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Admin
So trwtf is...
The guys who transferred over were left with no support from the previous consultants working on the project?
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Definitely a fictional story. A system with meaningful/helpful documentation? When was the last time that happened?
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Is there any chance of posting the unedited story to see whether the way it sets up the scenario makes any sense? The first 9 paragraphs of this article seem to be deliberately written to make it hard to figure out what's going on.
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For English readers - 'acclimated' = 'Acclimatise' ...
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yep, the style provides a deliberately garbled up intertwined structure with the apparent goal of provoking increased interest in the unfolding of subsequent consequences.
short, it's a mess. i feel conned and insulted.
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It's clever, isn't it - rather than just telling you, it makes you FEEL how Peter felt.
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Consultants with proper documentation? Is TDWTF allowing science fiction now?
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The Daily Dogbert. Another tale of overpaid consultants who are not held to the same standard as underpaid employees, due to the bad business sense of pointy-haired bosses.
Captcha tation: "tation, n. A portion of potatoes. (From a portmanteau of 'tater' and 'ration'.)"
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Of course Peter was then fired for interfering in a process at a location he shouldn't be, and causing extra consultant-costs and -fines due to not following proper described procedures that he himself then only executed after those unneeded consultants where brought in, according to said consultants?
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The real WTF, as usual, is freaking SharePoint. BAAARRF.
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ShareBarf, Windoze, Micro$wat.
That about sums it up dunnit?
Admin
Actually my pet name for SharePoint is SharePointless. Not that anybody cares.
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We always provide documentation, but customer engineer refuses to read it.
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I was looking for feature the Sh!tPoint wiki didn't have (categorisation, trasnclusion, soft links to uploads, etc) and found an article like this: https://www.nothingbutsharepoint.com/sites/eusp/pages/wiki-in-the-box-is-sharepoint-wiki-really-that-bad.aspx This is from a Sh!tPoint developer, and basically opens "No-one chooses Sh!tPoint because it's the best (because it isn't); they use it because it's already in their company because their IT department trusts Microsoft. Suck it up." Not encouraging.
Admin
Both those words mean exactly the same thing in both British and American English.
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Name calling is an interesting cognitive bias, don't you think?
Interesting, in that it is generally used by people who want to weigh in on a topic when they know very little about it. They deploy name-calling as an attempt to fool a weaker minded audience into agreeing with an argument that lacks any form of substance.
Admin
Hmm, no. As a British English speaker, I can tell you that 'acclimated' is an Americanism. It isn't in common use over here.
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Perhaps, but in this case the fact remains, SharePoint really does suck.
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He didn't say it was common use just that they have the same meaning in both languages.
Admin
Hmm, no. As a British English speaker, I can tell you that it might well be an Americanism, but that is totally irrelevant. It IS in use in Britain, by British English speakers.
Also, the word antejentacular isn't in common use anywhere. It's still British English.
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COCA, on the other hand, has 70 acclimatize to 358 acclimate.
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I like it when the only documentation is a diagram of what systems are talking to what other things behind the wall of their black box.
You make a request, it gets sent to our load balancer, that picks a database and that information gets sent to a response system, and that sends the response back to you! Also there's a cloud somewhere.
Um, ok. And how do I actually make a request....
Admin
Documentation is most of the time meaningful AND helpful (AND outdated, but that's a different story...)
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I admittedly grew up in Hawaii where we speak Pidgin instead of (American) English, but I thought the American spelling was acclimatize.
Peter, beware of Muphry's Law; Acclimated is an adjective, while acclimatise is a verb.
Admin
If 'acclimated' is in use anywhere in Britain by British English speakers, I've yet to hear it in my over half a century lifetime; certainly not used by anyone in the software business. I supposed it might by used by someone explaining how eccentric the 'English' spoken in that far away country about which we know little, the USA, can be.
Admin
"empty bottles of Evian" ? perhaps a left-over of the original story, indicating it happened in France... or perhaps Evian is commonly found in whatever country it happened in.
Admin
Peter peered over Bob’s shoulder, at the error message on his laptop. “It could be that the security log’s full. Have you checked the application’s internal registry?”
Definitely the wrong thing to say. The proper observation to make would have been, “Hire me as an ad-hoc consultant and I'll fix this in five minutes. It'll cost you two grand but it'll be worth it: you guys can take the credit and look like geniuses.”
Peter is evidently doomed to a life of abject honesty.
-Harrow.
Admin
So, you've come out with some statistics about two sets of arbitrary text data.
Consider the number of words spoken, per hour, in both of these countries. That number will be higher than the total number of words in the respective corpora.
So, if it only takes an hour to out-do a corpus, how can it possibly be representative of anything, and how relevant can it possibly be to this discussion?
I'm British. I use the word 'acclimate'. I use it in the course of speaking British English. The people to whom I speak understand what I am talking about, therefore my use of British English has been successful. Now, you might want to erroneously deploy a "no true Englishman" argument, but the fact is, I only need one counter-example, me, to be correct on this issue.
Admin
How is this going to work in real life? Peter could get arrested for holding information critical to company.
Admin
I damned well hope Peter put that in his PMP. And told his boss. He needs to brag that up big time. There are times to help people, and there are times to let people do the job they're being paid for.
Admin
About the only grammatical nitpick remaining is that if you're going to do a translation, at least use the same part of speech. Those don't mean the same thing, since the first one is an adjective. "Acclimated = acclimitised."
Of course, then we can get into single versus double quotes if anyone wants another totally pointless row....
Admin
This might beg the question, but WHY didn't Peter solve the problem BEFORE the highly paid consultants arrived back at the scene of the crime?
Admin
"British English" doesn't mean "the superset of all idiolects of people who claim to speak British English". If the word "ket" is used only in Yorkshire then that makes it Yorkshire English, not British English. You form a sample of one, so you're probably not a statistically representative sample of all British English speakers.
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The Oxford English Dictionary defines British English to be English "as spoken or written in the British Isles; esp. the forms of English usual in Great Britain".
So, while your definition of British English gets a special inclusion, mine is clearly included within that definition.
What is more, the OED includes acclimate, and cites it in British English usage circa 1792.
If you'd like to disagree with the OED about this, you're more than welcome. Just fuck off while you're doing it.
Admin
So. Peter gets to play high and mighty for 5 minutes, and he's still paid nothing compared to Bob. Poor Bob will need to drive his Porsche home that's twice as big as Peter's and think about what he's done.
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Many companies have successfully embraced the whiteboard-and-post-it documentation paradigm!
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Letting the consultants take the credit for fixing it is why OP is not a highly paid consultant.
Admin
Hmm, the whole build-up of this story, about the consulting company and the contractual arrangement and all that, really had just about nothing to do with the punch-line. "You don't remember what you yourself wrote?" could be just as applicable to an in-house developer as a consultant. Well, I guess without the big build-up the story would have been too short.
And frankly, the idea that someone might forget one tiny detail amidst all the thousands of details that go into a large system isn't particularly startling. I'm sure I've forgotten lots of things that I've written down at one point or another. That's why we write them down: so we have something to look back at when we forget. But finding the key fact among all the irrelevant facts is the challenge.
Admin
Yeah, that's just the sort of thing we expect one of you communist racist Nazis to say.
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Also... As you have mentioned, those corpora have curators deciding what goes in and what doesn't, curators who are acting as the arbiters of the many inclusional/exclusional decisions. I think you'll find that is pretty much the definition of arbitrary data.
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Don't try to embiggen the word.