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There are probably browser based apps now that are equivalent to Mac apps from the 90’s
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great link
diligent hands rule....
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I think a (smart) "graphic designer" would focus on the software he thinks he needs first; then find the hardware to run that software.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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Maybe there was a time when it was true.
Graphic designers used Mac for a long time and it worked.
And it's takes a lot for people to change platforms.
You get used to how things are done on Mac (or on Windows) and switching between platforms can take some time and can be aggravating.
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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Our county was one of the hardest hit.
120 MPH winds.
Getting the power back on was quite a struggle, involving many people. Because the line coming to the house got pulled down by a branch.
We had to get to get an electrician in the middle of an emergency...Thank god we found one that came right out.
We called the electric company and they said we would have to get it inspected before they would hook it up.
The county seat where the inspector is was totally destroyed, 18 miles from us.
So we called the people that repaired the line and they called the electric company and said that they would hook it up since it was an emergency and they would call us. No Call!
So this morning I say a truck drive by I stopped him and he said sure I'll have a crew here as soon as one is free.
15 min. later a truck arrived, hook us back up and we have power again.
I don't think before I open my mouth, I like to be as surprised a everyone else.
PartsBin an Electronics Part Organizer - Release Version 1.1.0 JaxCoder.com
Latest Article: SimpleWizardUpdate
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Mike Hankey wrote: 15 min. later a truck arrived, hook us back up and we have power again. Nice!
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Yeah, Mike that was quite a storm. Glad you made it through. Wow, 120MPH is cat 3 stuff. Sounds like you have some experience.
We had similar problem in 2008 when hurricane IKE hit Houston. Our winds were not quite as strong at <110mph. Our houses were designed to handle 115 mph so no roof damage. But power was very tricky. Some here, some there, across the street out, but ours on. The big difference is our lines are underground, so to tie ones line to a break was complicated.
Anyway, glad to hear you have power back. Lots of downed branches though. Chain saw time.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Yep,
Here is a small failure you probably won't see in the news media. Recently the FBI and CISA announced the closure of "Operation Duck Hunt". An astute reader might have noticed it being described as a "disruption". While the initial media reports described it as a "takedown". Allow me to shed some light on that.
They basically wrote a DLL that would be loaded by Qbot and issues the QPCMD_BOT_SHUTDOWN command. Then sent a C2 command to around 700,000 bots instructing them to download and execute the DLL. A good and solid plan.
But what you haven't heard is that the FBI/CISA tool authors dynamically linked to the C runtime. Guess what happens if you try to run a DLL (dynamic linked to C runtime) but without the C runtime installed?
Those 700,000 computers will certainly have a large percentage without the Visual C++ Redistributable package installed. I can understand why they left the (persistence modules) WMI and scheduled tasks untouched, but dynamic linking the uninstall library looks like rookie ineptitude.
Luckily the C2 servers were apparently seized so it was ultimately a success. But the client software uninstall was a failure.
"I wrote a C++ program that only runs on my computer" is something you might imagine a high school student asking. But I didn't expect that from our nations brightest security teams.
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It was probably written by ChatGPT and c opy'n'pasted without any thought being involved.
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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FBI wrote: As a result of this operation, the FBI and the Dutch National Police The Dutch National Police.
Does anyone else still own a fax machine?
Bastard Programmer from Hell
"If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
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Boy does that bring back memories. Years ago, many years ago, I had written this app for whatever company I was working for then, and it simply wouldn't run anywhere but on my computer. Yup -- dynamically linked to the C runtime, which nobody else had installed.
Granted the problem was easily fixed, though as I recall it took a few hours to figure out why it failed, no error message given.
And then there were more interesting problems, like different DLL versions (often on the sales people's computers) and somehow the app was loading the wrong, older, DLL or something like that, from who knows what folder, and the solution was usually to wipe any residue of the old app and DLL's off the computer, something of a PITA in DOS days, though del foo.dll /s should have worked - I don't really remember why it was more complex than that.
I still have that problem with the .NET runtimes occasionally, but at least the app is kind enough to tell me that the required so-and-so .NET framework is not installed, and here's the unclickable link to go to. Unclickable because it's a popup message where the URL isn't a clicky and the text isn't copy-and-paste'able.
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I hate DLL's.
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Randor wrote: But I didn't expect that from our nations brightest security teams. But they are responsible for security, not software support. Just because it's the FBI does not mean they employ the best software engineers.
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Probably sourced the engineers from Freelancer site for the lowest price possible.
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They should have asked me, I have extensive experience of writing bad software.
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They would have hired the lowest bidder who would then have used H1-B’s to write it. Those H1-Bs - brought to you by Democrats and RINOs - are lowering wages and bill rates in IT…all to make the big tech owners richer. If you don’t believe me compare the salary of a cloud engineer from 2020 to 2023.
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A lot of software written in C run on a clean Windows install with no further prerequisite; Windows does ship with a version of the runtime.
I suspect - if the details are true - they might have targeted a newer version, which would result in what you're relaying.
Could've been something else altogether. Just sayin' you generally can't count on mainstream reporters for technical accuracy either.
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I suspect about 50% of my time for the past 20 years has been spent dealing with problems that others failed to account for when they created the software.
Originally I figured that it must be an individual fault. But it just happens too much.
Developers get focused. They see a problem. They fix that problem. They very, very seldom consider what the fix means even within the application they are working on much less other possible impacts.
I don't expect that to change.
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Uh... Where have you been in the past several years?
Since the 1980s the US public school systems have been in decline.
Analysts now warn that as a result of this first decline along with the more recent deterioration of our universities, graduates are demonstrating increasingly their inability to perform properly in jobs.
What else did we expect?
The Taiwanese company that agreed to build a new semi-conductor plant in the US has now put an indefinite hold on the project since it cannot find enough technical talent in the United States who can manage the various job requirements the new plant was expected to provide...
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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Since the 1980s the US public school systems have been in decline.
More like since the 1950s. By 1960 logic and critical thinking had been removed from curriculums, and then the gradual decline in literacy and mathematics.
Much of what U.S. high school students are doing is what 5th and 6th grade students are doing in most countries. If anyone excels in the U.S. public schools they are either very self-motivated or have strong interest and encourgement at home, where they are learning most of what they know.
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Member 14192382 wrote: and then the gradual decline in literacy and mathematics.
I doubt either of those are true.
Certainly the literacy part is not.
National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL) - 120 Years of Literacy[^]
As for math figuring out what the actual achievement levels are is very difficult. Exams that attempted such measurements varied widely for very long periods of time.
So exactly what objective data are you using to make the claim that math achievement has changed between now and then? What is the name of the test that was used in that period?
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I am European, living in the US of A now for 26 years. And I can only concur that both literacy and math are the worst areas of US general education. I see this with clients, when they are complaining how their word processor is marking so much of the text they write has those annoying red squiggly lines all over the place. Or they don't understand why Grammarly keeps suggesting changes to their sentences, that honestly don't make any sense when looking at them.
And general knowledge in math is abysmal, barely anyone can do any kind of basic calculations in their head but need to whip out their trendy smartphone and then try to find the calculator on it. About 80-90% people fail basic multiplication/division before addition/subtraction rules. Or don't question the results of computer based calculations when the end result is obviously wrong due to bad input. Which should have been obvious as they ended up with a 40% difference. Like in an architects office calculating the usable square footage of a 5 story building but only adding up 3 of those 5 floors...
There is a reason why most students in spelling bees or math Olympiads are South and East Asian or (Eastern) European heritage. But hey, all those math challenged US folks are proud to use those most illogical Fred Flintstones units and don't fail to try to convince you why this is sooo much better than using metric...
And in regards to "writing software", in the last couple decades, the level of actively applicable knowledge, rather the latest "software paradigm of the week", has indeed significantly dropped. All those Kool Koder Kidz think they are the bee's knees, great in story telling to get hired by yet another failed startup, while lacking even basic knowledge of "algorithms and data structures".
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Ralf Quint wrote: I can only concur that both literacy and math are the worst areas of US general education
Perhaps. But that is different than saying it was better in the past.
Ralf Quint wrote: Or don't question the results of computer based calculations when the end result is obviously wrong due to bad input.
First that isn't really a mathematics problem. Well educated (mathematics) people have either accidently or deliberately misused mathematics for a very long time.
Second there is an ongoing and recent problem at least in the social sciences where studies that have been well regarded (and referenced) for decades have been found to be non-repeatable. Multiple studies. Thus there is a push to make the analysis (mathematics) use a more rigorous standard to find a 'success' result. They used the math correct the first time but it was not sufficient to be scientifically valid.
Ralf Quint wrote: There is a reason why most students in spelling bees or math Olympiads are South and East Asian or (Eastern) European heritage.
Except of course that is not a 'school' problem. It would of course be a cultural (home) problem.
Ralf Quint wrote: in the last couple decades, the level of actively applicable knowledge, rather the latest "software paradigm of the week", has indeed significantly dropped.
What is definitely true in the past couple of decades is that volume of choices has gone up significantly. And attempting to choose the 'best' choice was always subjective. More choices is not going to help with that.
Ralf Quint wrote: great in story telling to get hired by yet another failed startup,
Well known that all companies, regardless of business domain, fail at a very high rate. True now and true more than two decades (maybe three) when I first saw that stats on failures. The small strip mall by my house which probably has 20 companies but less than 5 have been there more than 5 years. And that is not just related to covid. Probably easier for a software company to fail because it is also easier for them to start up. A retail store needs inventory to open and that requires more capital than a software shop.
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