- Feature Articles
- CodeSOD
- Error'd
- Forums
-
Other Articles
- Random Article
- Other Series
- Alex's Soapbox
- Announcements
- Best of…
- Best of Email
- Best of the Sidebar
- Bring Your Own Code
- Coded Smorgasbord
- Mandatory Fun Day
- Off Topic
- Representative Line
- News Roundup
- Editor's Soapbox
- Software on the Rocks
- Souvenir Potpourri
- Sponsor Post
- Tales from the Interview
- The Daily WTF: Live
- Virtudyne
Admin
FYI... "the seat of ones pants" is utilized when flying, not sailing.
I like pirates and all, but they generally do their sailing whilst standing up, thus they don't receive any feedback from the clothing around their ass being in contact with some kind of seat.
Mixed metaphors don't really work.
Admin
When I read "pirates", I thought the article was going to be about something different.
Damn metaphors.
Admin
tsirf
Admin
What? Ahab invented FTP?
Admin
Admin
Not much else to do on those long, cold journeys.
Admin
Admin
Note to self: familiarise myself with basic plot/themes/characters of Moby Dick before attempting a painful analogy based on the book...
NB: The first line, one characters name and the fact it involves a whale might not cut it.
Admin
I'm missing the part where Ahab's leg was torn off by a bad conversion.
Admin
Which he did so that the Staines Massive could send each other e-mail.
Admin
Admin
+1. I read it as "Ali G" too :)
Admin
snoofle, don't let them get to you! Some of us prefer your posts which simply set out the WTF to the painfully exaggerated literary references which the house style seems to promote.
Admin
I don't suppose he will. Anyone who has to put up with the shit Snoofle does is going to have a hide like a rhinoceros' arse!
Admin
TRWTF is thedailywtf.com I miss them good ol' days
Admin
Did you even read this one, or did you just not pick up on the painfully exaggerated literary reference?
Admin
Admin
There is potentially one good story about the Ahab guy, who made everybody his bitch, who ruled as a tyrant, but who turned to be a total n00b in some incident exposing his lame code and this had some consequences, which could've been told.
But sadly, we only got 4 pretty week stories. They were written in one article, so they may be related:
Still better than Hanzo, though.
Admin
"After the government agency's numbercruncher had toiled away for a full day without decrypting the authentification token, an operator had a sudden idea: 'They, they,... they couldn't have just spelled the name backwards, now, could they?' 'Nah, nobody would do that, that's just to weak for security. Give it another couple of hours on it.'"
Yup. And I don't want to see one worse than Hanzo.Admin
Admin
[quote user=2013-11-28 08:05 • by Pirate pants provide minimal data"]FYI... "the seat of ones pants" is utilized when flying, not sailing. [/quote]
TRWTF is that this comment was posted 12 days before the article was even posted.
Admin
Admin
Wow, there is a french TDWTF: http://fr.thedailywtf.com/Articles/Quatri%C3%A8me-temps-est-le-charme.aspx http://fr.thedailywtf.com/Articles/La-nouvelle-ligne-dans-la-performance.aspx
Admin
Ah yes... security by nametag.
Admin
Alternate title: "The baha moment"
Admin
The stories are accessible before publication, by using the AddComment.aspx page, and altering the ?AtricleId= query string value. You can poke around in that range of values, and usually find 4 or 5 stories already written, but not yet visible on the sites front page.
The early comments can be used to provide some feedback on the story before it is seen by everyone else. Whoever does the publishing usually deletes any early comments (which is what I expected), but this time they didn't.
Admin
[quote user="TheSoftwareDev"][quote user=2013-11-28 08:05 • by Pirate pants provide minimal data"]FYI... "the seat of ones pants" is utilized when flying, not sailing. [/quote]
TRWTF is that this comment was posted 12 days before the article was even posted.[/quote]
The tsirf post didn't stand a chance.
Admin
I will start getting the dust off my french right away.
Admin
Admin
Admin
One's obviously never sailed:
Catamaran at 20kts+ flying up on one hull, with crew sitting out on a trapeze to counterbalance against capsizing (http://pubpages.unh.edu/~cnk8/IMAGES/catamaran.jpg)
Chesapeake Bay log canoe flying clouds of sail, with crew sitting out on hiking boards to counterbalance against capsizing (http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-xU632xLzPz8/T8WFo-imOKI/AAAAAAAACGU/wCo1S6NbgNE/s1600/P1010024.JPG - one of my neighbors is the guy in the white cap on the end of the middle hiking board)
...so, yes, some folks do need the seat of their pants when sailing...
Admin
Given that definition you can apply "by the seat of their pants" to anything, from sailing to programming to cooking.
Admin
Just had a look around at those Chesapeake Log canoe things, they look fantastic fun to sail. More fun than the article and my programming duties anyhow.
Admin
David couldn't figure out that his boss's password is "hunter2"?
Admin
I read it as "Algae."
Admin
No Al Gore invented the Internet therefore he also invented FTP.
Algoreithm := repeating something over and over until everyone is convinced it is true.
Admin
I can speculate the flow of events resulting in the "no conversion" type:
Using the stdio file interface, the Windows CRT will read \r\n as \n and write \n as \r\n.. regardless of fopen() or open(). Specifying "b" in fopen() or O_BINARY in open() will turn this conversion off. I'm guessing this code was written to this interface to be portable (in Windows, the lowest form of user space I/O is done via handles, and "file descriptors" are CRT entities).
So, "no conversion", or I'm suspecting, the original code which appeared to do nothing, ends up converting newlines, while "binary conversion", an added feature specifying the flag, ends up doing no conversion.
Admin
Maybe I'm needlessly touchy here but the naming here just seems racist. Weird. Maybe a joke I didn't get, must try for more sleep.
Admin
I had a similar problem with Wells Fargo. We had to download a daily file of electronic utility bill payments. System worked fine. Then they announced they were changing their system, and my original system bombed. The file looked fine on visual inspection, but SQL Server barfed every time I tried to import it. So I tried importing it in to Access, and found that the file had carriage returns but not new lines, or vice-versa, I don't remember. I confirmed this by looking at a hex dump of the file.
Here's the killer WTF: the tech kept saying that new line and carriage return didn't take any space in the file.
Turned out to be an incompatibility between my SFTP program and their new system, which they'd never tell me what it was. I switched to a different SFTP program and the problem went away.
Admin
TRWTF is that the design part of the story is hanging. Was their design really a mess? Ahab was right or he managed to make it worse, some hopeless trainwreck?
I was expecting that, by the way.
Admin
This would have been really tough if he'd had been named "bob".
Admin
Have you read the book Moby Dick?
Admin
Thanks for introducing an opening for another level of indirection into the pedantic way this thread is going.
After all, you don't SAIL a canoe do you?
Admin
But the reveal is more like "Journey to the Center of the Earth"
Admin
Admin
hehe
Admin
Admin
With the subject matter that we're manipulating, I'm not clicking either of those links. o_O
Admin
Yes, Hawaiian voyaging canoes are sail-powered.
Admin