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Latest Forum Posts
May we recommend..
TClock is an open source replacement for the windows system tray clock.
Development and maintenance of TClock has been continued by a series of coders on the DonationCoder forum.
- Last updated: 2017
- Visit the TClock github page to download the latest version here: https://github.com/White-Tiger/T-Clock.
- Visit the TClock section on our forum: here.
Our daily Blog
This page spotlights the most interesting posts collected from our forum every day.
OSNews on the Mobile App Store ModelI just want to quote this small blog entry on OsNews because it is concise and insightful. The application store model is a blessing and a curse. It's a blessing since it made it very easy for developers to get their code to users, but that ease also caused the supply side of applications to grow exponentially. The end result is something we are all aware of - application stores are littered with garbage, prices of software have plummeted to unsustainable levels, which in turn has all but killed off the independent application developer. The top application lists are now dominated by either high-profile applications such as Facebook or Twitter, or predatory pay-to-win gambling "games". Doing any search in a modern application store reveals piles of useless junk. http://www.osnews.co..._with_app_developers See also https://www.thisisin...ons-app-store-2018-7 |
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Do Not Buy a Smartwatch Right NowOn September 10, Qualcomm is hosting an event in San Francisco where they will announce a new wearable chipset that will more than likely be in all future Wear OS watches. This new chipset is said to be built from the ground up, will allow watches to look pretty when you aren’t using them (like a normal watch sitting idly by your side), and extend battery life.” More importantly, Qualcomm is betting that this Snapdragon Wear chip will “significantly change the Wear OS ecosystem, what you expect from a smartwatch.” https://www.droid-li...martwatch-right-now/ posted by mouser
discovered on https://hardware.sla...smartwatch-right-now (permalink) (read 19 comments) |
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Story of a failed attempt to invent a smartphone in the 1990sListen to it or read the transcript: General Magic spun out of Apple to make, essentially, what was the first smartphone, and John Sculley famously said, “It’s the most famous company or the most important company in Silicon Valley that nobody’s ever heard of.” It was this incredible team of people that went on to build that thing that we use every day, that everyone has in their pockets... https://www.recode.n...kara-swisher-podcast |
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A Spectre is Haunting UnicodeFun article.. In 1978 Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry established the encoding that would later be known as JIS X 0208, which still serves as an important reference for all Japanese encodings. However, after the JIS standard was released people noticed something strange - several of the added characters had no obvious sources, and nobody could tell what they meant or how they should be pronounced. Nobody was sure where they came from. These are what came to be known as the ghost characters https://www.dampfkra...-is-Haunting-Unicode |
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Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800Dawn of the Microcomputer: The Altair 8800 But Popular Electronics readers were introduced to something in the January 1975 issue that they had never encountered before. Below a heading that read “PROJECT BREAKTHROUGH,” the magazine’s cover showed a large gray and black box whose front panel bore a complicated array of lights and toggles. This was the Altair 8800, the “world’s first minicomputer kit to rival commercial models,” available for under $400. Though advertised as a “minicomputer,” the Altair would actually be the first commercially successful member of a new class of computers, first known as “microcomputers” and then eventually as PCs. The Altair was small enough and cheap enough that the average family could have one at home. Its appearance in Popular Electronics magazine meant that, as Salsberg wrote in that issue, “the home computer age is here—finally.” https://twobithistor...e-microcomputer.html You can play with an Altair emulator in your browser here: https://s2js.com/altair/sim.html posted by mouser
discovered on http://www.osnews.co...uter_the_Altair_8800 (permalink) (read 1 comment) |
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Gizmo's TechSupportAlert website needs our helpIan Richards who heads the TechSupportAlert.com website has put out a call for assistance.
There is no better website on the planet to learn about real freeware software, and Ian and TechSupportAlert have been true friends to us here on DonationCoder, always supporting our fundraisers and always being generous in their praise of our software. This is an absolutely essential website for freeware lovers. I hope everyone who has donated to DonationCoder will consider sending them a donation. I know I will. Gizmo's Freeware is one of the few remaining websites that is doesn't charge for reviews, doesn't offer pay-for-app listing services or accept reviews written by developers and advertisers. That’s the reason our reviews have always been honest and independent and that's the way we want to keep it. Donate to techsuportalert here: http://www.techsupportalert.com/donate.htm |
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