The Bluffer's Guide To Yegge: Business Requirements R Bullsh*t Prototype Ready for Launch Idea: a poor man's eye-tracking heatmap for win forms 'The Register' seems to have plagiarised Mary Jo Foley A magic goal for software businesses A to Z of Software Methodologies TimeSnapper in Music! Fixing problems can give you a glimpse of something terrible Web Tablet: Toward Less Complexity Do they store the code for TFS in TFS? Sudden TimeSnapper Discount! How Can Microsoft Beat Google? TimeSnapper 3.1: Attack of the the Red/Green Stripes 21 tools used in our MicroISV Lost Treasures of the DOS World: tree! The Virtual Machine Machine and the Virtual Virtual Machine Should Linq To Sql Go "Open Source"? Redux: New Synchronisation Idea Overlooked By Microsoft New Synchronisation Idea Overlooked By Microsoft Live team Visual Studio UX Taskforce, Office UX Taskforce... etc. How to be Jeff Atwood
No matter what other interesting skills you acquire, an ability to write DOS batch files is a skill that you will cherish throughout your life. And should you survive to a hundred and five, batch programs may be the one thing that remains unchanged.
Add your comment.
name
comment
homepage
Back to The Lost Art of Batch Programming