Thanks for sharing this; I've only skimmed it but it seems to hit some of the common issues right on the nail. Definitely a useful subject matter. Now we just gotta make the management read it ;-) I like the checklists and the questions to ask sections. The appendix also seems to ask relevant questions and provide proper guidance. I'd be interested to hear from a non-technical person to see what they think of it. Cheers
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Write about different things. At different times. Interested in intersection of software, business and people. Currently focusing on writing a JavaScript book.
Cheers for this post!!! Like finding more writers to follow =)
Did exactly the same thing when i went away a few months back, my trip just after the second accident but not before the grounding i believe. Not sure what the options are if you get stuck on a plane you don't exactly want to be on.
My trip just after the second accident but not before teh grounding.
Airlines like Delta show very clearly what type of plane you're supposed to be on. Of course that could change because of maintenance issues, but it is easy to check at least what is scheduled.
Pains me to see CBC go down this path - from their recent modernization changes that made their website unusable for basic things like news, to seeing comments like this. Makes me wonder why "non-tech" companies just copy tech companies that are able to innovate and move faster without considering their own fate. But then I remember how they work and that every company is now a tech company at the apparent mercy of FAANG. I'm seeing a lot of talk about our neighbours down south but not a lot of action. This piece made it seem like CBC is losing a piece of the pie and they are salty. Makes me feel sad to see this from the top down. We have the same tech available and the similar resources but it seems that we would much rather partner or purchase than take some risk and try something different. I hope I am wrong.
They broadcast in HD and SD for free, funded in part by public funding, advertising, merchandising, and licensing.
Netflix buys CBC content, and they're not the only ones.
While I might not appreciate her crassness, I understood it as a caution-call for new content delivery companies from other countries not conforming to Canadian broadcast law. Much like Uber skirted taxi laws. I'm sure most people here could run with the like examples from there.
As for the CBC site, if you're looking for a pared down version, they provide rss feeds and their site works perfectly fine as a news reader with JS disabled.