Well, let's see... the new car automatically unlocks all the doors when I get in (my wife thinks the carjackers'll love that one), I have to stand on the brake pedal to get it to start, the window decides for itself to go all the way down when I just want it down a crack, and the turning radius sucks. But, hey, that's progress. It's new and improved.
Anyway, ignore this as the grumblings of an old codger whose coffee hasn't overcome the arthritis yet this morning. ;^) Regards, Charlie Noah [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Change to the process flow is many times the impetus to replace a module or application in the first place. Change is not always terrible, although feared. In truth I have found the fear to be more in the hearts of the IT person who has tweaked the system over the past 15+ years and is insulted that their masterpiece is being considered a dinosaur ready for replacement. How dare they! You don't think that way when you replace your car now do you? You generally move into a newer improved model that outperforms the car you left behind. It may react a little differently, but overall the performance is better. -- u2-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.oliver.com/mailman/listinfo/u2-users
