Comment Re:The devil in the details (Score 1) 276
any cost savings go directly into the pockets of company executives and shareholders.
Sounds like a good time to buy some shares, then?
any cost savings go directly into the pockets of company executives and shareholders.
Sounds like a good time to buy some shares, then?
For the last 3 years, I have been putting loads of batteries in kids toys and some of them just plained sux to put batteries in.
What a weird hobby. But I guess it's like those people who put money into stranger's parking meters.
Depends on the type of business. Web design or computer related stuff is fairly light on it I'll admit, but anything requiring insurance or inventory tracking is enough to scare off anyone who isn't a dedicated lover of paper shovelling.
That's why business owners hire other people to handle that stuff. They usually want money for their trouble but you can focus on making more of it.
I always thought that these notices are very odd. I mean, can I put up a sign that says "In no event shall Esben be responsible for any crime he might do" and expect it to have any effect?
Of course not, since that claim would be false. Software maker responsibilities are a different matter. Would you hold the Apache Foundation liable for damages if someone hacks your web server due to security holes in their code? No, as they don't claim or promise responsibility any more than Microsoft or anyone else with half a mind do.
That's only if you count Alaska, which is disingenuous at best, given that it's huge, and almost completely unoccupied.
But it has more than its share of bridges, I've heard.
10 years experience using programs that have only existed for 5 years
The honest man's solution of course is to outsource your job to a team with combined experience of 10 years.
And it should be the law: If you use the word `paradigm' without knowing what the dictionary says it means, you go to jail. No exceptions. -- David Jones