“What is important for us is that the brain of the car, the operating system, is not iOS or Android or someone else but it’s our brain,” Dieter Zetsche, the chief executive of Daimler
Looks like I won't be buying a car from the Daimler family of manufactures anytime soon.
They changed to a better kernel. A really old and battle tested kernel. It is an exceptional reason to break compatibility but it's hard to argue that they shouldn't have made the decision. Certainly they won't switch kernels again soon because there is no better Windows kernel than NT.
Or an iPhone 3GS, since there's... oh, wait... and it was released when? ... 2009 you say? Astonishing.
---------
EDIT: For the narrative impaired, I am saying that the 3GS is still being supported with major software upgrades despite being three years old, in stark contrast to all other major smartphone platforms.
A huge blunder or a yet-to-be tweaked nuance of the Webkit engine? Seems to me that a huge blunder would entail a very difficult to address issue. I'll chalk this up as a minor blunder.
It really seems like one of those after release patch items. Something that OS X would have in a 0.0.1 update. It is iPad 3 generation specific and they didn't do a specific release update this time so that might make it a patch item.
My company is in the Milwaukee area and we have a significant need for strong C# .NET engineers. Telecommuting is not currently an option, but we offer some relo assistance on a case by case basis.
What company are you with? I live in Milwaukee and I'm not actively looking for a job right now, but I like to keep an eye on what kind of work is around.
The market for experienced Java & .NET engineers in the Milwaukee area hasn't been this hot in many years. Finding top talent is proving to be a challenge and is affecting growth.
Sir! Bite your tongue! This truly unique genere of iPhone apps has incalculable (by you, at least) amounts of potential. I'm certain that you would be shocked at the extensive research and development that is going into the next generation of these apps.
The case that I've bumped up against several times is when trying to get the class of the generic object. Something like:
T obj;
obj = getObjFromSomewhere();
log(T.class);
This type of operation is most useful if writing framework type of some sort. I've come across it when trying to write a generic JPA base DAO type of class.
Looks like I won't be buying a car from the Daimler family of manufactures anytime soon.