Futureproof
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Futureproof! WTF! I think I first came across it several years ago whilst I was working for a IT Consultancy, and our Lead Developer was bandying the term around. What exactly is it meant to mean? And how do I tell the difference between an application that is future proof and one that isn't? :mad: Or is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Vincent www.pub-olympics.com
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encoding years in 2 fields is not very future proof for example
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
fat_boy wrote:
2 fields
Two digits? Two-characters? Or do you mean century separate from two digit year? Either way, no. And neither is using a 32-bit signed integer number of seconds.
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fat_boy wrote:
2 fields
Two digits? Two-characters? Or do you mean century separate from two digit year? Either way, no. And neither is using a 32-bit signed integer number of seconds.
" digits, 2 chars, 2 ints, doesnt matter. It depends on the data type and its representation. What I was of course getting at is the milenium bug, as if you didnt know. That is a good example of non future proof design.
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
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Futureproof! WTF! I think I first came across it several years ago whilst I was working for a IT Consultancy, and our Lead Developer was bandying the term around. What exactly is it meant to mean? And how do I tell the difference between an application that is future proof and one that isn't? :mad: Or is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Vincent www.pub-olympics.com
From a coding point of view I guess it means developing in such a way as to make future changes as easy to implement as possible. I don't mean documenting every line of code, but making it as modular and consistent as possible.
"An eye for an eye only ends up making the whole world blind"
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encoding years in 2 fields is not very future proof for example
Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription
I heard on radio that about 5% of all gas meters could not handle gas prices above $4 per gallon... I guess you have to decide how much to futureproof... I bet 10 - 20 years ago, no one imagined gas could reach $4, so at the time this might have been a reasonable limit...
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A project I worked on a while back, we wanted to upgrade a client's servers because they could no longer handle the load. They wouldn't let us. They said that part of the contract we had signed stated that the equipment would suit their needs for ten years; upgrading the equipment would mean we hadn't held up our end of the deal. :wtf: Why couldn't the system handle the load? Because their business had grown much more quickly than they had expected.
Bad luck, but why do someone write these things in the contract. I mean think about, 10 years, thats a long time. in 10 years we may have a pc not comparable with ours right now and the software will be completely out of time. Cheers
You have the thought that modern physics just relay on assumptions, that somehow depends on a smile of a cat, which isn’t there.( Albert Einstein)
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Futureproof! WTF! I think I first came across it several years ago whilst I was working for a IT Consultancy, and our Lead Developer was bandying the term around. What exactly is it meant to mean? And how do I tell the difference between an application that is future proof and one that isn't? :mad: Or is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Vincent www.pub-olympics.com
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I heard on radio that about 5% of all gas meters could not handle gas prices above $4 per gallon... I guess you have to decide how much to futureproof... I bet 10 - 20 years ago, no one imagined gas could reach $4, so at the time this might have been a reasonable limit...
we hit a point about 2 years ago in the uk where the price of fuel started approaching £1.00 / litre. It's amazing how quickly the petrol industry changed their price displays / pump displays to accommodate the extra digit.
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Futureproof! WTF! I think I first came across it several years ago whilst I was working for a IT Consultancy, and our Lead Developer was bandying the term around. What exactly is it meant to mean? And how do I tell the difference between an application that is future proof and one that isn't? :mad: Or is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Vincent www.pub-olympics.com
A futureproof application is one with an extremely high price tag, naive consumer, and will last as long as any other cheaper application in the market presently.
Regards, Thomas Stockwell Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning. Visit my homepage Oracle Studios Discounted or Free Software for Students: DreamSpark - downloads.channel8.msdn.com MSDN Academic Alliance - www.msdnaa.com
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Futureproof! WTF! I think I first came across it several years ago whilst I was working for a IT Consultancy, and our Lead Developer was bandying the term around. What exactly is it meant to mean? And how do I tell the difference between an application that is future proof and one that isn't? :mad: Or is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Vincent www.pub-olympics.com
Vincent Curry wrote:
is it just one of those fancy buzz words that is used to sound impressive?
Perhaps so, in order to get marketing people all riled up.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon
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To futureproof: (Adjective) To futureproof means the hardware to run this steaming pile of cow doo doesn't exist yet, and won't exist in 20 years time.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
Good definition. A typical futureproofing tool is a crystal ball perhaps.
"The clue train passed his station without stopping." - John Simmons / outlaw programmer "Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon