Tuesday, November 3, 2009

GAMES :: Legends King Arthur code

The embedded code for the GAME Legends King Arthur are:::

Sunday, July 26, 2009

$23 quadrillion software glitch




This tale of IT failure is so extreme as to be a joke, making it the perfect story for a mid-summer Friday.

A guy spends $1.94 on his prepaid VISA card and then receives a bill for $23,148,855,308,184,500. Making things worse, VISA also charged the poor fellow an additional $15 fee.

I kid you not, this is a true story. CNN describes what happened:

Josh Muszynski, 22, of Manchester, New Hampshire, was one Visa customer aghast to find the 17-digit charge on his bill. Adding insult to injury, he had also been hit with a $15 overdraft fee.

He next called Bank of America, the issuer of his Visa prepaid debit card. The bank kept him on hold for two hours, during which time he contemplated the impossibly bleak financial future that might await him. He also felt a stab of fear that he had saddled all his unborn grandchildren — and their grandchildren — with a lifetime of debt. “Down the generational line, nobody would have any money.

Here’s a picture of the bill:

In a statement, Visa said the rogue charges affected “fewer than 13,000 prepaid transactions” and resulted from a “temporary programming error at Visa Debit Processing Services … [which] caused some transactions to be inaccurately posted to a small number of Visa prepaid accounts.”

The company assured customers that the problem has been fixed and that all falsely issued fees have been voided. “Erroneous postings have been removed … this incident had no financial impact on Visa prepaid cardholders.”

Moral of the story. Check your bill carefully, I suppose. What do you think?



Friday, July 24, 2009

Indian BPO


The Indian BPO industry is at an interesting juncture of its history. After recording mind-boggling growth of nearly 37 per cent YoY for the last six years, the sector is faced with a dynamic and volatile global scenario, which is throwing up significant challenges. As the markets, where the industry predominantly plays are changing, and as customer needs are altering, the BPO industry needs to reinvent itself in order to sustain its global leadership.

Clearly, the going has been good so far. BPO industry revenues have risen to USD 14.7 billion in 2009, up from USD 1.6 billion in 2002, making it the fastest growing among all other Indian industries and giving it a 51 per cent share of the global outsourced industry.

At the same time, the debilitating impact of the economic slowdown sweeping across the world cannot be ignored by the BPO industry which predominantly relies on exports.

Matters are made worse by the fact that the Indian BPO industry banks significantly on the US market (with 59 per cent of the sector’s revenues being realised from this geography) as well as the Banking, Financial Services and Insurance (BFSI) vertical (which accounts for 50 per cent of BPO exports), as both these areas have been massively hit by the economic slowdown.

The current crisis has also led to a complete change in the way global customers are now approaching outsourcing. A recent NASSCOM-Everest Research Report shows that the outsourcing needs of buyers are changing with companies focusing on value drivers (lower prices, smaller-sized projects, savings and speedy implementation); minimising risks; re-evaluating the sourcing model (re-thinking captive versus supplier mix, evolving risk-reward relationships with vendors and opting for outcome-based pricing) and examining whether they ought to outsource work currently done in-house owning to sentiments on lay-offs.