They dabble. Sometimes law, sometimes accounting. Hell, they even have a Wikipedia page.I think they're actually a law firm. They were also mentioned in this thread a few hundred pages back. Further proof that everything new is old, again.![]()

They dabble. Sometimes law, sometimes accounting. Hell, they even have a Wikipedia page.I think they're actually a law firm. They were also mentioned in this thread a few hundred pages back. Further proof that everything new is old, again.![]()
To be fair to Terry McIntosh, Ares Digital did integrate all that data into one system. He's talking about the source spreadsheets, exported from the crowdfunding platforms. Now that he's gone, all the updated and integrated data went with him, apparently, meaning Axanar's now starting from scratch.Whether or not Mr. McIntosh is a competent IT guy is not something I wish to debate, but from reading the above I would have to say he appears to be totally inexperienced with database management. What I know about it could fill a thimble, but I do know that what he describes confirms the military adage "Piss Poor Planning Prevents Proper Performance". Eight separate spreadsheets? He shouldn't have been using spreadsheets to begin with. Just buy the full business/professional Microsoft Office package that includes Access. Use the right tool for the job from the start and you won't have problems down the road.
I thought it was spelled CheathamRumor has it that they did have a CPA firm: Dewey, Cheatum & Howe
EDIT: I'm sorry, it's an old joke and I winced upon rereading it.
Well, yeah. But he was replaced by his cousin Riley CheatumI thought it was spelled Cheatham![]()
And there he is in the wrong. The data was not his. When he left the project, he had a moral, ethical, and probably legal responsibility to leave the database behind.Now that he's gone, all the updated and integrated data went with him, apparently, meaning Axanar's now starting from scratch.
I will now give you a crash course in the data geekery that is database joins.
I would imagine that the source data is still intact - just as he found it, IOW a messAnd the he is in the wrong. The data was not his. When he left the project, he had a moral, ethical, and probably legal responsibility to leave the database behind.
What a fustercluck (with credit Jespah of courseTerry explains the complexity in the CBS Paramount v. Axanar FB page:
There are eight or so spreadsheets that I can remember off of the top of my head -- I've deleted them from my files, since I have no reason to keep them after departing the production -- and that isn't counting live data from things like retro packages and the donor store which evolve over time organically.
On top of that there are two years of email and Facebook messages from donors with updates to their info that were manually processed (hundreds of them), such as email and shipping address changes, that have to be factored in, too.
And, as the cherry on top, the original spreadsheets are a mess as they were provided to the production from Kickstarter, Indiegogo, and the bane of my past which is the BackerKit spreadsheet -- the latter is a cluster fuck of galactic proportions for technical reasons.
Then, as a P.S., there is a spreadsheet for things like installment plans from the Indiegogo.
So... maybe 20 different data sources and each one has its own unique challenges to not only import in to a database intact, but then it all has to be sanitized, verified as correct individually, and then setup in tables so that each source can be searched against using geeky methods called "joins" which allow say a table of Indiegogo data to be cross sorted with something like PayPal donations and/or the retro packages.
Please believe me when I say that using something basic like a mail merge would be a proper nightmare for everyone... especially the donors... and that was when the data was fresh. After two years... I don't envy their new geek.
Yes and no. When he left, he was required to delete any copies he had in his personal possession, but he was obligated to leave a copy with the organization.the actual sorted data itself should have been (and probably was) deleted
They do it right????I can't help but wonder... how do the thousands of other people doing crowdfunding manage their perks? I have a hard time believing there's anything uniquely complex about Axanar, fustercluckery aside.
I can't help but wonder... how do the thousands of other people doing crowdfunding manage their perks? I have a hard time believing there's anything uniquely complex about Axanar, fustercluckery aside.
And it's a flustered duck, to boot."If it looks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it probably is a duck"
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