Guejae Gae
The breed originated in Korea where it is most known for being related to the Korean Jindo Dog, just slightly bigger with larger canine teeth that bend slightly inward that worked best for hunting and herding. The standard size for the breed is relatively unknown other than being larger than the Korean Jindo Dog. The unique instinct of the Guejae Gae enables them to predict a prey's path while never giving up on that animal either. The breed indeed loves to play, but don't let that fool you, the Guejae Gae is a very intelligent dog as well.
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Great list!! It is definitely early for Scala aopitdon. It is always difficult for the industry to shift a primary language, and we quite often get stuck with less than the best. But given Scala's full integration with Java, there is a path of gradual aopitdon. That opens the door for teams to alter their syntax a bit, switch to the scala compiler, throw in the scala library, and keep developing full speed. Then gradually fold in (or should I say foldLeft, hehe) more fundamental principles, Monads, etc. Processors will get more cores. Software will become more concurrent. Scala also currently deploys and runs both on the JVM and CLR. And yes, you can build an Android app in Scala. Very Interesting.SproutCore is an interesting framework, which is good for those that are targeting HTML5. It presents a solid MVC pattern to HTML5 apps in pure JavaScript, deploys to apache cleanly, and helps users manage and apply views and animation transitions. Not a full replacement for Flex4, but is a good fit for an app that needs to span devices (browser, iPad, iPhone, Android).I'm not that excited about iAd (I think web advertising is overblown), but entirely agree with the Chrome App Store. I love the iPhone and iPad, but I don't think Objective-C is it. Feels like a historical choice by Apple instead of one to build momentum on, at least from a language feature perspective. It seems that Android's biggest problems are app consistency and ease-of-use. App Inventor might help this tremendously. Back to the old open vs. closed battle. If Android can produce consistent high quality across the multiple vendors of hardware for their OS, then aopitdon could shift their way, otherwise it is up to Apple to keep ahead via innovation and the experience they can push by producing the whole solution (both hardware and software). Apple has an uphill battle in the enterprise space and pushing Objective-C doesn't help them at all. Nobody wants to carry multiple phones, and with the network family plans it means that Android can probably catch up to iPhone just from enterprise aopitdon and its fallout. But I wouldn't count Apple out either, they have a knack for inventing and delivering the goods that we want.Gene, you've got a great blog here!!
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