Posted on 07/06/2010 12:30:05 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Or that cinnabar (mercuric oxide or mercuric sulfide) can be found all over Northern California in surface deposits.
The real solution to all these hazardous substances is to post warning signs in every delivery room in every hospital that say:
Let the kid decide then whether he wants to climb back in where it's safe, or not...
Swordmaker, my apologies, you are absolutely correct.
I scratched my head for a while, and finally figured out where I made my memory error.
When the Macintosh first appeared, my main computer at work was a DEC LSI-11/23 running RSX-11/M, with a 9600-baud line to a VT-100 terminal. The VT-100 had a keypad that was used for numeric entry by accountants, and for editing by the rest of the world.
My editor of choice was DEC's "EDT" (EDT Text Editor), which made extensive use of the editing keypad -- it was highly programmable and you did nearly everything (except enter raw text) with the keypad.
The original Macintosh had no keypad (and as stated, no cursor keys).
So for me, especially using it as a terminal emulator, not having a keypad was as bad as not having any keyboard at all. So I guess I'm not too surprised that that is the way I remembered it... :)
If I'd known Vi better at that point I'd have used it; instead I drifted towards Emacs.
I do correctly recall the pull-down menu of keys in the terminal emulator programs -- but the menu was the keypad, not the entire keyboard.
Sorry about that, and thanks for the correction!
It's an old debating technique called "muddying the waters" or more technically "obfuscation." Puget does it frequently.
OK, then I’ll make this really easy since you two seem to be easily confused:
Apple does not lead in Smartphone OR general phone markets. They are not a market leader.
Is that clear enough? I thought it was pretty obvious and easy to understand that there are two markets that apply. And that Apple leads neither.
No one consciously lists "cosmetics" as a requirement for a computer. Most people who walk into a computer store have "requirements" like "I want to surf the Web, e-mail, play Farmville, and organize the pictures from my digital camera. I was thinking about building a Web page." Folks who have a list of technical requirements are likely to order online.
Design isn't just cosmetic. It's also ergonomics, efficiency and durability. With computers, like cars, appliances, or just about any big-ticket item, how it feels, how it works, and yes, how it looks are a factor in choosing a machine you're going to be sitting at and looking at for hours on end. No one walks into a car dealership and says they're looking for a car with easy-to-reach stereo controls and large cup-holders, but they notice those during a test drive.
I know. It started with a comment that Microsoft computers were "ugly", so the reply was in that context.
“Sigh. The reason most people don’t know that is that it simply is not true!”
Sigh. See post #107, Swordmaker. I admitted my poor choice of words before you went on your rant. Happy FReeping.
I don't see anywhere in this thread where it was said the iPhone was a leader in marketshare in any market. I do see you being very dismissive of the iPhone's accomplishments, instead touting the lesser accomplishments of your preferred platform.
Microsoft has always mimicked Apple. They start off with a great product when it reaches Beta, but then they start adding Microsoft-isms to it until it turns into a boondongle you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy.
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