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  1. "Not many people use forward-deleting"

    It's just deleting. And that's a questionable assertion for which you've provided no support. You seriously think people Backspace old E-mails away? They Backspace unwanted files away? They Backspace selected areas away in Photoshop? OK.

    "I find it much easier to just Fn+Backspace"

    Except most people don't find that at all, because it's not marked on the keyboard. And again, you're asserting that a secret, two-keyed, two-handed hotkey is easier than pressing a clearly marked button?

    If you watch real users when they're faced with the lack of Delete, they use the arrow keys to move the cursor across the characters they want to delete, and then Backspace them away. Twice as much work. Or they reach for the mouse or trackpad and tediously highlight the characters to delete.

    And there is no separate function row on Apple laptops. The Eject key was right above the Backspace key... easily reachable.

  2. Nope. The problem isn't the terminology. I wouldn't even bring it up if Apple had a key to perform the function of everybody else's Delete key.

    The problem is missing functionality. And hiding it behind unmarked, multi-hand hotkey combinations is neither equivalent nor discoverable.

  3. Nothing tops Apple's infantile refusal to put a (real) Delete key on their laptops. Instead, they have a Backspace key mislabeled "delete."

    When the Eject key became obsolete, Apple had a perfect opportunity to fix this omission with essentially no effort. NOPE. Meanwhile, everybody else managed to have a proper Delete key on their laptops.

  4. But that is squandered by piss-poor programming and stupid visual gimmicks.

    I had to return to Windows as a daily work platform after a long time away (on Macs). I already knew that it had devolved into a grotesquely defective, regressive parade of UI blunders and deleted functionality... but its actual performance is TERRIBLE. I'm waiting for simple operations that I wouldn't have expected to wait for 20 years ago, even on bog-standard office desktop machines.

  5. Anything that helps people shun Autodesk's despicable, anti-customer and anti-industry practices is laudable.
  6. Exactly. And an entry in a key/value store is either a key or a value. Not both.
  7. Yep. Which is why "If the right lane goes straight" doesn't make sense. We've already established that the right lane does NOT go straight, because it's a turn lane.
  8. Nobody said he did. He said the RIGHT lane was a TURN LANE. Which means the lane to the left of it could count on the people TURNING, not going straight.

    WTF, YOU made the comment: "If the right lane goes straight"

    You might as well say, "if the people on the opposite side of the road cross the median..."

  9. No, they don't. A master/slave configuration (of hard drives, for example) involves two things. I specifically included it to head off the exact objection you're raising.

    "...the slash is now used to represent division and fractions, as a date separator, in between multiple alternative or related terms"

    -Wikipedia

    And what is a key/value store? A store of related terms.

    And if you had a system that only allowed a finite collection of key values, where might you put them? A key-value store.

  10. "cutting of a legal right-into-any-lane from the rightmost lane"

    "its also possible for people to turn right from the middle lane of the source street into the rightmost lane of the target"

    So you've created hypothetical situations that are no more useful than mine. I specifically mentioned having to turn into the nearest lane. If that's not true somewhere, then neither would adjacent turners be allowed. I simply asked if they were really cutting the other people off.

  11. Obviously. But the comment said TURN LANE.
  12. Thanks! I understand what tags are, but not what an "object" was in this context. Your example of multiple encodings of the same video seems very good.
  13. Are they cutting them off, though? If the street you're turning onto has two lanes, it shouldn't be a problem for two cars to turn at once. The car on the inside is required to turn into the nearest lane (according to any state law I know), so why can't the car on its left turn into its own lane?
  14. The worst are assholes "blocking the box" while there is space to pull forward along the curb or even the neighboring lane. This should be a tripled fine, simply for the monumental level of douchebaggery displayed.
  15. The most galling and pervasive offense, though, is TEXTING. The rampant texting while driving is killing pedestrians (and other drivers), leading to oft-cited statistics about the failure of "Vision Zero" and the increase in pedestrian deaths. Not to mention the millions of hours stolen from us all by people BLOCKING TRAFFIC while texting.

    We should not tolerate the ignorant and ineffectual response from lawmakers on this issue. Year after year, they refuse to do the right thing: make texting a DUI-level offense, with the same penalties. You could even argue that texting while driving is worse than DUI: Drunk people suffer from impaired judgment; sober people texting have decided to endanger and steal from everyone else while in full command of their faculties. It's despicable.

  16. A key-value store would be a store of one thing: key values. A hyphen combines two words to make an adjective, which describes the word that follows:

      A used-car lot
    
      A value-added tax
    
      A key-based access system
    
    When you have two exclusive options, two sides to a situation, or separate things; you separate them with a slash:

      An on/off switch
    
      A win/win situation
    
      A master/slave arrangement
    
    Therefore a key-value store and a key/value store are quite different.
  17. What are "tags on objects?"
  18. It's "key/value store", FYI
  19. Thus Apple announces that they're making their already piss-poor, fraudulent app-store search WORSE.

    I wrote an app for my company and put it on Apple's app store. It was basically IMPOSSIBLE to find. You could search for the company's exact name (it was the publisher of the app), and it did not appear in the top 300 results (which is where I gave up).

    What I caught Apple doing was essentially hijacking the company's (trademarked) name and not showing it, but rather any and every alternate spelling of a similar word... or listings that had no part of the string in their name or description at all. The search string was not present in ANY part of the vast majority of search "hits."

    I complained to Apple, and after being blown off once with a bullshit boilerplate response, I mentioned legal action in defense of our trademark. Then they addressed my case with a lie: They claimed that the publisher name is one of the top three search criteria. That is utter bullshit, in practice.

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