Microsoft Wrongly Gives Britain the Day Off
Barence writes "An error in Outlook's public holidays calendar has incorrectly given Britons the day off work. Today was originally meant to be a Bank Holiday in Britain, but the holiday was postponed for a week to coincide with the Queen's diamond jubilee next week. However, Microsoft Outlook and Windows Live services are still reporting today as Britain's Spring Bank Holiday, potentially tricking Britons into believing they have the day off work."
Cancel or post-pone some actual holiday because their kings/queens have done something else. It's hardly Microsoft's fault. And this would not be mentioned in news if it wasn't USA or UK Kingdom.
"potentially"? How about you find some git that skipped work because of it.
Do you even lift?
These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.
Seems odd to post this *after* normal work hours in the UK. Did someone actually complain about this?
After all, Microsoft does own England.
My Dilbert calender says today was a holiday in the UK as well. DAMN YOU SCOTT ADAMS!
If the brits don't already know their holiday was moved, why should they expect MS to be on top of that?
Most linux users don't know this, but the man pages were named after Chuck Norris. Chuck Norris fsck'ing hates noobs!
Windows Genuine Advantage
1. Google calendar has the same issue which is more embarrassing since Google calendar is online by definition and can be fixed more easily than outlook.
2. Apparently you can download an updated holidays file and patch Outlook.
3. Now that we've had our daily Microsoft-is-the-stupidest-and-evilest-company-on-the-planet-for-not-accurately-predicting-an-arbitrary-holiday-date-change-years-in-advance post, I'd like to see some more stories about how Americans are stupid and evil and some scientific studies showing that Christians are genetically inferior to the Atheist master race.
AntiFA: An abbreviation for Anti First Amendment.
but the holiday was postponed for a week to coincide with the Queen's diamond jubilee
In their defense, I must point out that the Queen of England writes terrible VBScript code. It probably is still being reviewed. If she wants to postpone a national holiday, she needs to get her changes committed at least 2 weeks prior to the hotfix release date.
We're on BST at the moment, it's 16:30 here.
Please consider this account deleted, I just can't be bothered with the spam anymore.
How many people actually rely on Outlook to tell them what days they have off, particularly something like "Spring Bank Holiday"?
This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
I don't pay any attention anyway.
Microsoft insists in referring to England as the UK when in fact they mean England.
Scotland has different holidays to England, but these aren't available to Scottish users according to MS.
Last year Windows UK had a UK tour, which only toured English cities. Nothing in Wales, Scotland or Northern Ireland.
A peeved UK citizen in Scotland.
if you cant think enough for yourself and don't know when a holiday really is, you have bigger problems.
Same sorts of people that will drive into a brick wall when the GPS says to turn right.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
No way are we that dependent on MS Outlook.
Wait--who relies on Microsoft to tell when they have off work? Since when is Microsoft the authority? Whatever MS may or may not say about holidays, it's your own fault if you listen to anyone other than your employer as to when you've got off work.
That sent us back to 1792. I couldn't even have toast since sliced bread hadn't been invented yet.
You could have invented it yourself, and then been the inventor of the greatest thing until [insert cool thing here].
So following the announcement of the postponement, MS decides to include the updated calendar info in a patch.
Since the patch isn't a critical or security patch, a large portion of end users -- and a larger portion of systems administrators would not install the patch.
Still not a news item.
I gave up on the holidays calendar years ago due to an overabundance of errors -- primarily inclusions of US holidays in the Canada calendar.
I suspect most Outlook users in the UK did the same.
It isn't raining.
IIRC, there were some guys at the stock exchange, coincidentally in London.
PlusFive Slashdot reader for Android. Can post comments.
Standing there alone
The ship is waiting
All systems are go
"Are you sure?"
Control is not convinced
But the computer
has the evidence
No need to abort
The countdown starts
When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
I gave up on the holidays calendar years ago due to an overabundance of errors -- primarily inclusions of US holidays in the Canada calendar.
Wait, what's the problem with that?
Us windows phone owning suckers in the UK had the same problem. My wife ruined my morning poop wit the news that it wasn't a bank holiday :(
Microsoft have never really cared about getting calendar details right. Whenever a colonial (maybe should I say yank to really annoy them - even though I know they're not all yanks) sends a meeting request it arrives saying GMT as the timezone for London instead of BST. You would have thought that they could get the hang of daylight saying as they have it too. You actually have to confirm with the other end and say: you know that meeting that says 1:00 pm GMT is really 1:00pm BST or noon GMT (actually I normally translate to whatever zone they're in) e.g 8:00 am EDT.
Using 64-bit processors is just a stopgap! What happens in 292 billion years?
Bank holidays are not statutory holidays in that sense.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bank_holiday
From the Wikipedia entry:
Remember the good old days when Microsoft prevented you from working because its software crashed?
When I picked up my Samsung Omnia 7 this morning it gleefully had on my main screens Calender App that I was on Holiday today. Luckily my wife was on hand to shout at me to get out of bed and get the kids up as she has a Palm Pre.
I'm all about the Linux, and I'm not a fan of Microsoft. I haven't used Windows since XP, and it hasn't been my primary OS since Win98. But if a regularly scheduled holiday is postponed by decree, does not being informed of that count as "a mistake"? The way I see it, the entity ordering the change is responsible for informing the media, and the mistake was not considering Microsoft (or Google, apparently) part of the media. How often is a holiday temporarily postponed? I can't remember such a thing happening in the US. What we've all learned is that the information infrastructure is not equipped to handle this extraordinary case.
The depressing thing is that our anachronistic, out-of-touch, hereditary monarch is probably the sanest and best informed member of our government...
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
The depressing thing is that our anachronistic, out-of-touch, hereditary monarch is probably the sanest and best informed member of our government...
Not to mention the most popular.
And the least corrupt.
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
I gave up on the holidays calendar years ago due to an overabundance of errors -- primarily inclusions of US holidays in the Canada calendar.
Iti s a good bet that a Canadian will live within commuting distance of the American border or will have business and personal contacts in the states.
I've a suspicion that some of those aren't independent variables. It would be interesting to know how they connect, because then instead of having to get depressed, you'd know why the rest of government was so flawed on such a consistent basis and what was actually needed in the way of reform. Discovery is only depressing if you never do anything with it.
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
Agreed. The Far North states are just as much a part of the good old United States as the Far South states (Mexico & friends).
We only let them think they are independent (with their own provincial government) so that they are easier to control. It's basically the same deal the UK has with the United States.
I am John Hurt.
That sent us back to 1792. I couldn't even have toast since sliced bread hadn't been invented yet.
You are aware that you can cut bread with a knife, into slice, yourself?
Just wondering.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
If it only hit Missouri, it would still be called a US Tour. It happens all the time.
Is that how they named the "World Series"? :)
To be fair, I guess all the teams are actually in "the world"
Paul "Say no to feeping creaturism"
And the least corrupt.
When you have ammassed as much wealth as the Queen legally, you don't need to be corrupt.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
Unless my eyes deceive me, you started three sentences with capital letters. Is something wrong?
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
The article makes no mention of whether those hard-working Britons in Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man get the day off either. :)