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Aztec Flyer
Can we start with the easy education? They aren't maps, they are CHARTS.
You really need to get an iPad...
Can we start with the easy education? They aren't maps, they are CHARTS.
No matter, we had to be fully staffed all night "just in case". THAT was insanity.
Drove a rental in Germany with a TomTom GPS. That was the single worst POS GPS I have ever seen or used in my life. Took us on a several block merry-go-round ride in Berlin (and put us right back on the road we were on, several blocks back). An hour later we were on the Autobahn, and it showed us a few km off the road in a forest - for half an hour. It was aggravating, then almost entertaining, but we eventually decided to just turn it off and wing it.Tomtom owns the automotive GPS market in Europe... Every Fiat has a Tomtom navigation system.
As if I needed an excuse! CheersApril 7 is, IMHO, much more dang important.....National Beer Day!
Drove a rental in Germany with a TomTom GPS. That was the single worst POS GPS I have ever seen or used in my life. Took us on a several block merry-go-round ride in Berlin (and put us right back on the road we were on, several blocks back). An hour later we were on the Autobahn, and it showed us a few km off the road in a forest - for half an hour. It was aggravating, then almost entertaining, but we eventually decided to just turn it off and wing it.
Our take was, TomTom SuckSucks.
The company I worked for at the time (a Fortune 500 Company) had a massive Y2K project team for over 2 years. Every programming department had devoted programmers on the team. We met every week for updates. Those meetings were probably the only wasted time. The number of bugs uncovered and fixed was eye popping. We had a Y2K celebration on Dec 29 when the last known bug had been fixed and tested. On New Years Eve, we had almost every programmer on staff standing by. Food, coffee and soft drinks were plentiful. But no alcohol. We had ONE undetected bug show up around 9am and it was fixed by 9:15am. We had another party on the evening of Jan 1.The reason that Y2K wasn't a disaster was that we fixed the systems that needed to be fixed. I did a couple of large projects for the DoD; they came down to the wire.
The company I worked for at the time (a Fortune 500 Company) had a massive Y2K project team for over 2 years. Every programming department had devoted programmers on the team. We met every week for updates. Those meetings were probably the only wasted time. The number of bugs uncovered and fixed was eye popping. We had a Y2K celebration on Dec 29 when the last known bug had been fixed and tested. On New Years Eve, we had almost every programmer on staff standing by. Food, coffee and soft drinks were plentiful. But no alcohol. We had ONE undetected bug show up around 9am and it was fixed by 9:15am. We had another party on the evening of Jan 1.
People make fun of the Y2K scare that never happened. There was a reason it didn't happen.
But what ****ed me off the most was that it wasn't long I noticed various programs again using 2 digits for the date field. The logic was that those programs would not be around in 100 years from now. They were probably right, but the sloppy programming habits would be. At one time, memory was so expensive that saving those two bytes was important. These days, there is no excuse.
I believe it is time for E-Loran.And Y2K was to bring the end of the digital world too.
I describe it as doing as good a job as management willl let me, as opposed to the best job I can do. Been in both situations, far too many timesNot to say that there are no lazy programmers, but that’s not fair to most of the builders of those systems. Many of those systems were built in mainframe days where systems were only rented from IBM and all the core (yes, core) as well as disk cost real money as you used it. Those systems programmers were never expecting the longevity that occurred and were saving real, run time, money by limiting those fields.
Now that I have gray hair I’ve dug through enough old systems (some that I built) and realized most engineers do what makes sense given the conditions, goals and assumptions in place when they built the system.
The reason that Y2K wasn't a disaster was that we fixed the systems that needed to be fixed. I did a couple of large projects for the DoD; they came down to the wire.
My firm goal is to be retired, at least from IT by then, and just not give a flip.You might want to worry about the Year 2038 problem instead.