This is like the Dwarf Fortress of computing platforms. Unequivocal at its core, but impenetrable without dedicating some section of your life to it.
Seems that both appear to allow sacrifices to god(s).
This is like the Dwarf Fortress of computing platforms. Unequivocal at its core, but impenetrable without dedicating some section of your life to it.
Seems that both appear to allow sacrifices to god(s).
Blah blah, a CNN page showing a simple article makes 200+ HTTP requests and uses 2 MB of data. It sucks, but it's par for the course
Just out of morbidy curiosity, I jumped into an intranet Microsoft Dynamics CRM instance ("On-Prem Install," the salesman cooed with smug sophistication). ~125 requests and 10.5MB later, I had a dashboard of open Cases. About 3 minutes later, I hit "Refresh All" to get fresh data for all the widgets and it brought in another 3MB of data.
This is an application which has a huge cloud install base for its users. Microsoft's answer to other CRM solutions. I still can't imagine using it from a mobile setting without Wifi or some kind of native app whose primary job is reducing the amount of data it pulls from its server.
"That's called a Butter Diet."
it may work on vegans, sure, but to be fair you could say the same about any overweight woman you would potentially find attractive given weight loss. I'm sure there's some kind of male equivalent, but I'm too lazy to google it.
Blah blah, a CNN page showing a simple article makes 200+ HTTP requests and uses 2 MB of data. It sucks, but it's par for the course
Just out of morbidy curiosity, I jumped into an intranet Microsoft Dynamics CRM instance ("On-Prem Install," the salesman cooed with smug sophistication). ~125 requests and 10.5MB later, I had a dashboard of open Cases. About 3 minutes later, I hit "Refresh All" to get fresh data for all the widgets and it brought in another 3MB of data.
This is an application which has a huge cloud install base for its users. Microsoft's answer to other CRM solutions. I still can't imagine using it from a mobile setting without Wifi or some kind of native app whose primary job is reducing the amount of data it pulls from its server.
"That's called a Butter Diet."
it may work on vegans, sure, but to be fair you could say the same about any overweight woman you would potentially find attractive given weight loss. I'm sure there's some kind of male equivalent, but I'm too lazy to google it.
Ever since ~2006 when a Best Buy employee told me, a potential Zune customer, that I could squirt songs over wifi to other Zune devices, weird tech names/phrases haven't phased me too much.
Either way, neither Grunt nor Gulp are simple to jump into. They both require a large number of external libraries out of the gate and it is not always clear how you can piece the puzzle together. Once you get the patterns for either, they both work fine. I prefer Gulp because it was easy to get up and running with an incremental build system (which of course requires a minimum of 9 libraries).
This is like the Dwarf Fortress of computing platforms. Unequivocal at its core, but impenetrable without dedicating some section of your life to it.
Seems that both appear to allow sacrifices to god(s).
MUMPS still runs a considerable number of Hospital EHR systems. If you have been to a hospital run by the US Government (particularly any VA/VHA hospital), your patient records (inpatient and outpatient) are entirely covered by MUMPS code.
VA's EHR, Vista, is written in MUMPS and direct interaction with the legacy applications requires a client mainframe emulator. More modern client applications are Delphi. All of the VA's code is maintained by federal employees and is public domain, there was an open source initiative some time ago so you can probably find it online and jump down that rabbit hole. I just looked up Medsphere and they sell a commercial version of Vista
MUMPS vendors have latched on pretty hard to the NoSQL movement. One guy in particular has a github project called 'nodem' where he lines up node.js with an open source MUMPS runtime, GT.M : https://github.com/dlwicksell/nodem... So there's that.