Frank W. Zammetti wrote: > In such cases, the application IS important enough to code > trials, but the business won't allow you to but they STILL want you to > sweat the decisions! This is a typical way of doing things, going by my > experience.
It depends what _your_ job is. If you're a consultant, you're expected to _know_ the technology, and the customer isn't paying for you to experiment. If you're an employee, I've never worked in a situation where you don't get the time to evaluate the right techniques. > > Even if its the largest initiative of the year for the company, the most > important project, there is still a deadline, usually and unreasonable > one, and taking the time to properly evaluate options isn't always given. Then go find a new job. There's lots of them for capable people - don't work at places that put unreasonable demands on you. -- derek --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]