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| Comment on Reader Q&A: When will better JITs save managed code? by Why mobile web apps are slow | Sealed Abstract
[…] is from Herb Sutter, one of the big names in modern […] Read More »Comment on Lost two comments by Brochures printing dubai
You try to go for multiple facility software instead of single develop software and try to use print css in ur html for fulfilling your requirement of (in particular to post to the blog here, to produce print books, and to produce e-books.) Read More »Comment on Recommended reading: Why mobile web apps are slow (Drew Crawford) by mttpd
On a related note — I’m wondering, what are your thoughts on Steven Sinofsky’s recent article? He seems to be somewhat pessimistic (or perhaps realistic?), when saying that “working across platforms will only get more difficult, not easier.” Read More »Comment on Reader Q&A: When will better JITs save managed code? by Recommended reading: Why mobile web apps are slow (Drew Crawford) | Sutter's Mill
[…] agree with most of it, and not just because he quotes from my When Will Better JITs Save Managed Code blog post from last […] Read More »Comment on Recommended reading: Why mobile web apps are slow (Drew Crawford) by Jasper
And yet, MSFT tries to move developers away from C++ (not Herb or the VC++ but everybody else): Luckily, there seems to be a glimpse of hope. The new XAML platform is available from C++ (still no UI platform or desktop developers) and we are getting more C++11 Features (the slowest from the Major C++ Compiler). Read More »Comment on Recommended reading: Why mobile web apps are slow (Drew Crawford) by pjmlp
Thanks for sharing, very nice and interesting article. I know it is not really your area, but it would be nice that Microsoft eventually has a real optimizing native compiler for C#, not ngen. With the same kind of knobs that languages like C++, Ada and Delphi offer for code generation. Read More » | ||||
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Tuesday, July 9, 2013
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