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says... On Sun, 15 Mar 2015 08:56:41 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: On 3/15/15 2:26 AM, wrote: On Sun, 15 Mar 2015 01:19:17 -0400, Wayne.B wrote: On Sat, 14 Mar 2015 17:55:13 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: http://makeuseof.tradepub.com/free/w_wile155/prgm.cgi FREE book on Windoze 8. Computer to run it, extra. === Just for your obviously lacking information, Windows 8 generally sucks. Windows 7 is the good one. Nobody has showed me a compelling reason to get rid of XP. If your applications do not change, why should your computer change? I find it amusing that harry, who normally likes to rail on about how corporations screw consumers, falls for this planned obsolescence scam. They are tricking the public into throwing away perfectly good systems and buying new ones, not getting any real productivity gain, only pumping up the bottom line of Microsoft and the off shore hardware manufacturers. I know this will make harry's head explode but I just got the duty of managing boat ramp keys and I am doing it on dBase IV, the DOS version. This is a pure text operation and I am consolidating data from 4 separate systems that do not talk to each other. I know of no windoze application that would do it without massive amounts of new data entry. It actually felt good to dust off my old coding skills and write the routines that were able to merge all of these formats into a single searchable database. I have an old Thinkpad with DOS 6,3 loaded on it and I am thinking about putting the key application on it just for old times sake ;-) This is a P1 100 machine with 64 meg on it and DOS runs like a scalded dog. You can "ramdisk" all of your DASD into memory and crunching databases really screams. These databases really only have 400 records in one and 130 in the other so it is fast anyway. I am also working on the interactive map application that will let you click on a lot and get all of the data for that owner, similar to the LEEPA..ORG property appraiser site. That will be web based so it is a it more GUI intensive. I am still using my dBase application to develop the data for that application, exporting it as TXT files that the web site will access. Wow...dBase. When I got my first IBM PC the year it came out, I used Volkswriter as a word processor and sometime that was called, I think, PC-File. I did graduate to a version of dBase for a while and then I moved over to rBase on the PC. These days, I use something called Filemaker to maintain several databases. I'm at least several versions behind on Filemaker, though. There is a programming language on dBase that did not make it to the competition like Foxbase and the others. It is actually a subset of DOS assembler that allows very powerful applications. When I was doing some serious database stuff with IBM I still had cases where it was easier to export my SQL based DB2 data into dBase, crunch it and import it back into DB2. I used to get a lot of "how did you do that"? from experienced DB2 guys. Sounds like ignorance from both sides. I was a DB2 programmer and could do anything I wanted with it. |
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