From the article - "I really want to think about you as an extension to my product development organisation so that together you and us, as a product group, can combine forces and help develop and deliver the right products for our customers," - Interesting. So why would we developers PAY FOR THIS CODE if we are partially responsible for developing it? It seems like we should get paid for being part of the product group?
OK,
Just so it gets told. I use the beta Avantgo browser from behind my companies traffic filter. We use Websense to keep down the unsavory surfing. I have noticed that since Avantgo is acting as a proxy, I can get anywhere, even those places my company blocks. Of course, the nice folks at Avantgo know what I visit, but Websense only sees a connection to Avantgo, very interesting.
My Tungsten C plays MP3s just fine. Spend the 10 bucks and register pocket tunes link It is very full featured, supports skins, plays in background, etc. Sure it's only mono, but I can fake slow managers that I'm on a call, rather than just listening to tunes. Plus, I can use the same device to record voice memos. My $.02.
I left a job I loved a couple years ago. Great job, poorly managed organization. I could see the iceberg... The technical folks all understood, but the management team thought I was a traitor for leaving the Titanic. After the technical folks repeated requests, I helped them out with a systems issue. One of the peons noticed my login and alerted the management. They accused me of attempting to hack their systems, and called in their ultra tight-a** IT Security guy. 18 months and $7,000 in lawyer fees later, they finally droppped it. Now, I get written authorization, at least an email, before I log in to anyone's system.
If they use a wireless network to get to access inventory data, it's a good chance that wireless network is actually tied to the store backbone. You hop on the backbone and you can poke at all the other boxes on it. Just passing inventory data on wireless sounds secure at first, but when you examine it, they are just avoiding having client data sniffed. They aren't protecting the network.
Notice that http://www.adti.net/searchpage.htm accesses a free linux based search engine. What hypocrites.
From netcraft.com The site www.picosearch.com is running Apache/1.3.22 (Unix) (Red-Hat/Linux) mod_ssl/2.8.4 OpenSSL/0.9.6b DAV/1.0.2 mod_perl/1.24_01 on Linux.
Ewwww, Take a look at those "man hands"! yuck
From the article - "I really want to think about you as an extension to my product development organisation so that together you and us, as a product group, can combine forces and help develop and deliver the right products for our customers," - Interesting. So why would we developers PAY FOR THIS CODE if we are partially responsible for developing it? It seems like we should get paid for being part of the product group?
Except it is an MCSE, not an MSCE, moron.
OK, Just so it gets told. I use the beta Avantgo browser from behind my companies traffic filter. We use Websense to keep down the unsavory surfing. I have noticed that since Avantgo is acting as a proxy, I can get anywhere, even those places my company blocks. Of course, the nice folks at Avantgo know what I visit, but Websense only sees a connection to Avantgo, very interesting.
My Tungsten C plays MP3s just fine. Spend the 10 bucks and register pocket tunes link It is very full featured, supports skins, plays in background, etc. Sure it's only mono, but I can fake slow managers that I'm on a call, rather than just listening to tunes. Plus, I can use the same device to record voice memos. My $.02.
SA
Not to nit pick, but what the hell is this?
/= who are
>I'd say there certainly are people at MS who're very qualified...
who're
Where the hell did you learn that? Are you trying to call M$ a bunch of whores? They are, but at least write it correctly, geez.
I left a job I loved a couple years ago. Great job, poorly managed organization. I could see the iceberg... The technical folks all understood, but the management team thought I was a traitor for leaving the Titanic. After the technical folks repeated requests, I helped them out with a systems issue. One of the peons noticed my login and alerted the management. They accused me of attempting to hack their systems, and called in their ultra tight-a** IT Security guy. 18 months and $7,000 in lawyer fees later, they finally droppped it. Now, I get written authorization, at least an email, before I log in to anyone's system.
If they use a wireless network to get to access inventory data, it's a good chance that wireless network is actually tied to the store backbone. You hop on the backbone and you can poke at all the other boxes on it. Just passing inventory data on wireless sounds secure at first, but when you examine it, they are just avoiding having client data sniffed. They aren't protecting the network.
It's always a bad idea to challenge these guys, they will break it.
Notice that http://www.adti.net/searchpage.htm accesses a free linux based search engine.
What hypocrites.
From netcraft.com
The site www.picosearch.com is running Apache/1.3.22 (Unix) (Red-Hat/Linux) mod_ssl/2.8.4 OpenSSL/0.9.6b DAV/1.0.2 mod_perl/1.24_01 on Linux.