She wants to wish adequate textiles such as Corey's workstation.



is \n"
" prohibited by law and will result in prosecution. \n";

SISS sincerely hopes noone was positioned to monitor this Internet
traffic, because they would have picked up the full transfer.

*******************************************************************************
*******************************************************************************
*******************************************************************************

There are plenty of alternatives to

a) sending our proprietary code over the unprotected Internet
b) disclosing our code to a third party

The answer to a) is: don't do it. Get MD/SOO permission to use a courier.

The answer to b) is:

o Isolated the bug(s) to the smallest amount necessary to reproduce
the error. According to the previous email traffic between these
two people, there were two compile-time bugs. The programmer can
be faulted for not using two orders of magnitude fewer lines for
demonstrating the error. A small fragment of code can be emailed.

o If the problem is compile-time, email the relevant C/C++
preprocessor output snippet. The comments by the programmer in the
email transfer state THE CODE DOESN'T COMPILE ANYWAY.

o Have the vendor deliver a "debug" version of their product. That
would be a good use for email. Sun Microsystems does that with a
C++ product for us, their customer. Email the results back.

o Have the vendor visit to troubleshoot.

o Requested a login via SecureID and Salomon's netblazer, supporting
28.8 PPP (TCP/IP for windowing connectivity) for the vendor. Let
them transfer in any tools they need to troubleshoot.
Short-term access.

o If it is truly necessary to transfer a large amount of code, such as
Informix working to convert a large Sybase app, then take the time



.



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