an Apple device where .. checks notes.. every browser is webkit.

Monoculture is bad. smh


macOS can run any engine. iOS cannot.


Because when there is a monopoly, you are at the whims of the people that control it.


There's a company called Airhart that's trying to bring Fly-By-Wire to GA. But (at least in the US) I think innovation would be better focused on regulations - looking at you aeromedical specifically.


They don't. Glass avionics have a charts database that's physically updated about every month


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