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Author
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Topic: Computers in daily operations...
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Randy Stankey
Film God
Posts: 6539
From: Erie, Pennsylvania
Registered: Jun 99
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posted 01-28-2005 09:39 PM
I put forth that, UNLESS you know how to perform a task using nothing more than a pencil and a pad of paper, a calculator and a cigar box full of change you should not even attempt to do it on a computer.
Yes, I understand that, nowadays, it's often unweildy or even impossible to do some of the things that we do today unless you have a computer but my point is that you should know HOW to do a particular job BEFORE you computerize the task.
OK. I'm not saying we should go back to the days of mechanical adding machines. (Although the Curta Mechanical Calulator is pretty damned cool!) There are too many people who think, "Oh! I can do [this job] on my computer and it will be really cool!", but they don't understand the logical process behind the job before they embark on the project.
Once you have the process of doing a task firmly laid out in your head, the questions of what hardware & software platforms to use become easier to answer.
One thing that galls me a little bit is the idea that, just because a software system is old, it is no good. The lighting consoles in my auditoriums are all running on DOS and they work just fine. IF you strip them down to their essence, they are nothing more than DOS boxes with a turnkey setup. However, when I tell that to some people, they seem incredulous that such a system isn't running on the latest version of Windoze XP!
As far as I am concerned, if the system works AND you are not in danger of losing data, it doesn't matter HOW OLD the system is. If you have databases/files that need to be archived or transferred to a future system you should think about updating to a system that's more "futureproof". But, in the case I mentioned above, if the lights come on when the curtain goes up I could care less if the system ran on an old Apple ][ with 64K of memory!
I think it would be nice to see a theater system running on the Mac platform but I would like to see if OS X can be scaled down (hacked sytem) or if a good system can be made to run in Darwin (Unix) first. That way it would be harder for somebody to get inside the OS and mess with things they shouldn't or accidentally mess things up.
What I'd REALLY like to see is a theater running on an X Serve!
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