Ahh, looking back on it I did read it as a more general problem (their I go
again reading way to much into things)
Yes, I will agree your suggestion is very good one
On Thu, 30 Dec 2004, Erik Hatcher wrote:
>
> On Dec 30, 2004, at 11:58 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > O... Ok, tha
I must also agree. I will create another example, let us say you need to get
from point A to point B a mile away. Is it better to walk or drive. Well
drive of course. But if you do not have a car, or know how to drive, and can
not wait for a cab then your stuck walking. It takes ME less time t
On Dec 30, 2004, at 11:58 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
O... Ok, that seems like fun (I know I am sick, but truth is I
have time
to kill at home for next week and a half) But we should also have
different
kinds of common data, like a few hundred complete personal records, a
few
books/blogs,
O... Ok, that seems like fun (I know I am sick, but truth is I have time
to kill at home for next week and a half) But we should also have different
kinds of common data, like a few hundred complete personal records, a few
books/blogs, etc. We could also see a difference between memory reside
Rick and Drew have it right, a long time ago in a galaxy far away, I attended
the Xerox Professional selling course and the one thing important I learned was
that people make the buying decision on three things, (1) the first solution
they find for a problem, (2) the lowest percieved risk soluti
Richard Hightower wrote:
I agree. But what best are you talking about. The best technical solution or
the best business solution. The best business solution is not always the
best technical solution.
(Mounting high horse...) Engineering is about tradeoffs: budget, time,
beer... Actually I just thre