Yeah, but you could sell the tapes to Saturday Night Live?Quote:
Helpdesks are pretty expensive to run and are a total drain on profitability
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Yeah, but you could sell the tapes to Saturday Night Live?Quote:
Helpdesks are pretty expensive to run and are a total drain on profitability
rcg,
If 10% of the garbage had any shame, I would go for straight blackmail
MuHaHaHaHaHaHaHaHa!!!!! :lildevil:
No, then I would have wrote SP4.. and your right, but its a shame when you upgrade your OS, suddenly 47% of your licenced software wont work anymore, and updates... "maybe next year bub!"Quote:
Originally Posted by nihil
This is the main reason why I like Debian, if something not working, I report it to the mailinglists or.. write my own patch for it and send that to the mailing lists so others can benefit..
Hmmm,
Quote:
No, then I would have wrote SP4.. and your right, but its a shame when you upgrade your OS, suddenly 47% of your licenced software wont work anymore, and updates... "maybe next year bub!"
You are not making sense. If the software doesn't work it isn't going to tell you what OS to run, it just won't work :rolleyes:Quote:
(This software requires ATLEAST 2000 SP2 or XP SP2 to function, please check your system and try again) wtf!
Also, I do not believe that you will see software requiring Windows 2000 SP2 and Windows XP SP2. That makes no logical or commercial sense at all, as it would require supporting 3 service packs for Windows 2000, two of which are not supported by Microsoft.
As for "47% of your licenced software wont work anymore" that would mean that you have changed your operating system. Vista is a different operating system from other versions of Windows, that followed a logical progression:
..........-95 - 98 - 98SE - ME
......../ ...........................\
3.1x .................................XP
........\ .........................../
......... -NT4.0 .....-.... 2000
Vista is quite different, as it only really offers some legacy support functionality. That is why you can only "upgrade" it from XP or 2000 for starters.
If your software is of the licenced commercial variety, there are two possibilities:
1. You can upgrade it to the new OS.
2. The supplier goes out of business.
I also wonder how much of your problem is due to trying to run 32bit applications in a 64bit environment?