Bye bye Internet Explorer

You know when they first showcased it I didn't understand why on earth you would need to comment on a webpage and share it with people.

Now that I'm in a new workplace with crazy documentation that really needs to be updated yet I don't have the access to do so, I figure it's the most awesome feature ever if I could comment on notes and stuff to our internal pages and share that with the team.

Microsoft might be onto something.
 
IE Should die... however its not what Microsoft are saying. They are introducing a new browser and keeping the old one around. Dropping the name "Explorer" in the new browser, too, to avoid confusion.

Safari + Chrome is where it is at. ;)
 
No bank is going to suit you then. As a point of reference I am a nedbank employee, and Nedbank in terms of technology are ahead of the other banks. Independent assessors have verified this.

J-Jonah-Jameson-laughing.jpg

As a former employee, I can assure you that it is definitely not the case.
 
No bank is going to suit you then. As a point of reference I am a nedbank employee, and Nedbank in terms of technology are ahead of the other banks. Independent assessors have verified this.

Oh man, that's funny! :wtf: LOL
 
No bank is going to suit you then. As a point of reference I am a nedbank employee, and Nedbank in terms of technology are ahead of the other banks. Independent assessors have verified this.

Well I've seen the code... :erm:
 
I'm still there, we landed windows 7 before the other banks...we have virtualised most of the workplace...I work in IT dude

I know what Nedbank did in the virtualisation space, I was one of the people involved in it :)

And trust me, in terms of infrastructure hardware (including middleware), core banking technology and related applications, Nedbank is not ahead of other banks, and certainly not ahead of them in terms of provisioning functionality to their clients.
 
I know what Nedbank did in the virtualisation space, I was one of the people involved in it :)

And trust me, in terms of infrastructure hardware (including middleware), core banking technology and related applications, Nedbank is not ahead of other banks, and certainly not ahead of them in terms of provisioning functionality to their clients.

Are you referring to server or desktop virtualisation? And why was Nedbank held up as an example at the Dell Solutions Tour
 
Are you referring to server or desktop virtualisation? And why was Nedbank held up as an example at the Dell Solutions Tour

Server virtualisation.

And Dell... hmmm. You know how big Nedbank's contract with Dell is, and how many of our engineers they've poached? It's a mutually beneficial relationship, and Nedbank has been at the forefront of that. But as for the other areas... yeah, some ways to go, specifically AIX hardware and standardisation.
 
Server virtualisation.

And Dell... hmmm. You know how big Nedbank's contract with Dell is, and how many of our engineers they've poached? It's a mutually beneficial relationship, and Nedbank has been at the forefront of that. But as for the other areas... yeah, some ways to go, specifically AIX hardware and standardisation.

I was referring to the EUS space where we are ahead.
 
I was referring to the EUS space where we are ahead.

Sure, but you should've been more specific :)

Though, even that is debatable, but again, even companies within the same market can have rather different polices and requirements for their solutions. I wouldn't say that Nedbank is ahead, but I wouldn't say they're behind, either. YMMV.
 
SARS seems to prefer IE. I could never use their site with Safari, but this has changed now I can even use their iOS app :)
 
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