Daynote ,Svenson

Sjon
 
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2000-06-07

 


A bit drab in the morning but turning nice and sunny with some nice white clouds. 11°C

At work.
Yesterday I worked my way trough the archiving programs. I did find a few things that needed updating in the documentation (that was the original question: "Is this documentation still accurate?" ). I also found a omission in one of the programs. So.
I solved it, tested it, solved it again, tested it again, solved it another time, tested it once again, twice again.
The problem with testing an archiving program is that normally archiving will copy records to a tape and delete them from the database. But there is no way to get them back. You only run archiving to reclaim disk space and no one has ever tried to get data back from an archive. When archived data is needed again it is typically restored from a backup. This means it is damned hard to test the archiving more than once. After the first test, if it doesn't crash, the data is gone. Re-testing is not impossible of course (nothing is) just difficult.

The transport cost adaptation was accepted in v8.9 and now I added it to the v8.8 release as well.

And Koen has been meddling with the performance problems. First he didn't believe me when I said the problem was not on the AS/400. Then he tested it and noticed that I was right, processing on the AS/400 only took about 1 second while the user on the PC was waiting up to 15 seconds.
Now he claims that he can shave off about 10 seconds from the AS/400 processing time. I don't know what he has been measuring but each time he gets different times. And each time the percentage he can gain increases, first it was just about 1 or 2%, then it was 20%, now he figures it at 30%.

 

In the news.

The government is going to provide special bonuses for civil servants that work up to the official pension age (65). Years ago, in an effort to create new jobs, it was made possible to go on pension at 60 without losing out on money. The result is that only about 10% of the civil servants work beyond 60. Then they encouraged the private sector, with various compensations and tax reduction schemes, to follow suite. And they succeeded somewhat. Now with unemployment declining and actual shortages they want people to stay longer. So extra bonuses and a higher pension if you stay. And now they start to encourage the private sector again to follow. With bonuses and tax-cuts.
It won't be long before you are, nice but firmly, asked on Friday to go on early retirement. So the company can cash in on the old-style benefits. And on Monday you are asked to start again, so the company and you can reap the new benefits.
That is government logic.

About the news.
I was having problems with my online registration of my newspaper. For some articles the registration (which is free) is required. So I had to type a password. This worked until some when last week. The password was being refused. I mailed for help and the first advice was that I changed my password. Only to change it you must get logged-in. Catch-21. I did notice that Nescrape did crash a few times on the site so I tried MSIE. And here the password works as it should. A few help desk mails later (they are not your typical help desk, being responsive and to the point. too good to be true) they admitted that the site is MS-optimised with Javascripts and cookies and dhtml and such. They will look into it but don't promise a solution.
Now I am struck out. A help desk that is not only responsive and too the point but also honest.
This must be a dream, time to grab some coffee.

Spammers.
Dr Keyboard picks a bone about a spammer. The example he has indicates clearly that lots of spammers are spamming simply because they are clue less about e-mail. They apply the same rules they have been using on c-mail (clasic-mail). Of course with e-mail things are cheaper and have a wider impact. Of course replying to c-mail spamming costs money so most people just discard it. Replying (via Spamcop) to e-mail spamming does not cost money and is easier to do.
And now they are surprised.

I am going to drop the daynotes in day by day format and only keep the week-layout. Using both means that my site is more than double the required size. I was hitting the 5MB ceiling at Mailbank. Again. That is with only the daynotes. No computers, recipes or images there.


Adios
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Swijsen © 2000
Overclocking chips is sometimes a good idea...