On 7/6/26 2:31 PM, Michael Hennebry wrote:
I can write a program, spend three days figuring out any
and every way a user can screw it up, set it down in front
of the user, and in three microseconds the users hands me
my lunch.
The USS Yorktown had a bit of a problem in 1997.
A crewman accidentally entered a blank into
an arthmetic field in a database program.
When the program tried to divide by blank, i.e. 0.0, it crashed.
So far, so bad.
The computer was running Windows NT 4.0.
Somehow, the crash took it down.
The computer was running the ship
which was paralyzed for more than two hours.
That hurts!
There is a saying: "The software is never finished".
--
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