architected
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...does not appear to be a word, as in "designed". I guess I'll use designed. Marc
Definition: architected - idiot who forgot how to code, just took a PMP class and is trying to move to management but cannot shake off the fetters of underlings asking him/her for technical specifications.
MrPlankton
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Lots of discussions on that... Google "architect verb" If we use it enough, it will be accepted as a verb eventually. :)
Mark Salsbery Microsoft MVP - Visual C++ :java:
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I don't speak Queen.
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Mark Salsbery wrote:
If we use it enough, it will be accepted as a verb eventually.
we should get george right on that.
:laugh:
Mark Salsbery Microsoft MVP - Visual C++ :java:
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Marc Clifton wrote:
It seems like it ought to be a word though!
I second that. I have architected several useful applications in the past. is shown in MS Word 2007 as a correct sentence.
"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 "Not only do you continue to babble nonsense, you can't even correctly remember the nonsense you babbled just minutes ago." - Rob Graham
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ARCHITECTUALIZED, that's the word. There was post about this a while ago. Ok, maybe it is not the same, but it is still a cool word. :)
My .NET Business Application Framework My Home Page My Younger Son & His "PET"
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...does not appear to be a word, as in "designed". I guess I'll use designed. Marc
Ghastly word. I also hate the use of "authored" where people meant "wrote". Where will this creeping use of jobs as verbs end: "The officer policemanned the criminal."? "The fireman firemanned the fire."? "The lollipop lady lollipopped the children."? Designed is a perfectly acceptable word, why the need for "architected"?
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Ghastly word. I also hate the use of "authored" where people meant "wrote". Where will this creeping use of jobs as verbs end: "The officer policemanned the criminal."? "The fireman firemanned the fire."? "The lollipop lady lollipopped the children."? Designed is a perfectly acceptable word, why the need for "architected"?
Steve_Harris wrote:
lollipopped the children
Now that has some very interesting connotations :laugh: :laugh:
Panic, Chaos, Destruction. My work here is done.
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Ghastly word. I also hate the use of "authored" where people meant "wrote". Where will this creeping use of jobs as verbs end: "The officer policemanned the criminal."? "The fireman firemanned the fire."? "The lollipop lady lollipopped the children."? Designed is a perfectly acceptable word, why the need for "architected"?
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Well said sir! :laugh:
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Ed.Poore wrote:
the Queen's English?
Of course she is. She has to be, doesn't she?
Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface
Very few English Monarchs have actually been English. Our current lot are a strange admixture of Greek and German.
------------------------------------ Credit is a system whereby a person who can not pay gets another person who can not pay to guarantee that he can pay. - Charles Dickens
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Ghastly word. I also hate the use of "authored" where people meant "wrote". Where will this creeping use of jobs as verbs end: "The officer policemanned the criminal."? "The fireman firemanned the fire."? "The lollipop lady lollipopped the children."? Designed is a perfectly acceptable word, why the need for "architected"?
"The dressmaker dressmade (or dressmaked) a dress????" Come on .... The English language has an adequate number of words and with Dubya adding to it daily, it needs no more such monstrosities. Rich
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"The dressmaker dressmade (or dressmaked) a dress????" Come on .... The English language has an adequate number of words and with Dubya adding to it daily, it needs no more such monstrosities. Rich
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'We would not give being the author of one of Mr Aldrich's beautiful sonnets to be the author of many "Wyndham Towers", however skilfully architected.' - Harper's Magazine, 1890
Yes, they had idiots then too ... :) Rich
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Ghastly word. I also hate the use of "authored" where people meant "wrote". Where will this creeping use of jobs as verbs end: "The officer policemanned the criminal."? "The fireman firemanned the fire."? "The lollipop lady lollipopped the children."? Designed is a perfectly acceptable word, why the need for "architected"?
Ghastly is right, but it's bigger that just using jobs as verbs. Apparently it's now OK to use any noun as a verb. There's "gifting" ("Due to the economic situation. we're cutting back on our gifting this Christmas"), the ever-popular "impacting" ("The economy is impacting our gifting"). and so many more. I blame the bidnessmen. They like to invent their own language and then use it to impress other bidnessmen. They are needlessly upsizing the language, the result of which is downsizing the meaning of everything they say. People just need to stop verbing nouns, period.
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Very few English Monarchs have actually been English. Our current lot are a strange admixture of Greek and German.
------------------------------------ Credit is a system whereby a person who can not pay gets another person who can not pay to guarantee that he can pay. - Charles Dickens
But aren't the Greek monarchs Danish?
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...does not appear to be a word, as in "designed". I guess I'll use designed. Marc
Architecturalized. I feel so dirty...
Software Zen:
delete this;
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But aren't the Greek monarchs Danish?
It all seems to be Cake related. Phil the Bubble (Prince Phillip, Duke of Edinburgh) Was Born in Corfu, (Thus he is a Bubble, as in 'Bubble & Squeak', Greek) His Family name is Mountbatten which is the Anglecized version of Battenburg, which is a cake. ANd now you tell me he's a Danish? The Royal family adopted more 'English' sounding names owing to the First Word War, previously they were... "Saxe-Coburg Gotha Hanover Schleswig-Holstein" , which some thought may have sounded a little germanic. So they changed it to "Vindsor"
------------------------------------ Credit is a system whereby a person who can not pay gets another person who can not pay to guarantee that he can pay. - Charles Dickens
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Mark Salsbery wrote:
If we use it enough, it will be accepted as a verb eventually.
we should get george right on that.
:laugh: Not sure if many will get it though.
Many are stubborn in pursuit of the path they have chosen, few in pursuit of the goal - Friedrich Nietzsche .·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·. [Microsoft MVP - Visual C++]