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Comment Re:Woohoo (Score 1) 186

All software ends up a bloated pile of cr@p eventually
UNLESS
You have policies in place to prevent it (like code reviews) as well as no quick fix's, rush jobs, or hacks.....
Yeah right! Never worked in a company like that Ever!
Maybe the guys who get to code stuff like satellites and Mars rovers get the luxury of time to get things right/perfect

Nevermind did a quick google.
Bug 1
Bug 2

Comment Re:Hide the IE and MSO icons. (Score 1) 408

Clearly you have a different relationship with your parents than most people.
If my father says he wants x then x is what he gets
What he used at work, he wants at home, because he is familiar with it and it does what he wants/needs.

Also I have to comment on the fact that people who say that libre office is just as good as Office clearly do not understand or use Office to it's full ability.
Libre office has a looong way to go. (and just to clear things up I fvcken hate Office)
That being said Libre office will do for people why are just typing up the odd email, or summing a list of items etc.
But office has not been a major vector for viruses in a long while.
Do all updates and make sure automatically update is on (it's on by default)
Switch off hide file extensions for known file types
Install a good antivirus.
Most important of all, instill a fear of "When in doubt do not click", or at least forward it to you to check out first.

Comment Re:Spreadsheets? (Score 2) 165

Therein lies the problem, your simple trigger will fire ALL THE TIME. When all I want to watch is record A value B. Triggers are expensive, do you really want to weigh your tables down with unnecessary trigger calls? Clearly you are only dealing with a couple hundred transactions a second, but when things get into the thousands, and at peak millions, placing a trigger on a database is sheer stupidity. Triggers which are utilized are due to bad planning, last resort efforts/or because of crap code. Three guesses which one is usually the culprit? No wonder DBA's are annoyed with programmers.

Comment Re:I for one would love to see DBs be more like Ex (Score 2, Insightful) 165

Good god (or in this case bad god)
Every damn company I have ever worked in has some (albeit smart) idiot who creates a smart excel/access application which does wonderful things.
Who then distributes it to xyz people
Then the datasource (ip address) changes and the thing breaks.
Or the datasource changes (database table changes) and the thing breaks
Or his hardcoded status codes changes or is expanded and the thing breaks
Then they call you out of the blue and say, please fix it!
Access is an evil which should die. Advocates of it are welcome to come debate the matter with me. I need fresh meat.
Excel is extremely powerful and a handy tool, but as soon as anyone adds a datasource they should come and debate the matter with me.

Comment Re:Because... (Score 1) 406

I know of one (sort of). His church elders had an issue working at a betting company so he resigned.
So I suppose you can say he caved into peer pressure, instead of his own personal morals.

I've been asked to reverse engineer / crack / hack and decrypt stuffs by some of the companies I've worked at.
I don't have an issue with it.
I also would not use any of that for personal gain.
(Well I gave myself 10 bucks to prove to them their secure credit card page was not as secure as they thought it was, but I gave it back).

Submission + - 1.5 million pages of ancient manuscripts online (ap.org)

LordWabbit2 writes: The Vatican Library and Oxford University's Bodleian Library have put the first of 1.5 million pages of ancient manuscripts online.
The two libraries in 2012 announced a four-year project to digitize some of the most important works of their collections of Hebrew manuscripts, Greek manuscripts and early printed books.
Among the first up on the site Tuesday, are the two-volume Gutenberg bibles from each of the libraries and a beautiful 15th-century German bible, hand-colored and illustrated by woodcuts.
The 2 million pound ($3.3 million) project is being funded by the Polonsky Foundation, which aims to democratize access to information.
The Vatican Library was founded in 1451 and is one of the most important research libraries in the world. The Bodleian is the largest university library in Britain.

Comment Re:Upate to the most current (Score 1) 241

I never said it was the best OS ever made.
I said that is what they are used to, comfortable with and unwilling to change from.
See how long you stay in business by force feeding your users with something they don't want, or in fact don't need because XP works for them.


I agree totally with what your are saying about security etc.
But if you don't give your users what they want (not NEED, but WANT) then shortly thereafter you won't have any users and it becomes a moot point
Because someone else will step in and give them what they want.


The best you can do is present to them the risks of running unsupported software etc and hope they make the right call.

Clearly you work in a cubicle farm with someone in charge making the right decisions instead of dealing with users who are paying you and refuse to change.

Comment Re:Upate to the most current (Score 1) 241

WTF? I did this a day or two ago! No issues.
We have some legacy software which requires VS 2003 to make changes (SDK only works with 2003 and XP)
Fired up a new VM, installed XP, ran updates, installed VS 2003, installed SDK, opened solution, fixed references, build, success, made minor changes, build, succes
Done

You are forgetting about people's comfort zone. XP works, they know how to change their settings for whatever.
The drivers for their XYC device install and work
The ancient app that they use to do their books/orders/whatever work
Old office (before the ribbon bar) works, and they know it backwards
IMHO MS are being fcking stupid by trying to force people off XP by no longer supporting it. When it becomes clear that they have to upgrade because of all the vulnerabilities that have now been left open people are going to upgrade. But will they upgrade to an MS OS?
Drop support for XP when the user base has become negligible, not when there are still billions of users.

People DO NOT LIKE CHANGE (except from vending machines)

Comment Re:maize?? (Score 1) 341

Oops, soz. Meant to reply to your query but got distracted by your sig.

Yes I went to school in a former British colony, so it's British English and British Law

In hindsight I think it was more about my teacher being British herself which made me lose points due to American spelling.
Then again I almost always scored 95+ on essays, she had to find fault somewhere?

English is easy, you just have to read a lot. :-)

Comment Re:Is An English Language History Primer in Order? (Score 1) 341

Clearly you did not follow any of the links in theshowmecanuck's post.
While you may have made it more uniform all you are doing is muddying the water

And what's with your crappy date format (m/d/y) it causes untold grief in the computer world

And fucking switch to metric already

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