I have flown Delta consistently several times a month for at least the last two years. Very few, maybe 3-5 total, were late arriving, and at least a couple of those times it was out of their hands.
I know someone who flew home on Monday. They left on Monday and got home on Monday. Shit happens sometimes, but this wasn't a catastrophe even for everyone that way affected.
Who plans to advocate for transit workers if not their union (that is made up of transit workers, by the way, not a separate entity)? Certainly not you.
The general public thinks public servants are really important when they're "not doing their job," but look for their support on any given day when they're just being treated unfairly and it's a big fuck you. Well, fuck you all back. How you treat the people that "work for you" says a lot about you.
Guess what: it's not all about you. This treatment of public employees really angers me, and it happens whenever public servants decide enough is enough. Do you think if you were working a job to be able to pay your bills, you'd be interested in hearing "shut up and get back to work, I have stuff to do?" or be thinking "I know I have to feed my family, but how will Steve get to work?! Nevermind!"
How this works with police officers and other essential folks is that there are rules to protect the employees because they, basically, can't walk off the job because they serve the public good. Same sometimes with transit workers. If you want people to be at work no matter what, there has to be something else that takes the place of the right to strike.
I don't know about your salary numbers and don't have the time to go into them, but they almost always take into account people who've been working there a very long time, and some that have specialized skills. I see teachers salary numbers and they almost never reflect the reality.
It also keeps you from crashing through the ceiling if the plane ends up making an unusual maneuver (even not in a crash). People have fractured vertebrae or probably worse that way.
You shouldn't have to "reinstall a few times" since 2011. That was finally the last straw for me. If you want Windows running fast, you seem to have to reinstall it about every 9 months.
6. Windows seems to need to reboot almost constantly and takes a long time to apply updates.
Has not been true since xp Service Pack 1.
Oh it most certainly is. I installed Windows XP SP3 on a laptop the other day and the updates took at least 2 hours to install. It's not a brand new laptop, but it's reasonably capable. It also needed many reboots, and the most annoying thing about it was that it was a multi-phase thing to install updates (eg. install 20 of them, reboot, install 130 of them, reboot, install 7 of them, reboot -- something like that). Which meant you couldn't just start it and walk away.
I've run across Windows installs of apps being so broken that you couldn't install or uninstall them without going to the registry. Really never so with Linux. You remove it with the package manager or rm and it's gone. No mystery voodoo junk somewhere else to worry about.
I have had it be a lot harder to install a printer in Windows than in Linux. Linux, I plugged it in, it was recognized, and that was that. Windows XP I had to go find the driver, get it to install, and it got cranky about being connected to USB before the driver was installed, etc.
Video games are a poor substitute for volunteer work, being active and outside (which is good for you), or spending time with other humans. Reading I suppose I'll give you.
TurboTax is such a major pain in the ass. It doesn't even work properly in a Windows XP VirtualBox and works pretty poorly in a Windows 7 VirtualBox. I didn't even try WINE this year.
This is not always true. Especially for older games, which is what I like. Worms Armageddon, for example, was a couple of minutes to get working on Linux with WINE. Windows 7 was a major hassle, and we looked for info for hours before we figured out what was going on. Worms World Party, for what we could figure out, couldn't be played at all on Windows anymore.
I have flown Delta consistently several times a month for at least the last two years. Very few, maybe 3-5 total, were late arriving, and at least a couple of those times it was out of their hands.
I know someone who flew home on Monday. They left on Monday and got home on Monday. Shit happens sometimes, but this wasn't a catastrophe even for everyone that way affected.
There are plenty of other dependencies (OpenSSL versions, Apache versions, Java versions), so it's even worse than that.
PS: I can't see what the hell you responded to -- it's not in the parent comment!
If you're not riding along in the left lane, you shouldn't be a problem.
Who plans to advocate for transit workers if not their union (that is made up of transit workers, by the way, not a separate entity)? Certainly not you.
The general public thinks public servants are really important when they're "not doing their job," but look for their support on any given day when they're just being treated unfairly and it's a big fuck you. Well, fuck you all back. How you treat the people that "work for you" says a lot about you.
Googling for 5 whole minutes is not research.
Guess what: it's not all about you. This treatment of public employees really angers me, and it happens whenever public servants decide enough is enough. Do you think if you were working a job to be able to pay your bills, you'd be interested in hearing "shut up and get back to work, I have stuff to do?" or be thinking "I know I have to feed my family, but how will Steve get to work?! Nevermind!"
How this works with police officers and other essential folks is that there are rules to protect the employees because they, basically, can't walk off the job because they serve the public good. Same sometimes with transit workers. If you want people to be at work no matter what, there has to be something else that takes the place of the right to strike.
I don't know about your salary numbers and don't have the time to go into them, but they almost always take into account people who've been working there a very long time, and some that have specialized skills. I see teachers salary numbers and they almost never reflect the reality.
Please get a job that isn't bitching about other people who have found a way to make a decent wage in this world.
Beyond all the rest of it, what kind of person sits around and thinks "the thing that really bugs me is that this guy has a job"?
The big problem is that those people may be in your way, or in the way of any number of other innocent people on that plane.
Seriously, in this country, how can you? It's down your throat every time you turn around.
Considering we're talking about evacuating a whole plane in 90 seconds, seconds matter.
It also keeps you from crashing through the ceiling if the plane ends up making an unusual maneuver (even not in a crash). People have fractured vertebrae or probably worse that way.
I installed a fresh copy with SP3 already in it and then did all of the updates to make it current.
Umm, yes it is. Red Hat 1.0 came out in 1994. Windows XP, OTOH, is still supported.
I'm pretty sure Linux consistently uses the memory it can for FS caching.
You shouldn't have to "reinstall a few times" since 2011. That was finally the last straw for me. If you want Windows running fast, you seem to have to reinstall it about every 9 months.
6. Windows seems to need to reboot almost constantly and takes a long time to apply updates.
Has not been true since xp Service Pack 1.
Oh it most certainly is. I installed Windows XP SP3 on a laptop the other day and the updates took at least 2 hours to install. It's not a brand new laptop, but it's reasonably capable. It also needed many reboots, and the most annoying thing about it was that it was a multi-phase thing to install updates (eg. install 20 of them, reboot, install 130 of them, reboot, install 7 of them, reboot -- something like that). Which meant you couldn't just start it and walk away.
What color laser doesn't work on Linux?
I've run across Windows installs of apps being so broken that you couldn't install or uninstall them without going to the registry. Really never so with Linux. You remove it with the package manager or rm and it's gone. No mystery voodoo junk somewhere else to worry about.
I have had it be a lot harder to install a printer in Windows than in Linux. Linux, I plugged it in, it was recognized, and that was that. Windows XP I had to go find the driver, get it to install, and it got cranky about being connected to USB before the driver was installed, etc.
Video games are a poor substitute for volunteer work, being active and outside (which is good for you), or spending time with other humans. Reading I suppose I'll give you.
TurboTax has a lot of weird Dot Net and other types of dependencies that seem to be part of the problem.
TurboTax is such a major pain in the ass. It doesn't even work properly in a Windows XP VirtualBox and works pretty poorly in a Windows 7 VirtualBox. I didn't even try WINE this year.
This is not always true. Especially for older games, which is what I like. Worms Armageddon, for example, was a couple of minutes to get working on Linux with WINE. Windows 7 was a major hassle, and we looked for info for hours before we figured out what was going on. Worms World Party, for what we could figure out, couldn't be played at all on Windows anymore.