[NSRCA-discussion] Experimenting with new forum software
John Pavlick
jpavlick at idseng.com
Tue Jan 27 07:34:13 AKST 2009
Exactly. Never trust anything thst doesn't give you at least an assembly-code listing before it creates the binary. Interpreted languages should be avoided whenever possible. VBG
John Pavlick
--- On Tue, 1/27/09, Paul Horan <paul.horan at sbcglobal.net> wrote:
From: Paul Horan <paul.horan at sbcglobal.net>
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Experimenting with new forum software
To: "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Date: Tuesday, January 27, 2009, 3:48 PM
If you think vi is great and perl is one of the best languages then you have definitely gone over to the dark side.
Paul
--- On Tue, 1/27/09, Martin X. Moleski, SJ <moleski at canisius.edu> wrote:
From: Martin X. Moleski, SJ <moleski at canisius.edu>
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Experimenting with new forum software
To: jpavlick at idseng.com, "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Date: Tuesday, January 27, 2009, 8:59 AM
John Pavlick wrote:
> Excellent. Sounds like we're in good hands ...
Some days are better than others. :o(
> ... Hey, you have to try new stuff otherwise we'd all still be
> running DOS. Not that that would necessarily be a BAD thing. :)
I thought I was good with DOS.
Peak achievement: disassembling a device driver for HD, finding
one (1) bad byte, and reassembling it so that it would work
with DOS 2. I was also pretty proud of linking some
graphics ASM from one source into FORTRAN for some Navy folks.
I stayed in DOS as long as I could stand. I had to switch
to W95 eventually.
DOS is like a backyard garden plot.
linux is like a tropical rainforest filled with poisonous
critters.
Did I mention that I said for the first time in my life
yesterday, "I love linux"? I never thought those words
would come to mind. I've been playing with linux for
a couple of years on obsolete PCs. Configuring linux
for one user (me) doesn't show what it can do. I can
get it set up for me in a half-hour or forty-five
minutes. Setting up a server that anyone can use from
all around the world is a different kettle of fish,
especially working from a remote terminal.
The neat thing about climbing the learning curve
is the view you get as you go up. :o)
Marty
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