In conversations about Win8 and Metro, someone uses the expression "desktop app", it can take (me!) a few seconds to realise they're actually talking about an EXE program.
If someone said "desktop app" to me, an exe is precisely what I'd think they were talking about.
The use of databases is not something you can pick up in a couple of hours. Sounds more of an issue of concepts rather than application usage.
We only had a few weeks to do the assignment in. How can you learn MS Access in a few weeks? It must take some people a couple of years to learn it properly!
The "multi-threaded" aspect is related to its core programming routines, not how it displays mails. Outlook bloody PAUSES when downloading e-mails!! Any decently written mail client would allow you to continue typing, scrolling, deleting mails or dragging them to folders etc. whilst mail was being downloaded.
Not Outlook. It's far too badly programmed for that, and because Microsoft have no competition on the enterprise e-mail space they see no reason to fix it. Exactly how they used to be with Internet Explorer before Firefox and Chrome came along.
You can't , which is why you criticism is invalid.
I know, but we were made to do a relational database and mess with queries and all that and none of us knew what it meant. The lecturer explained it but it wasn't really enough. Most of us were struggling.
I know, but we were made to do a relational database and mess with queries and all that and none of us knew what it meant. The lecturer explained it but it wasn't really enough. Most of us were struggling.
Probably not, but unless you know what you are doing and have the relevant qualifications and training then most people wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole!
Probably not, but unless you know what you are doing and have the relevant qualifications and training then most people wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole!
Yeah...but why does complicated software need to go on the tech scrapheap?
I had to use it for a university assignment back in early 2009 and my god it was horrendous! You need a PhD in computer science to be able to work it. I never want to use that clunky piece of sh1t again if I can help it. I'm sure there are other database programs out there that are not as clunky as M$ Access. Argh! I hate Microsoft :mad:
Try linking it via cobol for a uni assignment...must of taken about 2-3000 lines of code to get it done before we even hit the actual procedural crap....people these days are well looked after
Probably not, but unless you know what you are doing and have the relevant qualifications and training then most people wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole!
It's not aimed at most people. There are other applications available but likely you would send them to the scrapheap on the basis that you find Object Orientated programming difficult or too hard to follow.
It's not aimed at most people. There are other applications available but likely you would send them to the scrapheap on the basis that you find Object Orientated programming difficult or too hard to follow.
I don't even know what Object Orientated Programming is! My undergrad degree was in business, not IT. Can't understand why they'd make business students learn to use MS Access.
Because it's awful for the most part unless you have a PhD in computer science and how many users would have that?
Perhaps you are thinking that because it is part of the wider office suite, then it should be easy to do something basic. However, the entry level understanding for a database application is far higher than a simple word processed document
Can't understand why they'd make business students learn to use MS Access.
Perhaps because all businesses use databases? I should have thought that a business student would understand that it is important to use the right tool for the job and not everyone is equipped to use every tool available.
computers in SINGLE CASINGS!
how about MODular COMPuting?
where the machine is in different parts, and with the ease of simply taking out a lead and putting another one back in, the same upgradability of a PC can be done .... even a five year old could do it
the casings could be stylishly covered, custom coverings, you could even spray paint them ..... then you can arrange them any way you want, on the desk, or even on your WALL!!!
My university uses Office 365 for their email system and they changed the layout today and it's vile. It's been Windows 8-ified and it's got to the point where I'm going to use Gmail all the time. I think it's fit for the tech scrapheap. I'd also consign:
Windows 8
Windows Vista
The ribbon toolbar in MS Office
Norton AntiVirus
McAfee Antivirus
Microsoft Access What software or hardware would you consign o the scrapheap?
Probably not, but unless you know what you are doing and have the relevant qualifications and training then most people wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole!
Your reading Law? Why would you have to be messing with Access ?
I'm doing a law degree as a postgrad but my undergrad was in business and it was while I was doing my business degree that I had to mess with Access.
That make sense. Access is a very powerful package, I've only messed with it to be honest but I used Dbase a lot in the past, harder again IHMO. Come the new year I'll start playing with CAD packages for fun...keep the grey matter ticking over
I had to use it for a university assignment back in early 2009 and my god it was horrendous! You need a PhD in computer science to be able to work it. I never want to use that clunky piece of sh1t again if I can help it. I'm sure there are other database programs out there that are not as clunky as M$ Access. Argh! I hate Microsoft :mad:
I've always been able to work Access, and I don't have a PhD in computer science or any PhDs for that matter!
Comments
If someone said "desktop app" to me, an exe is precisely what I'd think they were talking about.
Outlook has had 'conversation view' since 2010.
We only had a few weeks to do the assignment in. How can you learn MS Access in a few weeks? It must take some people a couple of years to learn it properly!
They were innovative a few years ago, cheap, with good specs and portable. Then everyone jumped on the bandwagon and bought out their own version.
Now phones have caught up, and are more powerful than the little MSI Wind I have gathering dust under the coffee table.
Not Outlook. It's far too badly programmed for that, and because Microsoft have no competition on the enterprise e-mail space they see no reason to fix it. Exactly how they used to be with Internet Explorer before Firefox and Chrome came along.
I know, but we were made to do a relational database and mess with queries and all that and none of us knew what it meant. The lecturer explained it but it wasn't really enough. Most of us were struggling.
That doesn't make the software bad though.
Probably not, but unless you know what you are doing and have the relevant qualifications and training then most people wouldn't touch it with a 10 foot pole!
Yeah...but why does complicated software need to go on the tech scrapheap?
Try linking it via cobol for a uni assignment...must of taken about 2-3000 lines of code to get it done before we even hit the actual procedural crap....people these days are well looked after
Because it's awful for the most part unless you have a PhD in computer science and how many users would have that?
I don't even know what Object Orientated Programming is! My undergrad degree was in business, not IT. Can't understand why they'd make business students learn to use MS Access.
how about MODular COMPuting?
where the machine is in different parts, and with the ease of simply taking out a lead and putting another one back in, the same upgradability of a PC can be done .... even a five year old could do it
the casings could be stylishly covered, custom coverings, you could even spray paint them ..... then you can arrange them any way you want, on the desk, or even on your WALL!!!
Your reading Law? Why would you have to be messing with Access ?
I'm doing a law degree as a postgrad but my undergrad was in business and it was while I was doing my business degree that I had to mess with Access.
That make sense. Access is a very powerful package, I've only messed with it to be honest but I used Dbase a lot in the past, harder again IHMO. Come the new year I'll start playing with CAD packages for fun...keep the grey matter ticking over