The fool has said in his heart "there is no way the government will try that."
I'm thinking about rewriting my news reader plugin for Movable Type around Google Reader. After doing some research on the subject, it seems like it'd be worthwhile since Google Reader exposes its parsing and storage capabilities as an API. If I can figure out how to use its API, then I can make Movable Type a front-end for Google Reader.
It would appear that Sony is really starting to feel the heat as it loses developers. Microsoft was the first company to open up its console to home-brewed games via the XNA Game Studio, and Sony has now cut away almost all of the bureaucracy between game developers and the PlayStation 2. Apparently all you need now to make a PS2 game is to buy one of their development machines.
I often see advice posts published on sites like digg and reddit for career-related things, and they invariably say things like "do the work that's interesting and that makes you happy." That's all well and good, provided the job pays you well enough to keep you going at the level you want to be, and you have no family to support. Better advice would be for people to be told that work is work, and that they may not like their job, but it's better to have one than not. This is especially true if you have a family to support. You can't simply say "screw this corporate job that pays all of the bills handsomely. I want to go work at a little company, doing fun stuff, even though my pay will go down 40%."
I'm thinking about rewriting my news reader plugin for Movable Type around Google Reader. After doing some research on the subject, it seems like it'd be worthwhile since Google Reader exposes its parsing and storage capabilities as an API. If I can figure out how to use its API, then I can make Movable Type a front-end for Google Reader.
It would appear that Sony is really starting to feel the heat as it loses developers. Microsoft was the first company to open up its console to home-brewed games via the XNA Game Studio, and Sony has now cut away almost all of the bureaucracy between game developers and the PlayStation 2. Apparently all you need now to make a PS2 game is to buy one of their development machines.
I often see advice posts published on sites like digg and reddit for career-related things, and they invariably say things like "do the work that's interesting and that makes you happy." That's all well and good, provided the job pays you well enough to keep you going at the level you want to be, and you have no family to support. Better advice would be for people to be told that work is work, and that they may not like their job, but it's better to have one than not. This is especially true if you have a family to support. You can't simply say "screw this corporate job that pays all of the bills handsomely. I want to go work at a little company, doing fun stuff, even though my pay will go down 40%."
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