Yeah, I do understand that it is experimental, but unfortunately the VA is very..... very slow to accept new treatments well after they are released to the general public. I have been hospitalized there for depression a few times (in fact I have to report there on Monday), so they are well aware of my conditions. I do appreciate your advice though.
That's great that you have a wonderful job that provides affordable insurance. I can't afford insurance and even if I could, the inseurance available to me won't cover my pre-existing conditions. By the way, I'm a tax payer too.
I'd love to try this. Unfortunately I'm an American and don't have health insurance. I'm sure the VA (my only "provider") probably won't get it for a long time.
I must be taking this out of context or some comments because this is a ridiculous statement. Temp workers ALWAYS make far less than full-time employees. I've worked quite a few temp jobs, since that's the direction this stupid fucking country is going, and I've always made less money than full-time equivalents while getting no benefits, no time off, and on top of that I get treated like a second class worker at some places *cough*nintendo,snapon,xerox*cough*.
I've been at....... uh, a large search engine company.... as a temp, for 1.5 years now. I've gotten no raise, I can't afford to buy into their shitty health insurance, and I make maybe 20k a year. The part of the country I live in now is very expensive to live (coming from Wisconsin). If I don't get my paycheck each week, I'm completely screwed.
I'm bipolar. No one will insure me and even if they will, it's laughably expensive. As always, no one will cover my medications for at least a year for some odd reason. At least the VA helps me out a little bit but anyone who has worked with the VA knows that it is a hassle (to say the least). When you make $23,000 a year working as an indefinite temp worker at one of the biggest tech companies in the world, insurance is just not possible.
"when done properly" is the key phrase there. Flying is HIGHLY regulated by the government. For one, you need a medical certificate to fly which needs to be updated every few years (depending on what class it is). Also, you need a certified AP mechanic to sign off on your aircraft. With a car, your drunk neighbor can basically build a car for you, and as long as you acquired a driver's license.... even 50 years ago.... you can drive it. As long as you are 18 (in Wisconsin at least), you don't even need a driver's education course. All you need to do is pass the test, which is ridiculously easy, and you get a license for the rest of your life.
Now, I have flown in a few aircraft that were slightly "questionable", but they were definitely airworthy. It is a bit scary pulling out the throttle and having the knob immediately pop off hehe. Also going into the clouds for the first time and having your VOR about 15 degrees off (I think I got a few more gray hairs on that one). My point is that the reason why flying is so safe is because it is extremely regulated. If everyone's car went through the same maintenance procedure as a Cessna 150 built in the mid 50s, then we would have almost no broken down cars on the highway. If the drivers were put through the same sort of training as pilots, we would have far fewer accidents.
I can barely understand how some people are allowed to drive vehicles on a 2D plane. I don't even have my certificate, but I've had two near misses in a Cessna 172 because one pilot, not announcing his intentions on the radio at a small airport, decided to fly in at about 500 feet and cut me off in the pattern on my final; and another helicopter pilot who flew about 50 feet under me just as I took off. Both times I was flying alone and as a student. It was absolutely terrifying. There is no possible way that any of this technology will be standard. If people can't drive cars, they sure as hell can't fly.
I think you are right here. I was a full-time EMT and a volunteer firefighter. EVERY fire district throughout the nation is different. At my fire station, we were on call 24 hours a day and were only required to show up if we could, since we were volunteers.
As an EMT, when I went home that pager was turned off. I just spent the whole goddamn day seeing nasty shit, and they can go to hell if they were to require us to be on call. We were already extremely overworked and I highly doubt the union would allow it.
Basically - At the station = "On-call." At home = "Go to hell, you have guys at the station."
"When they were no longer able to shape demand, then they failed because they were unprepared for what people actually wanted to buy."
That is exactly what the person who you were replying to was trying to prove. They failed because the customers didn't want what they were trying to sell.
I think that the the person who you replied to has a different type of mindset; one which is not too uncommon. If they had to work so hard for something, then it should not be handed so easily to those who don't put in nearly amount of effort. What was once difficult becomes easy for the newcomers due to the changes in the game. It basically boils down to a matter of pride.
The only thing I can compare this to is the Marine Corps. I was punched, kicked, tackled, thrown, slammed on a table repeatedly, forced to drink water until everyone in the platoon puked, etc... not to mention the mental abuse. I've never been punched in the face until I joined the Marine Corps. BTW, I joined in 2002 (I don't care if you believe or not, that shit still happens).
It would upset me if someone is handed that Eagle, Globe, and Anchor for doing anything less.
It is a much more... less PC... way of thinking. It has more to do with pride, and "I had to go through this bullshit in order to acquire whatever, so you should have to do the same.... blah blah blah."
I'm not saying that you are wrong, I'm just trying to point out a possible explanation to why people might get upset when someone who does far less work achieves something much easier than the work that they put into it. I'm sure many people could relate to this in many different situations. (I don't play WoW btw).
I am in the same position as the OP. I'm not able to afford college (even community college) anymore, but was just recently in school up until a few weeks ago. I would have loved to have some sort of computer club, or at the very least an IT organization available. Unfortunately, they didn't have any such thing at my "technical school", and the only way to get one would be to start my own. That could be one option, but as it was for me, might be way more than you could handle. I haven't looked in a few months, but I was not able to find any sort of local computer club that is designed for beginning programmers to help mentor, etc. Surprisingly, my school (and where I live) is about 5 miles from the Microsoft campus. Maybe I didn't look hard enough, but I couldn't find anything that wasn't an internship or didn't involve one of the large universities around here. Like the previous advice given, I figure the best way is to join some sort of open source project. Good luck!
I'm not sure if this is a recent change, but I use T-Mobile in the US and am able to send text messages up to 1000 characters. I confirmed this a few days ago by texting my wife (also uses T-Mobile). I used all 1000 characters and she received the entire text in one message. I don't remember being able to send such large messages in the past, so perhaps this is somewhat new.
SO be it. Give them what they want. Take down all music related content everywhere that isn't on their own sites. That means: Discussion boards about their music, Fan sites about their music, album reviews, links to amazon, etc. All of it.
Boycott these people up the wazoo... and just to make it fun... pick on someone specific to make and example of them.
What will there be to boycott then? Nothing...
I agree with you. Those unfortunate fools don't realize what they are doing to themselves.
Yes, most people buy cars and houses with cash. Are you a drug dealer?
Yeah, I do understand that it is experimental, but unfortunately the VA is very..... very slow to accept new treatments well after they are released to the general public. I have been hospitalized there for depression a few times (in fact I have to report there on Monday), so they are well aware of my conditions. I do appreciate your advice though.
That's great that you have a wonderful job that provides affordable insurance. I can't afford insurance and even if I could, the inseurance available to me won't cover my pre-existing conditions. By the way, I'm a tax payer too.
I'd love to try this. Unfortunately I'm an American and don't have health insurance. I'm sure the VA (my only "provider") probably won't get it for a long time.
I must be taking this out of context or some comments because this is a ridiculous statement. Temp workers ALWAYS make far less than full-time employees. I've worked quite a few temp jobs, since that's the direction this stupid fucking country is going, and I've always made less money than full-time equivalents while getting no benefits, no time off, and on top of that I get treated like a second class worker at some places *cough*nintendo,snapon,xerox*cough*.
I've been at....... uh, a large search engine company.... as a temp, for 1.5 years now. I've gotten no raise, I can't afford to buy into their shitty health insurance, and I make maybe 20k a year. The part of the country I live in now is very expensive to live (coming from Wisconsin). If I don't get my paycheck each week, I'm completely screwed.
That is my experience as a temp. I hate life.
I'm bipolar. No one will insure me and even if they will, it's laughably expensive. As always, no one will cover my medications for at least a year for some odd reason. At least the VA helps me out a little bit but anyone who has worked with the VA knows that it is a hassle (to say the least). When you make $23,000 a year working as an indefinite temp worker at one of the biggest tech companies in the world, insurance is just not possible.
Fuck the US "healthcare" system.
Any bets as to what the target will be stated as? Anonymity? The Internet in general?
They'll call it whatever they want, but the target will, again, be our freedom.
Map Maker has been around for years and has been active in over 180 countries since then. It just finally opened up to the USA.
norobotsexceptgoogles.txt
I really hope I'm not the only one that read "no robot sex 'cept google's".
Check out their new PR page on twitter! http://twitter.com/KennethColePR
Or spend the night in a hotel while awesome editing makes everything look extreme!
Well, they are going to find out some time. Unfortunately, it is normal.
Or screw the increment and jump straight to the Patriot Act.
Or Stephen King's IT, where they all have sex with an 11 year old girl. I just checked, they are still selling it.
"when done properly" is the key phrase there. Flying is HIGHLY regulated by the government. For one, you need a medical certificate to fly which needs to be updated every few years (depending on what class it is). Also, you need a certified AP mechanic to sign off on your aircraft. With a car, your drunk neighbor can basically build a car for you, and as long as you acquired a driver's license.... even 50 years ago.... you can drive it. As long as you are 18 (in Wisconsin at least), you don't even need a driver's education course. All you need to do is pass the test, which is ridiculously easy, and you get a license for the rest of your life. Now, I have flown in a few aircraft that were slightly "questionable", but they were definitely airworthy. It is a bit scary pulling out the throttle and having the knob immediately pop off hehe. Also going into the clouds for the first time and having your VOR about 15 degrees off (I think I got a few more gray hairs on that one). My point is that the reason why flying is so safe is because it is extremely regulated. If everyone's car went through the same maintenance procedure as a Cessna 150 built in the mid 50s, then we would have almost no broken down cars on the highway. If the drivers were put through the same sort of training as pilots, we would have far fewer accidents.
I can barely understand how some people are allowed to drive vehicles on a 2D plane. I don't even have my certificate, but I've had two near misses in a Cessna 172 because one pilot, not announcing his intentions on the radio at a small airport, decided to fly in at about 500 feet and cut me off in the pattern on my final; and another helicopter pilot who flew about 50 feet under me just as I took off. Both times I was flying alone and as a student. It was absolutely terrifying. There is no possible way that any of this technology will be standard. If people can't drive cars, they sure as hell can't fly.
I think you are right here. I was a full-time EMT and a volunteer firefighter. EVERY fire district throughout the nation is different. At my fire station, we were on call 24 hours a day and were only required to show up if we could, since we were volunteers.
As an EMT, when I went home that pager was turned off. I just spent the whole goddamn day seeing nasty shit, and they can go to hell if they were to require us to be on call. We were already extremely overworked and I highly doubt the union would allow it. Basically - At the station = "On-call." At home = "Go to hell, you have guys at the station."
"When they were no longer able to shape demand, then they failed because they were unprepared for what people actually wanted to buy." That is exactly what the person who you were replying to was trying to prove. They failed because the customers didn't want what they were trying to sell.
You are very much missing the point. People take pride in the smallest of things. It is all relative. I only used the Marines as an example.
I think that the the person who you replied to has a different type of mindset; one which is not too uncommon. If they had to work so hard for something, then it should not be handed so easily to those who don't put in nearly amount of effort. What was once difficult becomes easy for the newcomers due to the changes in the game. It basically boils down to a matter of pride.
The only thing I can compare this to is the Marine Corps. I was punched, kicked, tackled, thrown, slammed on a table repeatedly, forced to drink water until everyone in the platoon puked, etc... not to mention the mental abuse. I've never been punched in the face until I joined the Marine Corps. BTW, I joined in 2002 (I don't care if you believe or not, that shit still happens).
It would upset me if someone is handed that Eagle, Globe, and Anchor for doing anything less.
It is a much more... less PC... way of thinking. It has more to do with pride, and "I had to go through this bullshit in order to acquire whatever, so you should have to do the same.... blah blah blah."
I'm not saying that you are wrong, I'm just trying to point out a possible explanation to why people might get upset when someone who does far less work achieves something much easier than the work that they put into it. I'm sure many people could relate to this in many different situations. (I don't play WoW btw).
I am in the same position as the OP. I'm not able to afford college (even community college) anymore, but was just recently in school up until a few weeks ago. I would have loved to have some sort of computer club, or at the very least an IT organization available. Unfortunately, they didn't have any such thing at my "technical school", and the only way to get one would be to start my own. That could be one option, but as it was for me, might be way more than you could handle. I haven't looked in a few months, but I was not able to find any sort of local computer club that is designed for beginning programmers to help mentor, etc. Surprisingly, my school (and where I live) is about 5 miles from the Microsoft campus. Maybe I didn't look hard enough, but I couldn't find anything that wasn't an internship or didn't involve one of the large universities around here. Like the previous advice given, I figure the best way is to join some sort of open source project. Good luck!
I'm not sure if this is a recent change, but I use T-Mobile in the US and am able to send text messages up to 1000 characters. I confirmed this a few days ago by texting my wife (also uses T-Mobile). I used all 1000 characters and she received the entire text in one message. I don't remember being able to send such large messages in the past, so perhaps this is somewhat new.
Ironically, people install NoScript for the specific reason of not trusting others on the internet.
What will there be to boycott then? Nothing...
I agree with you. Those unfortunate fools don't realize what they are doing to themselves.
How the hell did this woman's DNA get on ALL of these cotton swabs?