Why Do I Keep Giving Antivirus Companies My Money?

This isn't "fool me twice, shame on you," it's like "fool me every freakin' year for the past decade." At least Norton 360 doesn't seem to consume huge portions of my CPU constantly.

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Interested in Deep Understanding of Concurrency? Read Mark McKeown

I hesitate to call Mark McKeown's \<a href="http://betathoughts.blogspot.com/2007/06/brief-history-of-consensus-2pc-and.html"" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">Brief History of Consensus, 2PC, and Transaction Commit (via just about everyone, but let's say Bill de h?ra) a "blog post." It reads much more like a darn …

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I Am A Demo God

Can't talk about it, but I demo'ed something today. I love it when the chewing gum and baling wire doesn't show.

That was a lot of fun. It's been a long time since I've done a big stakes demo.

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Sopranos Ending: No Spoilers

Ambiguous? Of course. But c'mon, there's clearly one reading that gives David Chase credit for being brilliant.

Having said that -- Could anyone stand watching more than the first 15 minutes of John from Cincinnati? I only made it that far because it was David Milch.

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Dan Bricklin Shreds Wikipedia's "Spreadsheet" page

Dan Bricklin has posted a thoughtful article on Wikipedia's "Spreadsheet" page. Bricklin quickly establishes that the page is well below par and may be tainted by someone's personal agenda. Given Bricklin's knowledge and involvement with this important topic, the critique should certainly be taken seriously, both as an indictment of …

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Google Buys Peakstream, Hot Young Player in General Purpose GPU (Concurrent) Programming

Google's interest in concurrent programming is no surprise -- indexing the Web involves a lot of parallelism -- but their \<a href="http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/06/05/google_buys_peakstream/"" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">acquisition of Peakstream, developers of a low-level programming tool, is startling.

To quickly review …

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Book 'Bots Battling Builds Bizarreness?

Have you ever noticed that "Buy This Book Used..." prices from Amazon and the like are often bizarre? Often they're strangely specific -- "\\(43.72" -- and often they're insanely overpriced "Paperback 23rd Printing of Programming with dBase II: \\)1,234.56"

Jeff Duntemann thinks it's due to 'bots. If it's not …

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"Service Unavailable" Woes: It Appears that dasBlog is Spontaneously Restarting

I'm aware that my blog has been troublesome lately (hopefully, your aggregator has borne the pain). I run \<a href="http://www.dasblog.info/"" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferrer">dasBlog, which I generally like and in which I have an insane investment (oh, look, I started this blog 5 years …

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IBM's Telelogic Acquisition: Buying Marketshare, Not Expanding Market

I agree with Alan Zeichick's analysis of IBM's acquisition of modeling tool vendor Telelogic:  the overlap with IBM's Rational product line is high, the acquisition "is a bid to buy market share....we've taken a powerful innovator and strong IBM competitor out of the market."

The software development industry typically …

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As A Programmer, Do You Go Into Debug Mode With Bureaucracy?

One of my few talents is that I'm really good dealing with bureaucracies. Not in the long run, where they drive me crazy, but in the short run, when they're telling you that you should buy the ticket and they'll refund it, or that you have to pay your entire …

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