Jeffery Fisher wrote:
> I happen to find one of those about 6 months ago but it wasn't one of those
> happy moments. Pretty much everything was written in FoxPro including the
> web site but it was put together really, really bad. Over the weekend before
> I started, they decided to upgrade two of their servers and the end result
> was a nightmare. First day was a nice 14 hour day, second day ran into the
> third day with 40 hours straight, and on and on. The web site had code that
> was shared by the main application, but you had to pick and choose which to
> include in the compile or the whole site would go down. It took us a week to
> learn how to compile it since there wasn't any documentation of which prgs
> and tables [there were thousands] to include. Both the web site and the main
> application was a perfect example of what not to do with FoxPro. Everyone
> shared one exe on the floor which would write to dbf's located on another
> server, which created a batch file of what to update to the SQL server which
> would run a stored procedure every five minutes and update the SQL 7 server
> which would update the main SQL 2000 server located on yet another computer.
> And they wondered why it was so slow. Did I mention that the SQL 7 server
> had 12.1 GB of data, 512 MB of ram, a single PII with 0 bytes left on the
> hard drive. Locked up tight that first week which locked up the entire
> system. Same thing happen to the exchange server just two days later: no
> room no email. The boss was cussing out Microsoft everyday "They should of
> warned us that we were about to run out of space instead of just locking
> up". That is when I pointed out the log that have been spitting warnings for
> over a year. Mind you that happen on my second day - it didn't get any
> better.
>
> That first week, I pulled over 100 hours. That pretty much was the way it
> was until I had enough after being yelled at for not working 72 hours
> straight [that was the owners claimed limit on how long he could work
> without sleep] and walked off.
>   
Sounds like a couple places I've seen...one in Michigan and one in 
Wyncote, PA!  <eg>

> Now I teach. Three day weekends, 4 hours between my morning and afternoon
> classes which leaves plenty of time for a nice bike ride, no more 40 hour
> days or 100 hour weeks... Life is good again!
>   
Man, that sounds like a good deal!  What are you teaching?


-- 
Michael J. Babcock, MCP
MB Software Solutions, LLC
http://mbsoftwaresolutions.com
http://fabmate.com
"Work smarter, not harder, with MBSS custom software solutions!"



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