Hi,
I'm looking for some help. I'm a project manager at a large investment bank with offices in London and New York.
My development team has just finished developing a new payment system for clients to receive their dividends.
You'll laugh at this, but the one part of the solution we overlooked was a mechanism to schedule the payments to run once per day.
For security reasons, we're not able to use the standard Windows task scheduler to do this so our architect has advised me that a custom 'Windows service' can be used. None of the developers have experience in this area so I decided to hire a specialist contractor on a short term basis to deliver the remaining part. As the payments and interface code is already complete and just needs to be scheduled, this should be a relatively small and simple piece of work. Well... that's what I was led to believe during his interview anyway.
Since the specialist arrived he's spent half of his time either drinking coffee, picking his nose or talking to himself. The rest of the time he's doing what looks like debugging 5 lines of code, then bashing his fists on the table when it doesn't work. Throughout this he's had his own laptop on the same web page that look like 'forums'. I've asked what it is he's doing several times, but he quickly closes his browser window, and tells me that he's onto Microsoft Support who've found an enormous 'bug' in Windows. Something about 'time action' apparently. Unfortunately for him I've been in this business for too long to fall for such rubbish from contractors.
I'm so annoyed. The agency led me to believe this guy was the industry go-to windows service and C# expert, but that's obviously turned out to be agency bulltulip,....again! To be fair we usually spend more on contractor day rates than this one, so I guess you get what you pay for.
As we're now initiating the termination of contract with the agency, does anyone on this forum want to finish the job?
Thanks
I'm looking for some help. I'm a project manager at a large investment bank with offices in London and New York.
My development team has just finished developing a new payment system for clients to receive their dividends.
You'll laugh at this, but the one part of the solution we overlooked was a mechanism to schedule the payments to run once per day.
For security reasons, we're not able to use the standard Windows task scheduler to do this so our architect has advised me that a custom 'Windows service' can be used. None of the developers have experience in this area so I decided to hire a specialist contractor on a short term basis to deliver the remaining part. As the payments and interface code is already complete and just needs to be scheduled, this should be a relatively small and simple piece of work. Well... that's what I was led to believe during his interview anyway.
Since the specialist arrived he's spent half of his time either drinking coffee, picking his nose or talking to himself. The rest of the time he's doing what looks like debugging 5 lines of code, then bashing his fists on the table when it doesn't work. Throughout this he's had his own laptop on the same web page that look like 'forums'. I've asked what it is he's doing several times, but he quickly closes his browser window, and tells me that he's onto Microsoft Support who've found an enormous 'bug' in Windows. Something about 'time action' apparently. Unfortunately for him I've been in this business for too long to fall for such rubbish from contractors.
I'm so annoyed. The agency led me to believe this guy was the industry go-to windows service and C# expert, but that's obviously turned out to be agency bulltulip,....again! To be fair we usually spend more on contractor day rates than this one, so I guess you get what you pay for.
As we're now initiating the termination of contract with the agency, does anyone on this forum want to finish the job?
Thanks
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