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Karen Mitchelle wrote: Jeremy Falcon claims she he is always bloody right.
Hey, don't hate me for having fabulous hair.
Jeremy Falcon
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Quote: wrote an entire ASP.NET application using nothing but an Etch a Sketch
Doesn't everyone write ASP that way?
Quote: Jeremy Falcon is in the same room as Justin Bieber, Bieber will simply cease to exist
He would cease to exist if I was in the same room too...
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Seems like the nail thing might hurt.
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MehGerbil wrote: Seems like the nail thing might hurt.
That's right. It hurts the nails!!
Jeremy Falcon
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Well I can find Jeremy Falcon's home page, but Chuck Norris? Maybe he's a figment of Jeremy's imagination.
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: It's said that if every Jeremy Falcon is in the same room as Justin Bieber, Bieber will simply cease to exist. Can someone please arrange this?
This man, is truly a work of art.
Jeremy Falcon
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When Bob comes down to walk among His people he does so in the guise of Jeremy Falcon.
Jeremy Falcon wasn't born; he was found upon opening the box during Schodinger's famous cat experiment.
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PIEBALDconsult wrote: he was found upon opening the box during Schodinger's famous cat experiment.
Nice back reference there. Speak fluent regex you must.
Jeremy Falcon
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hey guys
does anybody know if there is a standard release type form / language / letter / etc, for a programmer who has a day job but wants to work on own projects in spare time WITHOUT the day job having any claim on the IP for those projects?
obviously, the own projects would not be in the same business sphere as the day job, nor would the dev use anything provided by the day job for those projects (hardware, software, etc) - the only crossover would be they are both on platform x (iOS or Android, etc)
thanks
"mostly watching the human race is like watching dogs watch tv ... they see the pictures move but the meaning escapes them"
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What does your contract state? Unless you've signed something to state explicitly that the company owns everything you produce, they shouldn't be able to touch you for it. Oh, and even if they do have an IPR clause, this is considered unenforceable in a lot of countries.
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hey pete
thanks - it's not me (i've never had a day job) - it's a potential member of a team i'm putting together for a big -ish project and i want to make sure all the bases are covered when it comes to legal stuff
i would rather not assume that because his contract doesn't explicitly state x, y, and z, we can use him without an explicit release letter being signed by said employers
it is for the text of that letter i was wondering if there are any standard forms anywhere
"mostly watching the human race is like watching dogs watch tv ... they see the pictures move but the meaning escapes them"
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There aren't any standard texts. I would include something like this if I were worried:
"x warrants that there are no prior claims to work performed while undertaking the tasks as outlined as part of the contractual agreement with y."
I would also require x to carry liability cover - it's not that expensive - to indemnify you.
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l a u r e n wrote: i want to make sure all the bases are covered when it comes to legal stuff Then hire a lawyer who knows the laws that exist in your country. Never trust a bunch of strangers on an internet forum.
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As Pete says, start by looking at your contract of employment.
Although such provisions are difficult (if not impossible) to enforce, it doesn't stop some companies trying - and they generally have better financial resources that programmers, so have access to better lawyers. Even if they lose, it can cost you a lot of time and grief.
Who are you going to get to sign the release? Have you discussed this with your employer? Did you get any training from your employer that might have been used to produce the "home" software? If so, their claim strengthens, particularly if they are for the same platform and can thus be expected to use the same skill set.
Me? I'd just keep quiet, and make sure you can prove that it was all done on private time and private equipment. And if you make a fortune, just quit the day job and don't tell them...
You looking for sympathy?
You'll find it in the dictionary, between sympathomimetic and sympatric
(Page 1788, if it helps)
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thanks - see my reply to pete above
"mostly watching the human race is like watching dogs watch tv ... they see the pictures move but the meaning escapes them"
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probably depends on where you are, but here the employer is in the weak position.
* First of all you do this during your own free time (not company time) The company does not "own" you during your free time.
* There is no realistic way that the knowledge you gain during company time cannot be used further down the road (if that was so "experience" would not exist) You're only really in trouble if you start re-using code (and selling it) from your company. In this case it's probably even more beneficiary for the company as you will learn new things on your own time and bring that back in.
* Even if the contract states you cannot do something in the line of a competitive company, this can be narrowed down. Your company could be a development company for a reporting tool eg, but you can still develop and sell applications of your own (or your knowledge) as long as it is not directly (and competitively) related to reporting tools.
* The OS has nothing to do with it and if you have a laptop you're allowed to use it for personal use. (here they sell a laptop as extra-legal benefits on top of your salary). I rarely use my laptop for real personal use though.
But personally I think your main worry is that your software might be competitive to your company's. What you could do to be on the safe side is talk to HR and your boss to check if this is OK. I would recommend that even.
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I always though that what I do on my own time is nobody else's business. Go figure.
modified 20-Oct-19 21:02pm.
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It was until Google started watching you.
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I'd require a written quitclaim from your prospective partner's day job, lauren, specifically releasing any claim to his work on your project before I'd let him contribute anything. There's no such standard form that I've heard of, but letting one corporate lawyer in the door will pollute the entire project. Most companies I've worked for in my life included a clause somewhere in the hiring papers to the effect that anything I produce of an intellectual kind, they own. The courts in the US have generally bent over backward here in the Colonies to favor the employer, even when it was perfectly clear that the company had no conceivable current or future interest. Trust nothing, unless it's in writing, and then take out insurance.
Will Rogers never met me.
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I have two computers which are always on at home, an old laptop running Windows Server 2008 and Microsoft Exchange and a Win7 PC which runs MediaCenter. Neither really do anything else.
I'd like to combine them, by having the Win7 machine run some sort of VM which would host Server 2008 (which is required for Exchange). I'm currently looking at VirtualBox.
But, my specific requirement is that the VM would boot when the host does and ideally run as an unobtrusive service or something.
Any suggestions - cheap ones?
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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You could use Windows 8 Professional, and do this with Hyper-V.
Fairly certain you can get it to boot any virtual machines when the host OS boots, completely unobtrusively.
Edit: Can confirm in Hyper-V this is known as an Automatic Start Action, just tick the box that says Always Start this Virtual Machine automatically and you're done.
modified 12-Aug-14 5:03am.
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Nice! Thanks I'll take a look. Only slight issue with that is they dropped MediaCenter in Win8, although I believe you can buy it as an add-on.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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You don't likely want to try to VM your media center. First of all, you want to "see" your media center full-screen (which you can only do via a hyper-v window or RDP, which I doubt you want to do), and video/audio drivers are limited to the Hyper-V integration tools. If your trying to use WMC as a media server and not a media client you're likely fine, but if you are expecting to use it as a client, you probably won't get the results your looking for.
Windows 7 Virtual PC will not support x64 (if I remember correctly), so you won't be able to run the NOS necessary to run Exchange using Virtual PC. This means updating to Windows 8 (but then dealing with the lack of media center as you had mentioned), or using another VM tool. I ran VMWare on Windows 7 with a Windows Server x64 and it did the job.
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This might help.[^]
It can run VirtualBox as a Windows service, launching VMs in headless mode.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
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