• qaz
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    33 months ago

    Could you give an example of something related to hardware that most developers don’t know about?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      3 months ago

      Simple example, our NASes are EMC2. The devs over at the company that does the software say they’re garbage, we should change them.

      Mind you, these things have been running for 10 years straight 24/7, under load most of the time, and we’ve only swapped like 2 drives, total… but no, they’re garbage 🤦…

      • @[email protected]
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        93 months ago

        Accurate!

        Developers are frequently excited by the next hot thing or how some billionaire tech companies operate.

        I’m guilty of seeing something that was last updated in 2019 and having a look of disgust.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          43 months ago

          Well, at least you admit it, not everyone does.

          I do agree that they’re out of date, but that wasn’t their point, their software somehow doesn’t like the NASes, so they had to look into where the problem was. But, their first thought was “let’s tell them they’re no good and tell them which ones to buy so we wouldn’t have to look at the code”.

          • @Ziglin
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            23 months ago

            That sounds extremely lazy. I’d expect more from a dev team.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              3 months ago

              Me too, but apparently, that wasn’t the case.

              My reasoning was, they’d have to send someone over to do tests and build the project on site, install and test, since we couldn’t give any of those NASes to them for them to work on the problem, and they’d rather not do that, since it’s a lot more work and it’s time consuming.

              • @Ziglin
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                13 months ago

                Couldn’t they remotely connect to them?

                • @[email protected]OP
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                  3 months ago

                  Yeah, they tried that a few times, the software would glitch and Windows would either BSOD or just freeze (had something to do with how their HASP dongle license communicated with the software and the drivers it used, nothing to do with our issue whatsoever, lol). In the end, they had to come down and debug the issue on a separate rig and install. We just couldn’t have those interruptions in production.

        • @Ziglin
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          13 months ago

          If it’s publicly accessible it likely has a bunch of vulnerabilities so I too understand that look.