"In conclusion, people are finally beginning to understand the hard way:
Web Browsers really make poor client application runtimes for all but the most basic of things.
ActiveX is a security nightmare and counter to making cross-platform applications.
The web is a constantly changing and evolving standard separate from Microsoft or any specific operating system, as such implementing an application for just one specific browser and version with no intent to keep it updated is just asking for disaster.
Tying local help files or other local content to a "live" web browser that may change in functionality is a bad idea.
But, nobody ever listened to anything I have to say."
Narrator: And nobody listened to anything he said.
The colonia status survives in the name, that's indeed the main significance. There were of course hundreds of coloniae. Some similar, in that the status also gave the town its name today. E.g. Lincoln, England from "Lindum Colonia". Not every outpost in conquered territory was a colonia though. Some were oppida, while others were military outposts
In contrast to CCAA and Augusta Treverorum, Mogontiacum (Mainz) was not a colonia. It was primarily a military post. The main difference is that citizens of a colonia were in fact fully Roman with all the rights and duties. It was also part of a different province - Germania Superior, whereas CCAA was the centre of Germania Inferior.
Mogontiacum (Mainz) is further east than CCAA. One of it's purposes was to secure the Limes, but there was a comfortable buffer between the Limes and the town itself. Further north, the wilderness basically began when you crossed the Rhine at Colonia Ulpia Traiana (Xanten) or in fact CCAA...
You'll find the majority of Roman artifacts in an area roughly a third of the size of medieval Cologne, which itself is basically just the very city centre of Cologne today. However, a lot of digs were made along the roads leading out of Cologne since these were prominent burial sites for rich Romans. These roads follow the old layout until today...
I'm genuinely confused as why this is getting so much attention. The NativeScript-Vue integration is out for over a year already. It fulfils exactly the same purpose, without the additional strange cross-compilation/transpilation.
Gotta appreciate the update - not many vendors would do that. It's also a shame that very few independent sources do thorough comparisons like these... I mean comparisons below the Gartner enterprise analysis level.
Also interesting to see that arangodb still performs better than Neo4J in typical graph scenarios, despite the attacks in another threat by the Neo folks.
Actually "das Mädchen" makes perfect sense. The diminutive ("-chen") requires the neuter form. This is remarkably regular for a language full of exceptions: Der Brief, Das Briefchen. Die Flasche, Das Fläschchen etc.
Web Browsers really make poor client application runtimes for all but the most basic of things. ActiveX is a security nightmare and counter to making cross-platform applications. The web is a constantly changing and evolving standard separate from Microsoft or any specific operating system, as such implementing an application for just one specific browser and version with no intent to keep it updated is just asking for disaster. Tying local help files or other local content to a "live" web browser that may change in functionality is a bad idea.
But, nobody ever listened to anything I have to say."
Narrator: And nobody listened to anything he said.