The Daily WTF The HP3000 was the first mini-computer that supported time-sharing. It launched in 1972, and HP didn’t end-of-life it until
The Daily WTF When evaluating a new development tool or framework, the first thing the smart developer does is check out the vendor
The Daily WTF Despite literally predating paper, passcodes and secret handshakes continue to perplex programmers, actors, and artists alike. For
The Daily WTF Dave inherited a data management tool. It was an antique WinForms application that users would use to edit a whole pile of business
The Daily WTF Today’s submitter goes by “[object Object]“, which I appreciate the JavaScript gag even when they send us C code.
The Daily WTF Shalonda inherited a C# GUI application that, if we’re being charitable, has problems. It’s slow, it’s buggy, it
The Daily WTF It’s Labor Day in the US. We’re busy partaking in traditional celebrations, which depending on who you ask, is either
The Daily WTF Testing in production again, here’s five fails for the fifth day of the week. Or the sixth. Or is it the fourth? Anonymous
The Daily WTF Despite being a programmer, I make software that goes in big things, which means that my workplace frequently involves the
The Daily WTF When moving from one programming language to another, it’s easy to slip into idioms that might be appropriate in one, but are