- Joined
- Jun 1, 2000
- Messages
- 5,637
You can always check out my online DVC point tracker at www.dvcplanner.net. While it can't tell you what is available, it WILL tell you easily what points costs/etc will be.
lisareniff said:With the push to sell DVC in Calif. they may need to increase their evening hours to satisfy the west coast owners. If I was a CA owner I would be quite upset that MS hours ended at 2:30pm (PST)
I'm in agreement with lllovell. I would be quite content with the ability to view my account, reservations, and availability of resorts.
jarestel said:Is your millions and millions of $$$ cost estimate based on doing a similar project somewhere? I'd be interested in knowing how you arrived at that figure.
You do know that MS is open on Thursday evenings, right?PeterPanFanWDW said:I have always been frustrated by MS hours. It never fails that I'm on some exchange over a 3-day holiday weekend, something is going wrong and there is no one out there to help me. I wouldn't mind paying a bit more to get some hours on the weekend. Or push the close time during the week to later -- even 8 pm would be helpful. I can't always call from work.
PPF
Beca said:But, even more than MS not staying open late, is the annoyance that when I need to book "day by day" (something I do frequently becuase of my BCV obsession/paranoia), it REALLY stinks to get up so early (but, not as much as it stinks to set my alarm for 3:45 AM for Cindy's meals).
sagwanamu said:I am a web application developer and database specialist and have been in the business for past a decade.
Think about it. Nowadays, it costs about 80K - 100K to hire a Junior developer (at least in my area) and that's just a salary (and database specialist cost a bit more). PLUS, new hardware, more bandwidth, more database (or more licenses), network specialist, security specialist, project manager, tech support personnels, maintenance, and office spaces and so on to name a few.
The costs add up quickly...
rkdahl said:Based on work I do in the IT field I would not expect a $1-3 million investment over several years to be out of line for a system such as this. I find it interesting to read threads like these and see the wide variety of opinions on IT development topics. People try to equate a spreadsheet tracking program with an online, dynamic, secure real time inventory management system. There is no comparison.
jarestel said:I would imagine most of the support people already exist to maintain the current system. That's the part I think most of us are overlooking... there is a system in place already that does exactly what it needs to do. As an experienced developer, are you thinking a whole new system needs to be designed from the ground up? I wouldn't imagine your company designs and implements a completely new code base for every project they decide to tackle, much less when it's just an update to the user interface. Again, I'm looking at this, not as a new system designed from the ground up, but as an enhancement to the current one.
Orginally posted by jarestel
I'm a software engineer with many years of software design and coding experience. I wasn't envisioning or proposing a "spreadsheet" program when I made my earlier comments, so you are wrong about the suppositions of this "people".
DizWacko said:1) Recent layoffs at Disney IT group - I read that they layed off a SIGNIFICANT portion of their IT staff, only a couple of months back. Not sure if it was outright downsizing or outsourcing...
crisi said:I've always understood that the DVC reservations system is a little antiquated - I get the feeling its eleven years old with only some minor enhancements during that time. Which means it probably isn't a good candidate to slap a web front end on with low development costs.
jarestel said:11 year old code isn't necessarily ready for the scrap heap. Assuming the original design and coding was done by professionals ( and not by a DVC/DVD manager's unemployed brother in law ) and they followed standard practices and coding conventions, it may actually be in rather good shape. Especially if not much has been done to it since. Generally, the enhancements and code maintenance are done by people who weren't involved in the original project, so the potential for "hacking" just to make it work increases. Which makes it more difficult ( and expensive ) for the next person who has to work on the code.
The code might indeed be a piece of a crap, though. Who really knows, right? In which case development costs would tend to be high. Of course the current 800 number probably costs the members easily 1 - 3 million a year also, not to mention the salaries and benefits of the CMs needed to answer the phones. So the current system is not exactly cheap. DVC doesn't care what it costs because they don't pay for it, but I would think the members would be extremely interested in an alternate system with the potential to save a few million a year in dues by being able to scale back the volume of calls to the 800 number.
crisi said:I wasn't saying that the code was crap (though it could be). More that the code probably was never written with requirements for web enabled customer access which will make web enabling the application more difficult.