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> Sigh. I think I preferred it when Ballmer was in charge and Microsoft seemed clueless :-/

It's funny you say that because I used to joke that Ballmer did more to aid the adoption of Linux than Shuttleworth had.


It's not that surprising news. NT has supported ARM for a few years now and the Raspberry Pi 2 is a pretty beefy board - all things considered.


Actually Microsoft seemed to be backing away from ARM support. They have abandoned Windows 10 for existing Windows RT devices, for instance.


That is probably because Surface RT has pretty much been rejected by the market. There is no business in beating a dead horse.


Because enough members of HN found this interesting enough to up-vote the article.

The criteria is as simple as that.


It can do if you configure it to


its not really "native" scrolling. (technically, it is, but obviously the commenter meant to have regular scrollback maintained client-side)

Then again the situation is no better with ssh, and tmux/screen work okay for that.


You can get native tmux scrolling on a mac with iTerm or Terminal.app: https://filippo.io/native-scrolling-and-iterm2/


This is NOT native scrolling. You still have to manually toggle "scroll-mode", get janky lag because of the screen redraws, and a redundant "selection cursor" that messes with inversions of the scroll direction.


For all it's faults, I used to love writing VRML. In fact it was probably the last time I got giddy with excitement when talking about the internet as everything since has just been a case of trying to get web applications to catch up with desktop application.

I also agree that the world just wasn't ready for VRML. It was so far ahead of it's time that it even pre-dated 3D hardware accelerated graphics chips coming as standard on desktop PCs!


Indeed, there was a great example of collaborative VRML on-line in the late nineties, by exploring a 3D 'house' together you could unlock certain features, everyone ended up in the bouncy fireplace! We were very excited about the potential, it's only been 20 years to wait for the hardware to catch up :)


The hardware has been ready for 15 years already (just think of all the 3D multi-player games and Second Life clones out there).

What we had to wait for was the technology to be reinvented a dozen times before client side web languages finally reached the same point that desktop software development was 20 years previously (and let's not forget the prolonged stagnation in web technologies as pioneered by the dominance of IE6).


Like myself, the enthusiasm that you felt may have had more to do with yourself not yet developing a healthy sense of skepticism for technology than the usefulness of the technology itself.

I can definitely see some uses for it - architectural walkthroughs for example. But using it for creating a virtual store would just get in the way of doing any shopping.


Oh I didn't think it would replace HTML. For me the appeal was because VRML was the closest thing we had to the 3D rendered remote mainframe logins that Hollywood hacker films loved to show off.

Running around a VR modelled web page made me feel like the Lawnmower Man or Joey hacking into the Ellingson Mineral Company supercomputer (well, maybe not Joey specifically because he was a n00b)


Confirmed for architectural walkthroughs! The lab I worked at in college used VRML for some interactive building models on a rear projected 3-screen polarized 3D setup. Pretty fun stuff.


Just out of interest, what other reasons do you use Jails for?


The moment you push any kind of culture underground you automatically make it harder and more expensive to control. So the smarter move would be to legalise the less harmful drugs but create a safe, controlled environment for sale and usage.

While some of the more conservative people out there might disagree with people taking drugs, the fact remains that people do want to get high and thus those people will always find way to do so. To me, it makes more sense not to turn those people into outlaws and instead concentrate your efforts on tackling those who turn to drugs for non-recreational reasons (eg resolving addiction and/or peoples dependency on stimulants for escapism. Those individuals usually have other real life issues and -wrongly- turn to drugs as their "fix").

This will never happen though because drugs are given such a bad connotation in the press as the roots of all evil. Not all drugs are equal; whose which are proven to be relatively harmless compared to tobacco or alcohol are given the ridiculous label of "gateway drugs" - as if anyone who smokes two puff of a joint will automatically end up on the streets shooting heroin. If we want people off the harder drugs then we have to teach kids that not all drugs are equally bad - and to do this we need governments to send a saner political message about their stance on drugs.

From a personal perspective, I've done a few "magic mushrooms" at festivals in my younger years. They made me a little giddy but at no point did I rape, steal nor murder. In fact I was more pleasant company than when I've been drinking (and I'm not a rude drunk by any means). Yet since then, the UK government has made magic mushrooms illegal. It's just absurd to think that my previous actions, which were entirely harmless at the time, are now illegal. And when kids experiment (as many kids often do) they too will learn that government legislation is broken towards "softer" drugs. Which will make then re-evaluate their opinion about their governments stance on all drugs. So the government are really just wasting their own time and our public money by continuing on this charade that all recreational chemicals are evil.

The most hypocritical thing of all though, is I bet a great many of those in power have smoked weed at some point when they were teenagers / young adults (as we saw in the UK with the amusing yet frustrating confessions a few years back where several politicians came forward and admitted to "smoking but not inhaling". sigh


Actually Clinton is allergic to smoke, and was well known on campus for making hash cookies which is why he said 'never inhaled' because he ate weed instead. Too bad he went on to throw countless people in prison for doing exactly what he used to do.


> "Actually Clinton is allergic to smoke, and was well known on campus for making hash cookies which is why he said 'never inhaled' because he ate weed instead."

UK != US. So it stands to reason that I wasn't talking about Clinton specifically. But it's amusing to see the same stories happening on both sides of the pond.


"If we want people off the harder drugs"

If we want that. That is not really the goal. The goals of drug prohibition today are:

1. Creating favorable markets for the pharmaceutical industry

2. Expanding the size and power of the police

3. Artificially inflating the market for paramilitary police gear

4. Protecting the market for alcohol and tobacco

5. Attacking certain minority groups

6. Expanding the prison industry's profits

No amount of logic or reasoned argument can override the amounts of money and political pressure at work here.


> No amount of logic or reasoned argument can override the amounts of money and political pressure at work here.

The gradual erosion of prohibition through popular referenda in the states argues against the truth of this claim.


We have only seen the erosion of prohibition of a single drug. For everything else we are still seeing more of the same -- in the same period of time where states have relaxed marijuana prohibition, numerous other drugs have been made illegal.


> We have only seen the erosion of prohibition of a single drug.

Everything starts somewhere. If the factors that were posited as insurmountable in the defense of drug prohibition really were, we wouldn't see legal progress against prohibition at all. The fact is that is that those factors, even if they are accurately described as the motivations behind legal prohibition, are demonstrably not insurmountable.


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