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I have seen technology driven by the market demands.
But to be fair I think that is a more legitimate reason versus some single developer claiming that technology X will be used because it is 'better' or because it is a 'solution' to a business need.
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The gun shop where I work uses a specialized product for sales and gun tracking, and lately it's been crashing and losing indices several times daily. I just discovered that this state-of-the-art system is based on a Visual FoxPro database!
How many other products out there are still using long obsolete technologies, I wonder? I've still got a copy of Paradox, if anyone needs it...
Will Rogers never met me.
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Perhaps they just did not understood the essence of a 3rd party software 'putting everything into XML' is to connect it to a queue and process messages with a middleware on the other side, storing everything to standard relational database?
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[Edited to avoid enraging the Britishers]
There's much to be had, at the the timber shop. (5, 3)
Answer was "Great Deal"
I'll post today's shortly.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
modified 6-Dec-17 4:48am.
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Gotten? Any chance of speaking modern English?
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Why do Britishers hate the use of the word gotten so much? Just because it's more commonly used in North America? I'm from this side of the Atlantic and I don't consider it an abomination. In some situations it is much clearer than the potential alternatives.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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Probably because it reminds us of having to suffer Shakespere at school.
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I just say...
... such stuff as dreams are made on
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Mel Padden wrote: Why do Britishersnone Americans hate the use of the word gotten so much? It's also a trigger word that sets our resident CanAussien off (the Maunder man himself).
This space for rent
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Got vs. gotten - Grammarist[^]
Quote: The vehemence of some Britons’ scorn for gotten likely has to do with the fact that it has gained ground in British English over the last couple of decades. Many English speakers from outside North America resist the encroachment of so-called Americanisms (many of which, like gotten, are not actually American in origin) on their versions of English, and, for mysterious reasons, some feel especially strongly about gotten. Sounds like you're just being childish...
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Nah, we just know how thin skinned Americans are and how easy you are to wind up. It's all a massive conspiracy by the rest of the English speaking world.
This space for rent
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: Nah, we just know how thin skinned Americans are and how easy you are to wind up. So you fake being thin skinned and wound up about our use of "gotten" to get under our skin and wind us up.
Gotcha!
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Shhh. Don't tell anyone. We really don't care otherwise.
This space for rent
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Nope, sorry.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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Then, my cheeky mission is accomplished...
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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To be honest, I'm more offended by your use of "the the".
This space for rent
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Brits don't have lumberyards - we have timber yards.
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We'll let this one slide. The timberjack song wouldn't have been as funny.
This space for rent
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Indeed... but that was set in Canada, if I recall...
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Actually that's a good point. I think the clue, from a linguistic standpoint, is quite misleading in retrospect, for which I apologise.
One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I don't know.
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So are you going to post the answer?
This space for rent
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I agree with Pete O - time to put us out of our misery....
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