Bruno (Tokyo): Jeff, arrête de m'embrouiller la tête...
Bruno (Tokyo): Jeff, stop bullshitting me...
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
Jean-Paul (Tokyo): D'un point de vue technique ça marche,
mais, dans les faits, pas du tout.
Jean-Paul (Tokyo): From a technical point of view it works,
but, in reality, it does not.
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
François (Hong-Kong): Oh non, pas les minutes, pas encore moi!
La, je crois que ça va vraiment pas être possible...
François (Hong-Kong): Oh no, not the minutes again!
This time, I think it will really not be possible...
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
Do you remember the January SQL slammer worm? One of the consequences of this worm was that Continental Airlines had to cancel flights, because their admins failed to protect their systems.
But, on Tech Web, Nathan Hanks, managing director at Continental Airlines, said:All the guys hacking Windows are Linux guys. Continental was hit hard by SQL Slammer and our CEO said we'd failed.
[...]
Having one vendor throat to choke is helpful in crisis situations. An IT pro can't go to the CEO and say that a server is down, "and hopefully some guy in Amsterdam" will get to a fix when he gets back from the "dope house".
He also said that he was impressed with Microsoft's response to the problems.
These sayings brought of course a lot of reactions.
The guy who miserably failed to protect his systems, and caused Continental
problems is a funny one:
He defends his own technical choices by the fact that
Linux developers are all dopesmokers!
What is sure, is that these dopesmokers could not do a lot for him,
if he went to change his systems for Linux ones:
Maybe he would need to wait a couple of hours for answers
(when the dope effect is over!),
but, as in that case he forgot to install a patch available 6 months before
the worm, this delay would not matter anyway ;-)
Just for the fun, Continental problems maybe started the day Nathan Hanks asked people how to successfully install SQL Server. He eventually got a very responsive answer, two days later, by a Microsoft guy ;-)
[/fun/net] | permanent link | Google this
SCO
changed its mind
and, instead of asking $1 billion to IBM, prefers now to get $3 billions (!!).
But that is not all! They also
claim
to have rights on most of operating systems (yours is probably there!).
And of course that IBM helps the terrorists and gives North Korea a way to
build super computers.
And what will come next? Here is a a possible follow-up, found on slashdot:
SCO ups damages to 6 billion - citing IBM's illegal use of 'international business machines' acroynm which they thought up first.
Damages go up to 15 trillion when SCO discovers that gravity and other basic laws of the Universe which IBM has been using to build servers formed a basis for SCO's machines first.
Finally, SCO ups damages to (quoting here) "forty bazillion-kabillion" for "having a successful business," which is what SCO was planning to do but couldn't because of IBM.
It should be noted that this last figure was given just before the Executive board collectively passed out after coming down dangerously from a hallucenagic high caused by dry-erase markers, non-dairy creamer, pez, and possibly other office-related recreational drugs.
Maybe the IBM answer could simply be (another /. post):
I see your 3 billion and raise you two more. Show your cards...
[/fun/net] | permanent link | Google this
Jean-Paul (Tokyo): I think that's all.
Cyrille (Hong-Kong): No, that's not all.
Jean-Paul (Tokyo): Je pense que c'est tout...
Cyrille (Hong-Kong): Non, ce n'est pas tout.
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
François (Hong-Kong): Putain, ca va trop vite, c'est pas normal...
François (Hong-Kong): Shit, it is going too fast, there must be something wrong...
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
Bruno (Tokyo): Il faudrait quelque-chose de plus compliqué...
qu'un truc simple.
Bruno (Tokyo): We should do something more complex... than something simple.
XXX (Paris): On va faire un test en prod aujourd'hui.
XXX (Paris): We will make a test in production today.
[/fun/office] | permanent link | Google this
This article , and this one (and so many others, hehehe!), explain how Microsoft could:
First, two weeks ago, announce that they will build Windows-powered public toilets, with broadband internet access, good audio system, etc...
Then, this monday (two days ago) announce that it was a hoax. A Fools Day Joke made one month too late (but calendars were never their strong point, anyway).
Eventually, yesterday, change their mind again, and decide that it was a real project that was killed by the management...
Whaooo... I already knew the W$ toilet paper, but this real story is even better. Where do you want to go today?
[/fun/net] | permanent link | Google this
Bruno (Tokyo): Sylvain, tu es viré.
Bruno (Tokyo): Sylvain, you are fired.
Nicolas (Sydney): Il faut éviter les blagues grasses.
Nicolas (Sydney): We must avoid bad jokes.