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    #21
    Originally posted by chef View Post
    that's kind of the answers I was hoping to get and more.. thanks

    i didn't seriously believe it was as easy as a few courses and jump right in otherwise everyone would be doing it, if i'd have engaged brain before asking I wouldnt have wasted your time.. thanks though

    now what shall I cook for dinner?

    <chef in daydreaming mode>
    Systeme, Anwendungen und Produkte in der Datenverarbeitung

    Just another IBM offshoot really

    Comment


      #22
      Originally posted by milanbenes View Post

      Thomas,

      good lad.

      Have you been to the P shop today ?

      Milano.
      nope - I can get obese with out corporate subsidies :-)
      maybe I will go next week - for some coffee like substanses

      you need anything?
      "Condoms should come with a free pack of earplugs."

      Comment


        #23
        for nosalgia purposes

        If SAP made toasters, the manual to run the toaster would be approximately 10,000 pages long. The toaster would come with 2,500 switches which would all have to be set in an exact pattern and in a precise sequence in order to toast specific kinds of bread. SAP's experts would establish each pattern as the "Best Practices" method of toasting that kind of bread. It would take a team of basis and functional contractors about 1 year to configure the toaster in the best manner, and then another 6 months to test it.

        In the meantime, your entire family would need to attend extensive training classes on how to use the new toaster. In order to support end users and consultants, MIT would establish a list-serv for people to post questions and answers regarding toaster set-up and operation. Of course, the online help would randomly pop up in German. But once it was running, you'd get the best toast in the world.

        Comment


          #24
          Originally posted by Pondlife View Post
          If SAP made toasters, the manual to run the toaster would be approximately 10,000 pages long. The toaster would come with 2,500 switches which would all have to be set in an exact pattern and in a precise sequence in order to toast specific kinds of bread. SAP's experts would establish each pattern as the "Best Practices" method of toasting that kind of bread. It would take a team of basis and functional contractors about 1 year to configure the toaster in the best manner, and then another 6 months to test it.

          In the meantime, your entire family would need to attend extensive training classes on how to use the new toaster. In order to support end users and consultants, MIT would establish a list-serv for people to post questions and answers regarding toaster set-up and operation. Of course, the online help would randomly pop up in German. But once it was running, you'd get the best toast in the world.
          and you are forced to upgrade your toaster every 3 years - at the same cost as buying a new toaster. BOOMED!
          "Condoms should come with a free pack of earplugs."

          Comment


            #25
            Originally posted by Pondlife View Post
            If SAP made toasters, the manual to run the toaster would be approximately 10,000 pages long. The toaster would come with 2,500 switches which would all have to be set in an exact pattern and in a precise sequence in order to toast specific kinds of bread. SAP's experts would establish each pattern as the "Best Practices" method of toasting that kind of bread. It would take a team of basis and functional contractors about 1 year to configure the toaster in the best manner, and then another 6 months to test it.

            In the meantime, your entire family would need to attend extensive training classes on how to use the new toaster. In order to support end users and consultants, MIT would establish a list-serv for people to post questions and answers regarding toaster set-up and operation. Of course, the online help would randomly pop up in German. But once it was running, you'd get the best toast in the world.
            Untill you tried a different brand of bread, then you'll be back to cursing the ****er
            Coffee's for closers

            Comment


              #26
              Originally posted by ThomasSoerensen View Post
              and you are forced to upgrade your toaster every 3 years - at the same cost as buying a new toaster. BOOMED!
              not to mention having to test your toaster in (at least) three different kitchens before allowing anyone to put any real bread in it.

              Comment


                #27
                lol,

                but you haven't described the whole toaster line in the landscape you've only described the sandbox

                now your familly will need :

                european toaster line for developments of bread, dev, quality, regression

                ditto americas, ditto australasia

                consolidation line of toasters for consolidating the toast developments in the markets and continents into the global blueprint, again, dev, quality, regression

                then the production line or maintenance line, dev, quality, PRODUCTION which is where consolidations from the global blueprint line are promoted and maintained

                Prod will of course be highly available fail over etc

                of course as a minimum the quality systems in all lines will have to be mirrors of production from the architectural perspective so that any toasting issues which might might stem from prod being a different architectural design to the rest of the development landscape are spotted before new toasting developments move into the production line

                and that's only the toaster

                then we'll need to apply support packs to the whole toaster landscape at least twice a year and more if other components in the kitchen have dependencies on the toaster being a higher version

                now we're farming.

                up the .net

                Milan.
                Last edited by milanbenes; 29 October 2008, 15:39.

                Comment


                  #28
                  Originally posted by Pondlife View Post
                  not to mention having to test your toaster in (at least) three different kitchens before allowing anyone to put any real bread in it.
                  It is one of the few truly glorious products of the world. Think of how many families it feeds
                  "Condoms should come with a free pack of earplugs."

                  Comment


                    #29
                    Originally posted by milanbenes View Post
                    lol,

                    but you haven't described the whole toaster line in the landscape you've only described the sandbox

                    now your familly will need :

                    european toaster line for developments of bread, dev, quality, regression

                    ditto americas, ditto australasia

                    consolidation line of toasters for consolidating the toast developments in the markets and continents into the global blueprint, again, dev, quality, regression

                    then the production line or maintenance line, dev, quality, PRODUCTION which is where consolidations from the global blueprint line are promoted and maintained

                    Prod will of course be highly available fail over etc

                    of course as a minimum the quality systems in all lines will have to be mirrors of production from the architectural perspective so that any toasting issues which might might stem from prod being a different architectural design to the rest of the development landscape

                    now we're farming.

                    up the .net

                    Milan.
                    and since you cannot trust your family members with full access to the toaster settings you will need a few highly skilled contractors to develop family access profiles that differ from each other on each toaster in the .nett toaster landscape
                    "Condoms should come with a free pack of earplugs."

                    Comment


                      #30
                      If only people would decide how they wanted their toast done and not change their minds after one side's been browned.

                      Comment

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