Download Chapter 10
Transcript
On forums, people are free to make opinionated, dogmatic and sometimes mistaken statements, just as we do in casual conversation on the subway or in a bar. The Internet culture uses forums and message boards to consider perspectives and ideas, but never for a definitive answer. One reason: It all depends who’s chatting that day. “Dear ‘t_device’ — Let’s not get into a pissing match. My upsized applications run very nicely to this day. Yes, it’s not perfect, but I’ve used ERwin for documentation and Access is much easier for smaller projects. You get the application running, produce the relational schema and put it on the server. You may choose to develop on the target system. I prefer my method. I hope we can treat each other respectfully. — “Lucille Goldman” “I believe we have been civil. If that’s not the case, let me know. Apparently we have a difference of opinion. That’s healthy. I have upsized a few Access apps and I’ve developed in it, so I’m not speaking off the top of my head ... Anyway, let’s drop the Access better/worse convo and stick to the voting application.” — “t_device” “Go over to slashdot [Slashdot.org, a forum for computer people] and try talking about ‘security’ and ‘Access’ in the same breath and see how seriously they take you over there — they won’t even dignify you with a response, they’ll just laugh at you and spray you with onomatopoetic responses like this: ===== slashdot comment: *choke* *wheeze* bwahahahahahahahahahahahah *gasp* Wait, these things are already in use?!? *thud* ============= ...because all programmers know there is no security in Access.” — “abcxyz” 202