Lloyds Bank Unpredictable Errors?

Lloyds Bank IT ‘glitch’

A quote from the above: Modern banking methods mean we can now perform a variety of tasks on our phones in a matter of seconds, and almost anywhere,” said Dame Meg.

“What this incident brings into focus is the fact that there is a trade-off.”

She said interacting with banks online more means consumers “place our faith
in technology which can suffer unpredictable errors” – adding it was important this was made clear to customers.

I take particular exception to the description ‘unpredictable errors’. These errors are predictable, and are the result of sloppy design and implementation of the facilities provided. As such, the bank should be prosecuted for their illegal display of private information to those other than the rightful person.

Instead a sloppy wringing of hands, and piddling amounts of ‘goodwill payments’ are trotted out. Put this alongside all of the branch closures and what are customers left with? If Nationwide is any example for online help,the banking systems is making a rapid descent into complete chaos.
It is impossible to ‘chat’ with a real person. Instead a ‘bot’ is thrust at you, and is about as capable of dealing with your problem as a wooden puppet. Where I was dragged up, a ‘bot’ is another name for an arse – rather apt I thought, capable of one task only, that of expelling excrement.

There is one common factor driving this nonsense – money. Let’s see how many tasks we can derogate to save cash. How many folks we can get rid of. Skip testing our systems, let the users find the faults for us.

The Treasury Select Committee need some informed members on it, or consultants that know what is taking place. Philosophy, Politics and Economics, plus a spat as a journalist does not qualify a person to make remarks on the effects of sloppy software design and implementation.
Having said that, I agree that customers should be warned about what they are using. Can I suggest ‘This Application May Seriously Damage Your Confidence In Online Banking.‘ I had in mind a more pithy quote, but will leave that for another day.

BBC – Internet failure that didn’t really happen

Once again the BBC’s ‘Timely, trusted tech news‘ is neither timely, nor can be trusted.
Yup. The Y2K ‘failure’ didn’t happen on the scale predicted Thomas Germain, so why even mention it?
The reason it didn’t happen, was because tens of thousands of software engineers such as myself, fixed code, so that it wouldn’t happen – something the BBC article studiously leaves out. That some companies, and indeed some authorities ignored what they had been told accounted for several failures.
Apparently Thomas regards train delays and misprinted jury summons as ‘trivial’ – that is only his point of view.

Wickipedia gives a reasonably accurate account of the reason why remediation was required. Year 2000 Problem
It also lists a considerable number of ‘falures’ where the problem hadn’t been fixed. An example:
In New York, a video store accidentally generated a $91,250 late fee because the store computer determined a tape rental was 100 years overdue.’ – It doesn’t mention whether the tape renter had a heart attack when he was given the bill.
The BBC article: Internet Outages

Microsoft To End Support for Windows 10

Microsoft vai terminar suporte ao Windows 10

Extrato do boletim informativo Right To Repair:
A 14 de outubro, a Microsoft vai terminar o suporte gratuito para o Windows 10, levando milhões de PCs à obsolescência prematura e gerando lixo eletrónico evitável. Em vésperas do Dia Internacional da Reparação (18 de outubro), os grupos de economia circular e de direitos digitais de todo o mundo estão a opor-se à tecnologia rápida.

Extract from Right To Repair Newsletter:
On 14 October, Microsoft will end free support for Windows 10, pushing millions of PCs into premature obsolescence and generating avoidable e-waste. Ahead of International Repair Day (18 October), circular economy and digital rights groups worldwide are pushing back against fast tech.

Leia o comunicado de imprensa – Read the Press Release

Arduino IDE v2 Install on Windows 10 ‘Unconfirmed Download’ Problem Solved

Hi, I wanted to upgrade my old v1.18.9 IDE on Windows 10, and downloaded the V2 IDE from Arduino site.
Got a file name unconfirmed_download_blah.
No help whatsoever from Microsoft community. Une suggestion was ‘select ‘properties’ on file and uncheck the unblock box’
No such animal. I plugged an NTFS drive in my pi400, and downloaded the file, after an initial name of ‘unconfirmed-download_blah’ it morphed into an ‘exe’ file.
Transferred drive onto the Win10 machine and installed IDE no problem.

A digression (somewhat)
I have to admit, the win10 machine (AMD board) still works well (apart from the sloooow speed).
But I can now proceed to try out boards that can’t be developed using raspberry pi, who have abandoned dev of the latest family of Arduino boards altogether.

One pi400 has recently ‘bit the dust’ and the Raspbian OS is now a disaster, also including the 64-bit ‘Wayland’ rubbish.
Two Apples I bought in 2012 still work well, if a little slowly, so my next machine will be a new Apple.