Actually, Daniel15, the 6400 is a "business" model (though it's near identical to the E1505). I know, because I bought mine through Dell Small Business ;)
All the power warnings and lights work fine for me - but then, I use XP.
Actually, Daniel15, the 6400 is a "business" model (though it's near identical to the E1505). I know, because I bought mine through Dell Small Business ;)
All the power warnings and lights work fine for me - but then, I use XP.
Some of us are too poor to buy defuse kits... so we scavenge off the dead.
Guns too.
Electrical wiring jobs like those are pretty common in the Dominican Republic. Most of the wires connected to the power lines are just someone who hooked on to steal electricity. They seem to think they have a right to free electricity, and they complain whenever the power goes out (the power company there implements rolling blackouts to cut costs) even though they're the cause of the blackouts (they don't pay, so the power company can't stay running 24/7, so they get mad and refuse to pay, etc, it's a vicious cycle). It was lots of fun.
You're a professional bomb defuser.
You get called in on a special job.
Noone seems to want to tell you how much time is left on the timer.
You walk in and see this:
Think you can defuse the bomb in time?
The guy who wrote this barely knows C, let alone C++/STL ;)
Say you have an array of something:
int myarray[200];
or maybe you have
int* array2 = new int[200];
I thought I'd only ever see what I'll show next at one particular workplace, but I just came across it in code I was asked to rewrite for a university research project. To pass these arrays to a function, void myfunc(int* thelist), you would think the course of action would be:
myfunc(myarray);
myfunc(array2);
This is what made (makes?) me go WTF:
myfunc(&myarray[0]);
myfunc(&array2[0]);
The first time I saw that I stared at it for ten minutes before I realized what the author(s) *should* have done...