I threw them out except for my senior year, Did the same with my college year books too. Occasionally regret it, but hadn’t looked at them in forever anyway.
Please clean up your piecharts. I have a suggestion for the shade of green you should use; your green looks too much like your yellow. Look to your left. That is a terrific green.
I don’t know if it is because I have a Mac, not a PC, but there is one slice of the pie that always says 100% and the rest say 0%. Not only an eyesore, the chart isn’t even correct.
Kermie, it’s not your Mac. My home office has several PC’s and all reflect the same problem. I’ve sent so many emails to them and I actually got one response about a month ago - they were working the problem, they said.
The color [green] resolution and disparity in the quantitative values for the chart are either software problems or the fall-out of trying to customize the software. I’ve often suspected that the website was a patchwork build [meaning that several people took a stab at developing it with the end results being BandAids instead of needed surgery]. You would think that someone from the staff would look at the display from a computer not plugged directly into their server.
Unfortunately, this kind of problem sends the message "We don’t care." I just find it hard to believe that none of the women whose names and faces are in the header could not have noticed this.
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Kermie, you ARE a lovely shade of green.
And wowowow - a better idea - remove the pie chart altogether. Annoying. So annoying.
Getting a little long in the tooth? Maybe you failed the test.
I’m with ya Kermie, says 100% on my Mac also, but even funnier, the green on my pie chart is THE SAME color as your picture …. go figure !
There are SOOOO many other ways to show a graph, why a pie ???
Kermie, it’s not your Mac. My home office has several PC’s and all reflect the same problem. I’ve sent so many emails to them and I actually got one response about a month ago - they were working the problem, they said.
The color [green] resolution and disparity in the quantitative values for the chart are either software problems or the fall-out of trying to customize the software. I’ve often suspected that the website was a patchwork build [meaning that several people took a stab at developing it with the end results being BandAids instead of needed surgery]. You would think that someone from the staff would look at the display from a computer not plugged directly into their server.
Unfortunately, this kind of problem sends the message "We don’t care." I just find it hard to believe that none of the women whose names and faces are in the header could not have noticed this.