Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Program crashes with wireless

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Program crashes with wireless

    Hi,

    Got a program that uses Tsunami to store the data. It has been running for a few years now but the client, recently, tried it across a wireless network and it failed. (Not sure but sounded like a GPF) No problems have been seen with a hard-wired network.

    Any ideas?
    C'ya
    Don

    http://www.ImagesBy.me

  • #2
    Yes, had the same problem. kept getting time-out errors ( don't remember
    off-hand the err # ). ended up doing checks on every TRM call to retry
    up to 3 times if I got the time-out error. my program was running in a warehouse
    which was across the road from the main buildings and connected via a
    wireless connection. The IS department was never able to eliminate the
    problems ( even after 4 years of errors ). but retrying the TRM call did clear
    up the problems as far as the users were concerned.
    I kept logs of when it happened just for my own use as
    this application was not a money-making project for the company so very
    little effort was expended by the IS department.

    Comment


    • #3
      this application was not a money-making project for the company so very
      little effort was expended by the IS department.
      I bet if it was a "money-LOSING" project, the IT dept would invest more time into why or how to fix it.

      I know I loosely state that because of the whole "Butting Heads of Dept's" where each dept thinks the problem is on the other departments end and not theirs.

      Sometimes its worth pressing a point of a problem (especially if you have the data to back it up, know whats causing it or at least an idea of what is causing it, or at least logs showing the problem (hopefully a pattern) to track down the problem. Rather than "Work-Around" and forget it)

      Engineer's Motto: If it aint broke take it apart and fix it

      "If at 1st you don't succeed... call it version 1.0"

      "Half of Programming is coding"....."The other 90% is DEBUGGING"

      "Document my code????" .... "WHYYY??? do you think they call it CODE? "

      Comment


      • #4
        And people wonder why I despise wireless.

        Anyway, ask him/her/them if there are any RF generating devices located nearby. Flourcents, radios, etc. Your description smacks of data being scrambled/corrupted.
        There are no atheists in a fox hole or the morning of a math test.
        If my flag offends you, I'll help you pack.

        Comment


        • #5
          Thanks, all, I'll start looking down this track.
          C'ya
          Don

          http://www.ImagesBy.me

          Comment


          • #6
            And check the presence of X-ray devices too!
            "The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln.

            Comment


            • #7
              this application was not a money-making project for the company so very
              little effort was expended by the IS department
              If it required as much as one minute of any employee's time to "deal with it," yes it was, because there was a cost, therefore it 'made' negative dollars. (Unless all your employees are unpaid volunteers).

              That cost BTW came right off the bottom line, meaning right out of your last raise.

              MCM
              Michael Mattias
              Tal Systems (retired)
              Port Washington WI USA
              [email protected]
              http://www.talsystems.com

              Comment


              • #8
                And people wonder why I despise wireless
                Hummm. I've been in the networking end of the business (my primary line of work, programming secondary) for over 20 years. I've installed a few hundred commercial grade wireless solutions over the last 8-10 of those years. Can't say that I've ever had a single bad experience that was directly related to wireless technology. But then again, I know precisely what I'm doing and don't cut corners
                Software makes Hardware Happen

                Comment


                • #9
                  >I know precisely what I'm doing and don't cut corners

                  I hope you are not recommending this approach. It would simply destroy the entire belief system of the Generation X'ers now coming into poisitions of real power in the business world.

                  MCM
                  Michael Mattias
                  Tal Systems (retired)
                  Port Washington WI USA
                  [email protected]
                  http://www.talsystems.com

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Michael Mattias View Post
                    >I know precisely what I'm doing and don't cut corners

                    I hope you are not recommending this approach. It would simply destroy the entire belief system of the Generation X'ers now coming into poisitions of real power in the business world.

                    MCM
                    yea, I know, but I feel obligated to let them know that, despite what the media says, there are people who think differently than McHillary
                    Software makes Hardware Happen

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Sheesh. I must remember to not give background info in my replies as it
                      sometimes just stirs up things better left alone.

                      Well, just this last time ( maybe ). This program was used to track packages
                      received by the warehouse to be delivered to people around the company.
                      The system that it replaced was ancient and sort-of stopped working seeing
                      as how the company did not want to spend $4000 to $10000 to get the
                      updated program that worked with Windows ( this was a DOS version that
                      was no longer being maintained ). So I'm now on staff and getting paid and
                      had the spare time to do the job. It only took a couple weeks to get running
                      ( amid doing support for the other systems which took priority ).
                      The wireless connection had been installed 5-7 years prior to this when
                      the needs of the warehouse to access the main intranet was very
                      minimal. The warehouse manager and my manager decided to not press
                      the issue.
                      If I could solve the problem in a couple hours work then that was much
                      preferred to involving 2 or 3 ( at least ) high-paid network techs for even an hour.
                      They got paid 2 or 3 times more per hour than I made.
                      The whole problem got "solved" last month when the company laid off
                      another 20% of its people and laid off all but 2 of the warehouse people
                      and out-sourced the main warehouse functions to another company.
                      Those 2 people were moved to a small room in the main building and hooked
                      up with the normal wired intranet. As a side note, I was laid off 4 years
                      ago in another of their re-orgs which laid off 20% of the company. The
                      program is still working fine today with the small exception that the IS
                      department hasn't figured out how to move the network printer to the
                      new area ( the program writes to the printer queue as no computer has a
                      printer attached locally ).

                      Sorry if that sounds like a rant. If many complain then I'll delete the post.

                      Comment

                      Working...
                      X