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| Coffeehouse |
Windows Tablet : the sheriff is ready |
64 |
May 27, 2011 at 2:29 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
How to disable IE9's Pinned Sites "feature" |
18 |
Apr 19, 2011 at 2:56 AM |
| Coffeehouse |
Glad to see some official word on the Kinect SDK for Windows frm Microsoft |
16 |
Feb 21, 2011 at 7:11 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
IE is Back!! Internet Explorer 9 RC Is coming |
57 |
Feb 14, 2011 at 2:51 AM |
| Coffeehouse |
Wikileaks Supporters .. LOIC and C# |
12 |
Dec 12, 2010 at 1:55 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
IE9 refuses to show pictures |
5 |
Dec 01, 2010 at 4:24 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
Dean Hachamovitch: IE9 Questions and Answers - The C9 Questions Thread |
75 |
Nov 10, 2010 at 8:39 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
C'Mon Zune Team .. Really? |
45 |
Nov 05, 2010 at 6:49 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
SmartDJ gone from Zune 4.7 |
12 |
Oct 13, 2010 at 3:36 PM |
| Coffeehouse |
Bing crashes Internet explorer |
15 |
Jun 19, 2009 at 3:03 PM |
IE9 RTW Due Date, A Big Thank You, MIX11, and a Unicorn Named Frank
Mar 09, 2011 at 10:59 PMThis browser is not ready to be released. There is a serious bug that has been reported dozens of times during both the beta and the RC, and that is that IE9 does not render pictures with any reliability. I am tired of loading a page, only to see the pictures not show up, and be force to do "Duplicate Tab" over and over until I finally produce a tab that will actually render the pictures that the web page contains.
I and others have reported this MANY times at connect.microsoft.com. There's also a neowin thread on the problem. http://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/958964-images-break-in-internet-explorer-beta-9080276000/
The problem goes unsolved, and seemingly dismissed and uninvestigated. I've seen some of bugs at Connect dismissed as "Not Repro", others closed as "Fixed in the RC" (which is false), and others remain open but with no sense of urgency.
I really don't understand the problem here, as to why the IE team seems not to care about simple, basic, and essential functionality.
What's New for JScript in IE8?
Sep 11, 2008 at 3:33 PMAnd I do find it faster generally, particularly for Channel 9, but some pages take forever to load on Chrome while IE and FF load them quickly. Not to mention that my scroll wheel doesn't work on Chrome, nor the scroll area of my laptop's touch pad (only works in the downard direction, and too fast at that). If I close a Chrome window with multiple tabs, it doesn't even bother asking if I really want to close all the tabs; it just goes ahead and closes them all. Chrome's bookmark functionality sucks. (Photosynth plugin doesn't work either
P.S.
As for ACID3, isn't that based on "standards" that are still in development and have yet to be finalized? I recall a recent Opera beta that became the "first" browser to pass ACID3, then the next day a bug was found in the ACID3 test so it was tweaked, and suddenly that same Opera beta no longer passed. In other words, Opera's deved coded against the test rather than the standards that ACID3 was supposed to stress. Which means that Opera's ACID3 compliance proves nothing. I suspect the same for the other browsers. And Idon't put much weight on ACID3 until the things it tests against are actually finalized. Before that, what's the point?
Happy Holidays Niners
Dec 31, 2007 at 11:52 AMIt was great!
Happy New Year, everybody!
Don Syme: What's new in F# - Asynchronous Workflows (and welcome to the .NET family!)
Nov 21, 2007 at 3:20 PMThere's an IronScheme project in the works that runs Scheme on the DLR.
http://wordpress.com/tag/ironlisp/
http://www.codeplex.com/IronScheme
It's open source under the Ms-PL license, so roll up your sleves and get crackin'!
Don Syme: What's new in F# - Asynchronous Workflows (and welcome to the .NET family!)
Nov 20, 2007 at 6:54 PMNice video (a little noisy in the background, but what can you do?
).
I love all F# content. Keep it up!
Patrick Dussud: Garbage Collection - Past, Present and Future
Jul 27, 2007 at 6:04 PMHis mentioning that part of his Lisp background is from working on the TI Explorer (TI's lisp machine workstation) at Texas Instruments brings back some memories. My university had a couple of those TI Explorer lisp machines. I never got to do any real work on them, but I loved playing with them. They seemed to be a lot more polished than the Symbolics lisp machines we had.
Simon Peyton-Jones: Towards a Programming Language Nirvana
Jul 19, 2007 at 12:17 PMI love listening to programming language gurus.
Scott Guthrie: Silverlight and the Cross-Platform CLR
Apr 30, 2007 at 2:33 PMVery nice.
One thing I am glad to see is that the Silverlight CLR supports any .NET language. The original WPF/E CLR specs said that only C# and VB.NET would be supported.
James Clarke: Creating Silverlight Media with Expression Media Encoder
Apr 18, 2007 at 9:31 PMGreat video!
I love the jig-saw puzzle on Mac part.
The Best XNA Movie in the UNIVERSE
Dec 19, 2006 at 12:41 PM*sigh*
Some just can't stand to admit that Microsoft does anything innovative.
Here's a link to the DEMMX awards that took place a couple weeks ago:
http://www.demmx.com/demmx/awards/2006.jsp
XNA Game Studio Express won a couple DEMMX Awards:
Game Innovation of the Year
and
Best of Show: Innovator of the Year
So it's official - XNA is innovative.
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