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Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Sat Feb 29, 2020 6:06 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey
CBS Fantasy sites (like this -
https://www.cbssports.com/fantasy/football/ ) will load megabtyes of dumb shit nobody cares about
before they put the login screen up. It is absolutely maddening, especially since I'm on a slow connection.
One of the things I've tracked over the years is how many companies are capable of fucking up a login screen. The answer is - many of them! I would think it would be the #1 priority for any company on the web: make sure your customers can login. It's shocking to see how many times they fuck up this extremely simple thing.
(All fantasy sites are garbage, by the way, and someone should come in and disrupt the field.)
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Sat Feb 29, 2020 10:15 pm
by Jizaboz
When the Sega Saturn was how I connected to the Internet, this kind of thing infuriated me. Some sites would just take forever to load or fail to load because it wanted to load ads and bullshit first. Back then I just moved on to another site. Now people just accept this kind of horseshit and have for years with faster connections.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Sat Feb 29, 2020 10:58 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey
Jizaboz wrote: Sat Feb 29, 2020 10:15 pm
When the Sega Saturn was how I connected to the Internet, this kind of thing infuriated me. Some sites would just take forever to load or fail to load because it wanted to load ads and bullshit first. Back then I just moved on to another site. Now people just accept this kind of horseshit and have for years with faster connections.
Waitasec. Back the F up.
The Sega SATURN was how you connected to the Internet?
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Sun Mar 01, 2020 9:25 am
by Jizaboz
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote:
Waitasec. Back the F up.
The Sega SATURN was how you connected to the Internet?
I certainly did!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sega_Net_Link
It was way cheaper than having a good computer with AOL or whatever, but of course had limitations. A big one was it could run Javascript but not actual Java.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2020 5:13 am
by Tdarcos
Jizaboz wrote: Sun Mar 01, 2020 9:25 amA big one was it could run Javascript but not actual Java.
An even bigger fuckup was the person(s) who named the run-time scripting language JavaScript when the two languages have nothing to do with each other. The standardized version has the name "ECMAScript" as ECMA is the standards body who released the standard. And that might have been worse. If you mention ECMAScript to people they'd probably think it's a skin disease or a type of dandruff.
"Head and Shoulders... For the heartbreak of ECMAScript, err, we mean psoriasis."
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2020 7:34 pm
by RealNC
Yeah. Or the idiot who named their web content creation system "Hugo".
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Mon Mar 02, 2020 9:31 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey
RealNC wrote: Mon Mar 02, 2020 7:34 pm
Yeah. Or the idiot who named their web content creation system "Hugo".
That one really bugs the shit out of me.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2020 12:24 pm
by Tdarcos
Ice Cream Jonsey wrote: Mon Mar 02, 2020 9:31 pm
RealNC wrote: Mon Mar 02, 2020 7:34 pm
Yeah. Or the idiot who named their web content creation system "Hugo".
That one really bugs the shit out of me.
Unfortunately, this is why if you develop any kind of successful product you're supposed to register the name with the US Patent and Trademark Office in order to have exclusivity on that name, even if the item is given away for free. This is why major open source projects like Apache, PHPBB, Audacity and others have done so.
Or, if it isn't worth spending $250 on a federal registration, one can register at the state level. In Colorado you can register a trademark on-line through the Secretary of State's website for $25 and if you get larger, the state registration can be used as evidence of usage. I've used it myself. What did I register? The phrase "In the Matter of" for a series of books.That's why, techically, the titles of my two books are "In the Matter of: Instrument of God" and "In the Matter of: The Gatekeeper: The Gate Contracts."
You can't really blame the developers of the web product Hugo, I suspect either a Thompson & Thompson state trademark search and a Patent & Trademark Office search would return no hits for a software product with that name.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2020 6:09 pm
by Flack
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Tue Mar 03, 2020 9:43 pm
by Jizaboz
Oh shit
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 3:48 am
by AArdvark
Is there nothing we can believe in anymore?
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 9:56 am
by Flack
Want to give a special shout out to the Acer engineer who thought the bottom panel of an Acer Swift 3 laptop should be held together with 11 different Torx screws, each one a different length so they have to go back in the exact same hole. Super cool choice, bro.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 10:50 am
by Casual Observer
This belongs here because I guess new Subaru's are basically a LAN with dozens of computer systems. Apparently, whenever a Subaru Outback's battery dies, the drivers front passenger window button stops working. The dealer gave me what seems like a cheat code to fix it: using the passenger door's window button, roll it down and hold the button for 2 seconds then roll back up and hold the button up for 2 seconds. Voila, fixed. You would think that there would be some kind of computer update for that kind of thing.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 12:05 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey
Smoke alarm went off at 1:30AM last night. Glad they all make the same chirp, glad there's no clock in them to maybe chirp during daylight hours, loved going to the garage to get a ladder. A triumph.
I woke up to find our golden retriever Honey, who is sometimes ahhhhhh a little slow, had gone downstairs by herself and buried her ears in the couch pillows. She is the only person who understands me.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 12:07 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey
I'm on mobile, so I won't quote, but Commander - I get why anyone can call their new language whatever they want. But whoever made the other Hugo probably did a search and saw the text game language and decided to act like a pig. Legality has nothing to do with it, sir.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 12:41 pm
by Ice Cream Jonsey not logged in
We have to use Outlook at work. It's terrible, of course, but here is a specific.
There is an Outlook setting for what you want to do when replying to a group - reply regularly or reply all.
The. Default. Choice. Is. Reply. All.
I used to wonder how so many people could be so stupid that they would start Reply All chains and this makes a lot more sense - people aren't stupid, fuck-ups writing code for Microsoft are.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Wed Mar 04, 2020 2:40 pm
by Casual Observer
Reply-all shouldn't just NOT be the default choice, I think there should be a doublecheck like when you try to open an unsecure link, something like "Are you sure you want to reply to all of these email addresses?"
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2020 2:18 pm
by Tdarcos
I used to be on the list of bidders to provide goods and services to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. One time a request for bids was e-mailed out to me, and I tried to open it, and nothing happened. No message, no nothing. Finally, I think it was 5 minutes later, the message opened.
It was an announcement that the transity authority wanted bids for something, computers, cement, I don't remember. What I do remember was the reason why the message wouldn't open.
In the To: field of the message was a lisat of e-mail addresses the message had been sent to by the transi authority (instead of putting them in BCC:)
The To: field contained all 1,603 e-mail addresses it was sent to. Me and 1,602 others.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Fri Mar 06, 2020 10:17 pm
by Flack
And while I've made a living supporting Microsoft operating systems over the past 25 years, a big kudos to the team that decided new installations of Windows 10 Home would not only require an Outlook.com email address, but also a phone number so it can text you a security code while you're installing it. Nothing could be more convenient when setting up a laptop for a friend's kid than knowing that someday in the middle of night they're going to trigger something that's linked to my cell phone number which is now embedded in this laptop.
Re: Great Moments in Computer Programming
Posted: Sat Mar 07, 2020 10:19 am
by AArdvark
Seriously, they did that?