Carrier Transicold: Difference between revisions

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I actually worked for Carrier twice: once as a full-time contractor for about two years, and the other on a more project-oriented basis a few years later.
I actually worked for Carrier twice: once as a full-time contractor for about two years, and the other on a more project-oriented basis a few years later.
 
==Part 1 (1999-2001)==
One early project was [[wikipedia:Year 2000 problem|y2k]] remediation; this project was completed over several months, quietly and on schedule, by basically two people (Ed and myself), with some help from the PHP-11 support people in Syracuse. There were no unfortunate date-related incidents in any of the software within our purview.
The first project I worked on at Carrier was the "Shipping Calendar" application; I was heavily involved in the design and documentation phases, and wrote most of the code.
[[File:1999-03-18.Carrier remediation.scan 22.adj.jpg|thumb|the checklist I created and used for ensuring that all Access applications were properly remediated, filled out for the "Order Entry" application (with additional notes)]]
The major project which occupied the majority of my time there was [[wikipedia:Year 2000 problem|y2k]] remediation; this project was completed over several months, quietly and on schedule, by basically two people (Ed and myself), with some help from the PHP-11 support people in Syracuse. There were no unfortunate date-related incidents in any of the software within our purview.


[[ManMan|Another project]] which emerged from the y2k remediation involved bridging Windows-based database software (upon which front-office operations were increasingly dependent) with the older DEC PDP-11 business system running "ManMan"; this too was completed in short order. It was still in use during my second (brief) stint at Carrier a couple of years later.
[[ManMan|Another project]] which emerged from the y2k remediation involved bridging Windows-based database software (upon which front-office operations were increasingly dependent) with the older DEC PDP-11 business system running "ManMan"; this too was completed in short order. It was still in use during my second (brief) stint at Carrier a couple of years later.


My work there only came to an end when upper management abruptly issued a directive to terminate all contractors, throughout the company, without warning. My supervisor (Ed) was not happy with this. Circumstantial evidence points to the likelihood that they were falling short on their quarterly projections, and needed to quickly cut some costs (even at the risk of long-term health) in order to look good for the stockholders.
My work there only came to an end when upper management abruptly issued a directive to terminate all contractors, throughout the company, without warning. My supervisor (Ed) was not happy with this. Circumstantial evidence points to the likelihood that they were falling short on their quarterly projections, and needed to quickly cut some costs (even at the risk of long-term health) in order to look good for the stockholders.
===work done===
* co-designed/wrote shipping calendar application (VB6) (written in 1999, still in use as of 2003)
* co-designed/co-wrote client end (VB6/Windows) of system for exchanging data between [[ManMan|mainframe (DEC PDP-11) business system]] on the server side and MS Access /[[wikipedia:Microsoft SQL Server|SQL Server]] on the server side – a critical business system; written in 2000-1 and still in use as of 2003
* co-designed/wrote application (VB6) for tracking product assembly as components travel down the various assembly lines
* provided user support for all written applications as well as other MS Access applications supported by the IT department
===specs===
* '''dates''': late November or early December 1998 - 2001-06-13<ref name=gtimeline />
==Part 2 (2003)==
This itself came in two parts. First, I handled the IT help desk on site for a week so Ed could take a long-needed vacation. After that, I did a little VB work remotely (from Durham) designing a new subsystem for (I think) the [[ManMan]] queue-handler.


For the second time, upper management put the kibosh on this work by terminating all contractors without notice.
===work done===
* substituted on-site for technical supervisor for most of a week
* improved some existing applications (VB6, MS SQL Server 2000) and assisted with design of some new ones, working off-site much of the time
===specs===
* '''dates''': on-site around the week of 2003-06-22<ref name=gtimeline />; working from home for some time after that
==etc.==
* For more general information about Carrier, see {{l/htyp}}
* For more general information about Carrier, see {{l/htyp}}
==Footnotes==
<references>
<ref name=gtimeline>{{l/htw|Griever/Detailed_Timeline}} on the HypertWiki</ref>
</references>

Latest revision as of 00:51, 28 March 2020

I actually worked for Carrier twice: once as a full-time contractor for about two years, and the other on a more project-oriented basis a few years later.

Part 1 (1999-2001)

The first project I worked on at Carrier was the "Shipping Calendar" application; I was heavily involved in the design and documentation phases, and wrote most of the code.

the checklist I created and used for ensuring that all Access applications were properly remediated, filled out for the "Order Entry" application (with additional notes)

The major project which occupied the majority of my time there was y2k remediation; this project was completed over several months, quietly and on schedule, by basically two people (Ed and myself), with some help from the PHP-11 support people in Syracuse. There were no unfortunate date-related incidents in any of the software within our purview.

Another project which emerged from the y2k remediation involved bridging Windows-based database software (upon which front-office operations were increasingly dependent) with the older DEC PDP-11 business system running "ManMan"; this too was completed in short order. It was still in use during my second (brief) stint at Carrier a couple of years later.

My work there only came to an end when upper management abruptly issued a directive to terminate all contractors, throughout the company, without warning. My supervisor (Ed) was not happy with this. Circumstantial evidence points to the likelihood that they were falling short on their quarterly projections, and needed to quickly cut some costs (even at the risk of long-term health) in order to look good for the stockholders.

work done

  • co-designed/wrote shipping calendar application (VB6) (written in 1999, still in use as of 2003)
  • co-designed/co-wrote client end (VB6/Windows) of system for exchanging data between mainframe (DEC PDP-11) business system on the server side and MS Access /SQL Server on the server side – a critical business system; written in 2000-1 and still in use as of 2003
  • co-designed/wrote application (VB6) for tracking product assembly as components travel down the various assembly lines
  • provided user support for all written applications as well as other MS Access applications supported by the IT department

specs

  • dates: late November or early December 1998 - 2001-06-13[1]

Part 2 (2003)

This itself came in two parts. First, I handled the IT help desk on site for a week so Ed could take a long-needed vacation. After that, I did a little VB work remotely (from Durham) designing a new subsystem for (I think) the ManMan queue-handler.

For the second time, upper management put the kibosh on this work by terminating all contractors without notice.

work done

  • substituted on-site for technical supervisor for most of a week
  • improved some existing applications (VB6, MS SQL Server 2000) and assisted with design of some new ones, working off-site much of the time

specs

  • dates: on-site around the week of 2003-06-22[1]; working from home for some time after that

etc.

  • For more general information about Carrier, see HTYP

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Griever/Detailed_Timeline on the HypertWiki