The Daily WTF Today’s anonymously submitted story is a case where the WTF isn’t the code itself, per se. This arguably could be a
The Daily WTF Let’s say you have a database table containing a list of countries. Given the primary key of a country in that table- an
The Daily WTF One of the “features” of the Oracle database is that, in addition to the “wonderful” PL/SQL language for
The Daily WTF Unfortunately for Elena, the laboratory information management system (LIMS) her team used was being sunsetted by the vendor,
The Daily WTF In this week’s episode we have some more adventures in shipping and misadventures with dates. I just asked “Hey Google,
The Daily WTF Amanda‘s company wanted to restrict access to a service by filtering on the requestor’s IP address. Yes, this is a
The Daily WTF Let’s say your company wanted to offer special deals. When a customer calls about one of these deals, you want to play an
The Daily WTF Efren‘s employer recently acquired a competitor. The competitor had been struggling for a number of years, and the
The Daily WTF Luke has inherited a Java Struts-based application. Struts is one of the many Java web frameworks, designed around having HTTP
The Daily WTF File under “Old Business”: Swissrail just can’t catch a break. Diligent Richard B. dug into the news and reports