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April 3, 2009 at 7:48 PM #376570April 3, 2009 at 9:04 PM #375968CoronitaParticipant
[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Flu: I’m probably dating myself here, but I remember when going to McDonald’s (as a kid) was a big treat. I also remember my meal consisted of a cheeseburger (the little one), small fries and a small drink (like 12oz). We weren’t poor by any stretch of the imagination, but my folks treated going out as a pretty big deal.
I didn’t sit on my ass all day long either as a kid. We went and played outside until the sun went down and in spring and fall, I played baseball (Little League) and football (Pop Warner). I rode my bike everywhere and wouldn’t think of asking my mom for a ride to practice, I took my bike.
We didn’t overeat and we exercised. As a result, we weren’t fat. I coach football and I have kids that, when the season begins, literally cannot run a lap (440 yds) without stopping to catch their breath. It’s frickin’ scary.[/quote]
Going out to eat (anywhere) was considered a treat when I was growing up. I had paranoid parents that were concerned that eating out too much wasn’t good for one’s health. That and my parents were pretty frugal.
April 3, 2009 at 9:04 PM #376248CoronitaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Flu: I’m probably dating myself here, but I remember when going to McDonald’s (as a kid) was a big treat. I also remember my meal consisted of a cheeseburger (the little one), small fries and a small drink (like 12oz). We weren’t poor by any stretch of the imagination, but my folks treated going out as a pretty big deal.
I didn’t sit on my ass all day long either as a kid. We went and played outside until the sun went down and in spring and fall, I played baseball (Little League) and football (Pop Warner). I rode my bike everywhere and wouldn’t think of asking my mom for a ride to practice, I took my bike.
We didn’t overeat and we exercised. As a result, we weren’t fat. I coach football and I have kids that, when the season begins, literally cannot run a lap (440 yds) without stopping to catch their breath. It’s frickin’ scary.[/quote]
Going out to eat (anywhere) was considered a treat when I was growing up. I had paranoid parents that were concerned that eating out too much wasn’t good for one’s health. That and my parents were pretty frugal.
April 3, 2009 at 9:04 PM #376429CoronitaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Flu: I’m probably dating myself here, but I remember when going to McDonald’s (as a kid) was a big treat. I also remember my meal consisted of a cheeseburger (the little one), small fries and a small drink (like 12oz). We weren’t poor by any stretch of the imagination, but my folks treated going out as a pretty big deal.
I didn’t sit on my ass all day long either as a kid. We went and played outside until the sun went down and in spring and fall, I played baseball (Little League) and football (Pop Warner). I rode my bike everywhere and wouldn’t think of asking my mom for a ride to practice, I took my bike.
We didn’t overeat and we exercised. As a result, we weren’t fat. I coach football and I have kids that, when the season begins, literally cannot run a lap (440 yds) without stopping to catch their breath. It’s frickin’ scary.[/quote]
Going out to eat (anywhere) was considered a treat when I was growing up. I had paranoid parents that were concerned that eating out too much wasn’t good for one’s health. That and my parents were pretty frugal.
April 3, 2009 at 9:04 PM #376469CoronitaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Flu: I’m probably dating myself here, but I remember when going to McDonald’s (as a kid) was a big treat. I also remember my meal consisted of a cheeseburger (the little one), small fries and a small drink (like 12oz). We weren’t poor by any stretch of the imagination, but my folks treated going out as a pretty big deal.
I didn’t sit on my ass all day long either as a kid. We went and played outside until the sun went down and in spring and fall, I played baseball (Little League) and football (Pop Warner). I rode my bike everywhere and wouldn’t think of asking my mom for a ride to practice, I took my bike.
We didn’t overeat and we exercised. As a result, we weren’t fat. I coach football and I have kids that, when the season begins, literally cannot run a lap (440 yds) without stopping to catch their breath. It’s frickin’ scary.[/quote]
Going out to eat (anywhere) was considered a treat when I was growing up. I had paranoid parents that were concerned that eating out too much wasn’t good for one’s health. That and my parents were pretty frugal.
April 3, 2009 at 9:04 PM #376590CoronitaParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook]Flu: I’m probably dating myself here, but I remember when going to McDonald’s (as a kid) was a big treat. I also remember my meal consisted of a cheeseburger (the little one), small fries and a small drink (like 12oz). We weren’t poor by any stretch of the imagination, but my folks treated going out as a pretty big deal.
I didn’t sit on my ass all day long either as a kid. We went and played outside until the sun went down and in spring and fall, I played baseball (Little League) and football (Pop Warner). I rode my bike everywhere and wouldn’t think of asking my mom for a ride to practice, I took my bike.
We didn’t overeat and we exercised. As a result, we weren’t fat. I coach football and I have kids that, when the season begins, literally cannot run a lap (440 yds) without stopping to catch their breath. It’s frickin’ scary.[/quote]
Going out to eat (anywhere) was considered a treat when I was growing up. I had paranoid parents that were concerned that eating out too much wasn’t good for one’s health. That and my parents were pretty frugal.
April 3, 2009 at 9:18 PM #375973nostradamusParticipant[quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?
April 3, 2009 at 9:18 PM #376253nostradamusParticipant[quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?
April 3, 2009 at 9:18 PM #376434nostradamusParticipant[quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?
April 3, 2009 at 9:18 PM #376474nostradamusParticipant[quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?
April 3, 2009 at 9:18 PM #376595nostradamusParticipant[quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?
April 3, 2009 at 9:54 PM #375978CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus][quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?[/quote]
Thread hijack, from junk food, to technology.
———Step 1) Buy the cheapest mac you can (like me). Because you can’t develop on the iphone without a mac. You can get a Mac Mini for $450 and change now (I paid $590 last month :()
Step 2) Signup for the iphone developer program
Step 3) Pour through countless examples of Objective C, and don’t forget how to do memory management,especially if you come from a Java or .Net background. You embedded bit flippers shouldn’t have a problem with this…But some of us folks on the app side using java/.net(or pick your favorite script kiddie language) have gotten so use to just doing “new”‘s without “delete’s” π
Step 4) Follow directions to getting your app certified and sold.
Step 5) Port your application onto a crackberry and gphone too.
Alternatively, give me your idea and I’ll see if I can put folks to build it for you. We’ll split the profits 50/50….Just kidding.
Edit (forgot about step 0)….Search on apple store to make sure an app doesn’t already exist that does exactly what you are planning to do.
Besides tinkering, I’ve given up trying to hit it big with one killer iphone app. (1) I’m trying to doing things on multiple platforms without the overhead porting each platform. (2) You have limitations into what you can/can’t do on a iphone wrto the GPS. Apple won’t let you build a intelligence self-routing GPS on the iphone, for instance.
Personally, I’m tinkering with NFC devices right now just because….Trying to find a niche market for something.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_Field_CommunicationThis was something I bought at JavaOne awhile back…
http://www.sentilla.com/developer.htmlWhy am i doing this? Simple. I have a prediction. Enterprise computing has saturated and will be stale to dead over the next 5 years. Pretty much what was needed to be done on the backend can/will be done by most of what you have today…And the biggest driver will be cost (doing things cheaper faster). I doubt we’ll be seeing any killer apps from the enterprise side over the next 5 years.
The trend will be to be putting more and more capabilities into lighter weight client systems/devices, especially as the computing power of these devices drastically improve. That’s where the next 5 years of innovation is going to come from (aside from the IT work that Obama’s national health care system will incur)… Which brings me back to one thing I said before.
It’s doable for an Software Engineer to be an I.T. engineer. However, it’s going to be a challenge for some I.T. folks to try to do the mobile/device/connected app development.
It’s so easy to tinker these days. Because a lot of these things are so cheap, so accessible to people interested in them, and with the web, you can find so many people to help you with examples etc.
My only regret is i wished i had taken some of my other engineering classes more seriously and been more well rounded. Things like controls theory would be extremely helpful for me right now that I’m a tinkering mood… And with this economy, it’s perfect time to tinker.
———-
End hijack.Nostra, are you going to build an iphone app that allows you to order directly into McDonald’s? Just kidding.
April 3, 2009 at 9:54 PM #376258CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus][quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?[/quote]
Thread hijack, from junk food, to technology.
———Step 1) Buy the cheapest mac you can (like me). Because you can’t develop on the iphone without a mac. You can get a Mac Mini for $450 and change now (I paid $590 last month :()
Step 2) Signup for the iphone developer program
Step 3) Pour through countless examples of Objective C, and don’t forget how to do memory management,especially if you come from a Java or .Net background. You embedded bit flippers shouldn’t have a problem with this…But some of us folks on the app side using java/.net(or pick your favorite script kiddie language) have gotten so use to just doing “new”‘s without “delete’s” π
Step 4) Follow directions to getting your app certified and sold.
Step 5) Port your application onto a crackberry and gphone too.
Alternatively, give me your idea and I’ll see if I can put folks to build it for you. We’ll split the profits 50/50….Just kidding.
Edit (forgot about step 0)….Search on apple store to make sure an app doesn’t already exist that does exactly what you are planning to do.
Besides tinkering, I’ve given up trying to hit it big with one killer iphone app. (1) I’m trying to doing things on multiple platforms without the overhead porting each platform. (2) You have limitations into what you can/can’t do on a iphone wrto the GPS. Apple won’t let you build a intelligence self-routing GPS on the iphone, for instance.
Personally, I’m tinkering with NFC devices right now just because….Trying to find a niche market for something.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_Field_CommunicationThis was something I bought at JavaOne awhile back…
http://www.sentilla.com/developer.htmlWhy am i doing this? Simple. I have a prediction. Enterprise computing has saturated and will be stale to dead over the next 5 years. Pretty much what was needed to be done on the backend can/will be done by most of what you have today…And the biggest driver will be cost (doing things cheaper faster). I doubt we’ll be seeing any killer apps from the enterprise side over the next 5 years.
The trend will be to be putting more and more capabilities into lighter weight client systems/devices, especially as the computing power of these devices drastically improve. That’s where the next 5 years of innovation is going to come from (aside from the IT work that Obama’s national health care system will incur)… Which brings me back to one thing I said before.
It’s doable for an Software Engineer to be an I.T. engineer. However, it’s going to be a challenge for some I.T. folks to try to do the mobile/device/connected app development.
It’s so easy to tinker these days. Because a lot of these things are so cheap, so accessible to people interested in them, and with the web, you can find so many people to help you with examples etc.
My only regret is i wished i had taken some of my other engineering classes more seriously and been more well rounded. Things like controls theory would be extremely helpful for me right now that I’m a tinkering mood… And with this economy, it’s perfect time to tinker.
———-
End hijack.Nostra, are you going to build an iphone app that allows you to order directly into McDonald’s? Just kidding.
April 3, 2009 at 9:54 PM #376439CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus][quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?[/quote]
Thread hijack, from junk food, to technology.
———Step 1) Buy the cheapest mac you can (like me). Because you can’t develop on the iphone without a mac. You can get a Mac Mini for $450 and change now (I paid $590 last month :()
Step 2) Signup for the iphone developer program
Step 3) Pour through countless examples of Objective C, and don’t forget how to do memory management,especially if you come from a Java or .Net background. You embedded bit flippers shouldn’t have a problem with this…But some of us folks on the app side using java/.net(or pick your favorite script kiddie language) have gotten so use to just doing “new”‘s without “delete’s” π
Step 4) Follow directions to getting your app certified and sold.
Step 5) Port your application onto a crackberry and gphone too.
Alternatively, give me your idea and I’ll see if I can put folks to build it for you. We’ll split the profits 50/50….Just kidding.
Edit (forgot about step 0)….Search on apple store to make sure an app doesn’t already exist that does exactly what you are planning to do.
Besides tinkering, I’ve given up trying to hit it big with one killer iphone app. (1) I’m trying to doing things on multiple platforms without the overhead porting each platform. (2) You have limitations into what you can/can’t do on a iphone wrto the GPS. Apple won’t let you build a intelligence self-routing GPS on the iphone, for instance.
Personally, I’m tinkering with NFC devices right now just because….Trying to find a niche market for something.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_Field_CommunicationThis was something I bought at JavaOne awhile back…
http://www.sentilla.com/developer.htmlWhy am i doing this? Simple. I have a prediction. Enterprise computing has saturated and will be stale to dead over the next 5 years. Pretty much what was needed to be done on the backend can/will be done by most of what you have today…And the biggest driver will be cost (doing things cheaper faster). I doubt we’ll be seeing any killer apps from the enterprise side over the next 5 years.
The trend will be to be putting more and more capabilities into lighter weight client systems/devices, especially as the computing power of these devices drastically improve. That’s where the next 5 years of innovation is going to come from (aside from the IT work that Obama’s national health care system will incur)… Which brings me back to one thing I said before.
It’s doable for an Software Engineer to be an I.T. engineer. However, it’s going to be a challenge for some I.T. folks to try to do the mobile/device/connected app development.
It’s so easy to tinker these days. Because a lot of these things are so cheap, so accessible to people interested in them, and with the web, you can find so many people to help you with examples etc.
My only regret is i wished i had taken some of my other engineering classes more seriously and been more well rounded. Things like controls theory would be extremely helpful for me right now that I’m a tinkering mood… And with this economy, it’s perfect time to tinker.
———-
End hijack.Nostra, are you going to build an iphone app that allows you to order directly into McDonald’s? Just kidding.
April 3, 2009 at 9:54 PM #376479CoronitaParticipant[quote=nostradamus][quote=flu][quote=briansd1]There is an iPhone application that gives your the nutrition value all the dishes at all major restaurants.
You can compare that way.
BTW, if you use an iPhone, jailbreak it so you can get apps for free. Don’t pay the fees.
[/quote]
hmmm, that’s not very nice.[/quote]
No it’s not, especially if your an iPhone app developer.
Speaking of which, I have a million-dollar idea for an iPhone app. How should I proceed?[/quote]
Thread hijack, from junk food, to technology.
———Step 1) Buy the cheapest mac you can (like me). Because you can’t develop on the iphone without a mac. You can get a Mac Mini for $450 and change now (I paid $590 last month :()
Step 2) Signup for the iphone developer program
Step 3) Pour through countless examples of Objective C, and don’t forget how to do memory management,especially if you come from a Java or .Net background. You embedded bit flippers shouldn’t have a problem with this…But some of us folks on the app side using java/.net(or pick your favorite script kiddie language) have gotten so use to just doing “new”‘s without “delete’s” π
Step 4) Follow directions to getting your app certified and sold.
Step 5) Port your application onto a crackberry and gphone too.
Alternatively, give me your idea and I’ll see if I can put folks to build it for you. We’ll split the profits 50/50….Just kidding.
Edit (forgot about step 0)….Search on apple store to make sure an app doesn’t already exist that does exactly what you are planning to do.
Besides tinkering, I’ve given up trying to hit it big with one killer iphone app. (1) I’m trying to doing things on multiple platforms without the overhead porting each platform. (2) You have limitations into what you can/can’t do on a iphone wrto the GPS. Apple won’t let you build a intelligence self-routing GPS on the iphone, for instance.
Personally, I’m tinkering with NFC devices right now just because….Trying to find a niche market for something.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_Field_CommunicationThis was something I bought at JavaOne awhile back…
http://www.sentilla.com/developer.htmlWhy am i doing this? Simple. I have a prediction. Enterprise computing has saturated and will be stale to dead over the next 5 years. Pretty much what was needed to be done on the backend can/will be done by most of what you have today…And the biggest driver will be cost (doing things cheaper faster). I doubt we’ll be seeing any killer apps from the enterprise side over the next 5 years.
The trend will be to be putting more and more capabilities into lighter weight client systems/devices, especially as the computing power of these devices drastically improve. That’s where the next 5 years of innovation is going to come from (aside from the IT work that Obama’s national health care system will incur)… Which brings me back to one thing I said before.
It’s doable for an Software Engineer to be an I.T. engineer. However, it’s going to be a challenge for some I.T. folks to try to do the mobile/device/connected app development.
It’s so easy to tinker these days. Because a lot of these things are so cheap, so accessible to people interested in them, and with the web, you can find so many people to help you with examples etc.
My only regret is i wished i had taken some of my other engineering classes more seriously and been more well rounded. Things like controls theory would be extremely helpful for me right now that I’m a tinkering mood… And with this economy, it’s perfect time to tinker.
———-
End hijack.Nostra, are you going to build an iphone app that allows you to order directly into McDonald’s? Just kidding.
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