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Actually, russians are not the guys you go for high-level, easy to read, commercial software, nor you go to them for UI. But in case you need some crazy alghoritms... well, welcome to Eastern Europe.
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In Soviet Russia, code writes YOU!
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American managers will believe any line of baloney...What a Country!
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The bit where the stock codes fell down the screen and you had to rotate them in order to buy or sell was cool.
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Yeah the team was loyal and trustworthy all right.
You just have to make sure you know who they are loyal to. |
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The story ending suggests that they ought to fail again, having not learned anything?
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Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 09:25
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by
Dmitri... errr... Dmitry
(unregistered)
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Maybe his name was Dmitry Dmitri?
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His name was probably Дмитрий.
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I don't think it means what you think it does. |
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One of the real WTFs: they didn't just add a script to CVS that called dos2unix on source files when they were committed. CVS provides a hook for pre-commit tasks for a reason.
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So evidently this story is from Brett's POV, and Brett was hired after they had acquired the product. Which makes the entire first section of this story a complete fabrication.
But I guess it's OK, as long as it pokes fun at managers and executives. |
That's because you're probably the sort of person who 'could care less'. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 09:39
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by
Cecil
(unregistered)
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I know it peaked your interest, but for all intensive purposes isn't it just a mute point?
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That's fine by me. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 09:40
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by
highphilosopher
(unregistered)
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Or maybe you're just the kind of person who 'doesn't want to get involved'. |
There's a special level of Hell for cruel posters of Internet comments. You're a shoe-in for that. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 09:41
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by
Peter
(unregistered)
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Win. |
Dr. Finklestien is correct, If it left little to be desired then it had everything in it, or maybe he is wrong, because it did have the ability to back date a buy and make you tons of money. As for the 'could care less', this comes from "As if I could care less', meaning that you can't care less. Other sources of this give it a Yiddish etymology in which they tend to say the opposite of what they mean in order to enhance the idiocy of the comment. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 09:49
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by
Dignissim
(unregistered)
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Don't question The Brett's wisdom. If The Brett says the opposite of what he means, it is because The Brett wants to expose you as a whiner. You have fallen right into his clever trap. |
FTFY. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:00
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by
dr memals
(unregistered)
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In my country we call that "Sarcasm" |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:06
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by
Harold von Finklestein
(unregistered)
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While others might be vexed, carefully dissecting errors in the articles is surely a tradition by now. For what it's worth, now that I think of it it's in all likelihood a simple case of a missing "a".
I wasn't aware of this particular explanation, and yet it makes the most sese of them all. Many thanks. PS: How did you know I'm a doctor, anyway? |
Yeah, I know it's irrevelant, but that begs the question, aren't most comments? |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:08
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by
Plz Send Me The Code
(unregistered)
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Wow, you're so clever. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:14
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by
again!
(unregistered)
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more FTFY! |
FTFY all... let's just go and fix the real problem, not the words around it... |
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Normally, when you write forex trading systems, you sign tons of NDAs and other legalese which can get you literally destroyed (or worse) if you even try thinking of such a trick.
Disclaimer: I am writing trading systems for a living, I am Russian, and my name is not Dmitri. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:22
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by
Anon
(unregistered)
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No, you missed one. |
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I love eastern europe.
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Ah, damn... well, I was closer than the rest of these fools :P |
Re: 99% of lawyers...
2010-01-19 10:25
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Anon
(unregistered)
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Well, you see, that's why it's almost a perfect crime. Sure the company could press charges or sue him into oblivion, but to do so would show everybody how incompetent they are. Not good for a company that wants people to trust them with their money. If Dmitri got away with it, he would have been rich. If he get's caught (which he did), it's quietly swept under the rug and he's let go to try it again with a different company. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:31
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by
The names have been changed to protect the innocent
(unregistered)
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Wonder if Kaspersky is feeding intelligence to the Russian Maf.., sorry, Government.
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Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:33
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by
oldami
(unregistered)
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Inconceivable! |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:47
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by
Quirkafleeg
(unregistered)
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⇒ “couldn't care less”. |
Well, that might makes you the biggest fool, since all the other "fools" were intentionally adding mistakes. The "intensive purposes" mixup is not so bad. Yeah, "intents and purposes" is correct, but essentially it's saying "purposes and purposes". At least "intensive purposes" makes sense and isn't redundant. |
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Three layers of funny surrounded by three layers of clueless.
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Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 10:58
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Anonymous
(unregistered)
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OK, I'll remember that - it's OK to be wrong as long as BBT gives it his seal of approval. I was wondering, is it OK for me to put an extra a in "you God-damn reatard"? Thanks! |
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Hmm.. not so long time ago
http://news.cnet.com/Russia-dominates-computer-programming- contest/2100-1007_3-6061381.html |
FTFY |
You are a welcomed addition to the club of "I don't know what begging the question even means but I see no problem using it as I see fit". (I would add a helpful link to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Begging_the_question but some software drone in between thinks it is spam). |
Ahh yes, India. Where labor is cheap and the code is... well, ok not so good a quality. Maybe it's not India, maybe its Nigeria. I hear they have some good talent over there. |
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This article reeks of BS and xenophobia.
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So anyway, what sort of cars were they selling through the auto-trading system?
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Was the code preceded by a comment "maybe I needing this later"?
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Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 11:44
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John
(unregistered)
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Why, because the Russians are the antagonists? I admit it's very James Bond. Seeing as the vast majority of WTFs are American, with the occasional Brit it suggests a nice balance it's not only us that are crap. I also don't see why you can claim it's BS. I've always joked about messing up the rounding when it comes to VAT in our invoicing system (It could earn me a cool £120 per year). It's just that a bunch of guys who could write [bad] code decided to implement their crazy scheme. |
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So, after encountering one scoundrels and 6 idiots, the company decided that Russians are no gooNo d.
Good reminder for me, who on the daily basis has been trying to refactor the code from our Chinese colleagues - yes, thousands-line methods, copy-paste, no refactoring, just commenting out; global variables everywhere... so what? No, I am not defending all the crooks and idiots in Moscow; there's plenty. But if you look around, how many companies have tons of great programmers over there, in Russia; if you look at, hmm, the best Java/Scala IDE, if you check out where exactly the best anti-virus software is being produced... oh, whatever. Sorry for interrupting. |
Re: The Russian Plan
2010-01-19 11:53
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RBoy
(unregistered)
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You win a satchel of internets. |
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The article did smack of a bit of 'cliche corrupt russian' stereotype... Oh well, entertaining read none the less.
Moo. |
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This DailyWTF left little to be desired.
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