Hi Brian,
I am going to try an uninstall/reinstall today. If that doesn't
work I'll try using another PC. I'll post my results.
As far as a bad taste in my mouth, it's a taste I don't enjoy and one
I'm not used to. LabVIEW is a programming language that still
amazes me everytime I use it to control a single relay or dozens of
motors and sensors. I even write a small utility to do my
taxes with it! I also make my living from it.
Thank you National Instruments!
And I've returned the favor by constantly using NI hardware in every
job I possibly can....many thousands of dollars worth over the years.
But this is not a bug nor is my contempt for the outcome overly
harsh. In this day and age, any serious computer user has a
firewall or he's going to eventually get burnt. When an
application wants to access the internet and I feel it shouldn't, I
block it. That aspect of MAX should have been tested before
release...many times. How on earth do I know it's trying to
access a database?
I don't like the idea of trying to explain to my customer that "there
must be a bug" in his PC or some other tall tale. And I find
myself making these little "excuses" more often lately; the
activation process fiasco (lots of fun if you don't have an internet
connection), the fact that LabVIEW now holds the World record for being
the slowest application to launch, and now MAX giving up the
ghost without even leaving a note to console the next of kin.
Like I said, there are those at NI that are working against LabVIEW. And their heads should roll.