Yes, there is. There's a hurry, Xander. I'm dying...I may have as few as fifty years left.

Anya ,'Same Time, Same Place'


Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?  

Got a question about technology? Ask it here. Discussion of hardware, software, TiVos, multi-region DVDs, Windows, Macs, LINUX, hand-helds, iPods, anything tech related. Better than any helpdesk!


tommyrot - May 05, 2006 11:11:26 am PDT #8025 of 10003
Sir, it's not an offence to let your cat eat your bacon. Okay? And we don't arrest cats, I'm very sorry.

Our client needs a web thingie:

Let's say we have a table on MS SQL Server. They want to give users the ability to

  • Select various fields from the table
  • Select fields to sort the table on
  • Put "filter" criteria on various fields
  • And then print a report based on the table and their above selections.

They don't have the budget for us to develope this from scratch, so I'm wondering if there's any preexisting product out there that could do all this....

All their users are on IE6, with the .Net framework installed as well.


Typo Boy - May 05, 2006 2:28:52 pm PDT #8026 of 10003
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

This sounds like something a standard report writer or query builder could do. The reporting part of this sounds simple enough that a query tool rather than a reporting one might be the best bets.

Name brand in reporting software is Crystal Reports and that awful MS-SQL thing. Name brand in query - I really don't remember, but Stonefield is one know name.

Because you want full web integration you will have to shop very carefully - since you don't just to run the reports on the web, but have people design their queries completely from scratch on the web. If that were not a requirement, if you would not mind giving each user a small reporting client program over and above their browser, and everyone was on the same LAN you could do this really simply and cheaply. But even with your requirements you can probably find something. You just need a simple graphical query tool or Query by Example query tool with full web integration.


Typo Boy - May 05, 2006 2:36:27 pm PDT #8027 of 10003
Calli: My people have a saying. A man who trusts can never be betrayed, only mistaken.Avon: Life expectancy among your people must be extremely short.

A quick google under "web database query tool" included this result [link]

which is a free PHP browser based querying interface.


Spidra Webster - May 06, 2006 7:31:02 pm PDT #8028 of 10003
I wish I could just go somewhere to get flensed but none of the whaling ships near me take Medicare.

Fay - May 06, 2006 11:56:48 pm PDT #8029 of 10003
"Fuck Western ideologically-motivated gender identification!" Sulu gasped, and came.

Hey there, technophiles!

So I downloaded the Videora (iirc) iPod thingummy onto my laptop, and have successfully reformated 4 vids so that I can put them onto my iPod. This is a source of great joy.

However, for some reason I'm not able to reformat 6 or 7 other vids. And I'm not quite sure why that would be. The 4 that would reformat are not all the same flavour of file, so it's not just that, I think.

Any ideas?


Gris - May 07, 2006 3:58:38 am PDT #8030 of 10003
Hey. New board.

Can you tell us what flavors of file would and wouldn't convert?

A brief glance at the webforums tells me I might have some ideas - the application Videora uses to actually do the conversion is a program called ffmpeg that i'm familiar with. For example, I know ffmpeg can't handle recent WMV files.

ETA: [link] <-- the FAQ for Videora. Suggests installing a scripting program called AVISynth to make certain types of files work. Tells you how to use it on the next question. Try that?

ETA2: If you can't make this guy work, there seem to be a couple of pay solutions out there that you can download trials of. M2Convert seems like a promising one. It's $30.


Amy - May 07, 2006 10:11:34 am PDT #8031 of 10003
Because books.

Help!

I have an old IBM ThinkPad that was my dad's. I only ever use it plugged in because the battery's bad, and I just used it yesterday. Shut it down properly, unplugged it, put it away. Just plugged it and turned it on and I'm getting a black screen with the message:

ERROR 0271: Check date and time settings Press F1 to Setup

When I do that, though, I don't where to go from there. And I have no idea why is this happening. Any hints?


NoiseDesign - May 07, 2006 10:17:03 am PDT #8032 of 10003
Our wings are not tired

Sounds like the battery on the motherboard is mostly dead. What model of ThinkPad is it? Basically all motherboards have a small battery on them that keeps thinks like clock and BIOS settings in tact.


Amy - May 07, 2006 10:23:33 am PDT #8033 of 10003
Because books.

Well, Stephen (wisely, I guess) decided I should do what it asked, so we input the date and time again and now it's on. Weird.

It's pretty old, as computers go, I guess. It's a T23. I have noticed in the past that when I tried to let it run on battery it would lose time.


NoiseDesign - May 07, 2006 10:41:00 am PDT #8034 of 10003
Our wings are not tired

Found the part that you need to replace the CMOS battery on that laptop, but it doesn't look like a non-technical swap. There are two leads you'd need to desolder from the motherboard and solder the two new leads into place.