While no fan of Obama, he is using the same yardstick that every other President was measured by in the last 15 or so years.
Yes, it is a lie, but it is a lie we agreed on as the standard. Changing the goalposts in the middle of the presidency for arguments sake is also disingenuous at best.
Anyone who live through the Carter recession, Regan boom, Bush 1 recession, Clinton boom, internet bust, Bush 2 boom/bust cycle, knows this one is fundamentally different. In part because the industrial age continues to fade, and the tech revolution continues to grow, while our measuring sticks don't change. (and in part because Obama's policies are objectively and rationally not working as well as he claimed they would) The whole process needs to be revamped with the increase in tech workers. The current system is based around factory and 40hr a week officer workers.
Adjustments need to be made, with clear indications of how the raw numbers differ, for: People who want to work a full time job but can't People who choose to work less than full time. An "overemployment" number to show workers who work full time, but report more than 40hrs per week. Those hours need to be part of the unemployment number as they directly add to the unemployment number if a company can avoid hiring more people by making workers put in more hours, overtime or salary. Self employed are not counted in the current numbers, they should be. Too many "independent contractors" are hidden in the numbers.
There are backend/backoffice functions that keep getting more and more complex. SAP comes to mind, and while Hadoop and it's relatives are cool, they are more complex to deploy than a single big Data Warehouse.
Getting all the moving pieces to play nice is a full time job, at least for me. I have found that the more power you get the more the apps need it. It is a continual arms race of capacity and complexity against demand and utility.
I am a Cloud Architect. People ask me what Cloud is/means.
"In a nutshell, the Cloud means You Don't Own It."
If you outsource to IBM (and other physical plant providers as well) in a "traditional" datacenter, you the client actually own the hardware legally (in most cases). If you want, you can come lift and shift it out of the datacenter. In a cloud environment, you don't own it. Potentially not even the data you have stored in the cloud, as some people have found out.
During my long 25 years as a Sysadmin, the complexity of systems continues to grow, and I continue to make my living solving problems created by that complexity.
The difficulty I see is where will the next generation of BOFH's start out? The generalist is getting squeeze out of IT and replaced by more and more compartmentalized specialists.
Jeans and Khaki's that have the inside of the pocket lined with EMF blocking material. Just next to the skin, or it would block the phone from working.
Make a "pocket protector" version to use with any standard pair of pants.
Re: I lost interest when I saw brisket
on
When Nerds Do BBQ
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· Score: 1
Hence my comment it is an alternative... especially when I am not feeding a crowd but just 3 or 4 people.
Typical full brisket around here is 6 to 12 lbs. Doing just the flat is just disgusting. The deckle is where the flavor is!
That is like 6 weeks of red meat dietary budget.
Re: I lost interest when I saw brisket
on
When Nerds Do BBQ
·
· Score: 1
Tri-tip is well known in California but harder to find outside of California, and makes a great slow cooked alternative to brisket.
Leaner than a brisket, it is a little trickier, but it gets a good smoke ring and can be done either medium rare or cooked until falling apart. Anything inbetween is a little tough. Also, I can get them in about a 2 to 3 pound cut Price is slightly higher than brisket, but I don't have to buy so much at a time. It is triangular, so I can cook one end more well done and the thick end is more rare. This make it a hit with those who like their meat a specific doneness.
The first meal we get from it is usually just sliced a little thick and served with potatoes or something.
Leftovers are added to a mixed green salad with red onions, blue cheese, dried cranberries and raspberry vinaigrette. Yum... I am drooling already.
Re:I lost interest when I saw brisket
on
When Nerds Do BBQ
·
· Score: 1
Those who eat my brisket call it "beef bacon".
It is considerably more moist and tender than bacon, but I appreciate the comparison.
Cooked on a Traeger pellet stove, which is essentially this device, including a thermal controller for the pellet feeder. Set a temp, and forget it.
While no fan of Obama, he is using the same yardstick that every other President was measured by in the last 15 or so years.
Yes, it is a lie, but it is a lie we agreed on as the standard. Changing the goalposts in the middle of the presidency for arguments sake is also disingenuous at best.
Anyone who live through the Carter recession, Regan boom, Bush 1 recession, Clinton boom, internet bust, Bush 2 boom/bust cycle, knows this one is fundamentally different. In part because the industrial age continues to fade, and the tech revolution continues to grow, while our measuring sticks don't change.
(and in part because Obama's policies are objectively and rationally not working as well as he claimed they would)
The whole process needs to be revamped with the increase in tech workers. The current system is based around factory and 40hr a week officer workers.
Adjustments need to be made, with clear indications of how the raw numbers differ, for:
People who want to work a full time job but can't
People who choose to work less than full time.
An "overemployment" number to show workers who work full time, but report more than 40hrs per week. Those hours need to be part of the unemployment number as they directly add to the unemployment number if a company can avoid hiring more people by making workers put in more hours, overtime or salary.
Self employed are not counted in the current numbers, they should be. Too many "independent contractors" are hidden in the numbers.
The greatest gift of all for SysAdmins:
Sudocrem
http://www.sudocrem.co.uk/home
They are French?!
#darklasersmatter
Or a bundle of sticks.
You mean like the Beverly Hills Oil Field?
Not Vermont's fault.
It is Bernie Sanders throwing the curve off.
The web is not all of IT.
There are backend/backoffice functions that keep getting more and more complex. SAP comes to mind, and while Hadoop and it's relatives are cool, they are more complex to deploy than a single big Data Warehouse.
Getting all the moving pieces to play nice is a full time job, at least for me. I have found that the more power you get the more the apps need it. It is a continual arms race of capacity and complexity against demand and utility.
I am a Cloud Architect.
People ask me what Cloud is/means.
"In a nutshell, the Cloud means You Don't Own It."
If you outsource to IBM (and other physical plant providers as well) in a "traditional" datacenter, you the client actually own the hardware legally (in most cases). If you want, you can come lift and shift it out of the datacenter. In a cloud environment, you don't own it. Potentially not even the data you have stored in the cloud, as some people have found out.
During my long 25 years as a Sysadmin, the complexity of systems continues to grow, and I continue to make my living solving problems created by that complexity.
The difficulty I see is where will the next generation of BOFH's start out? The generalist is getting squeeze out of IT and replaced by more and more compartmentalized specialists.
so this must the be the Satan Particle.
hmm... improvement:
Fully line the left pocket, half line the right pocket...
protection from toxic radiation or protection from toxic ex... take your pick!
Jeans and Khaki's that have the inside of the pocket lined with EMF blocking material. Just next to the skin, or it would block the phone from working.
Make a "pocket protector" version to use with any standard pair of pants.
it will never work... perfect for kickstarter.
As I tell my 12 year old son:
You don't learn anything when you win the game of chess, you learn something when you lose.
A bit oversimplified, but the point is that you learn by rising to the challenge, not just by your success.
If productive falls, they can just turn on the Jacobs Ladders...
http://www.electricstuff.co.uk...
Hence my comment it is an alternative... especially when I am not feeding a crowd but just 3 or 4 people.
Typical full brisket around here is 6 to 12 lbs. Doing just the flat is just disgusting. The deckle is where the flavor is!
That is like 6 weeks of red meat dietary budget.
Tri-tip is well known in California but harder to find outside of California, and makes a great slow cooked alternative to brisket.
Leaner than a brisket, it is a little trickier, but it gets a good smoke ring and can be done either medium rare or cooked until falling apart. Anything inbetween is a little tough. Also, I can get them in about a 2 to 3 pound cut Price is slightly higher than brisket, but I don't have to buy so much at a time. It is triangular, so I can cook one end more well done and the thick end is more rare. This make it a hit with those who like their meat a specific doneness.
The first meal we get from it is usually just sliced a little thick and served with potatoes or something.
Leftovers are added to a mixed green salad with red onions, blue cheese, dried cranberries and raspberry vinaigrette. Yum... I am drooling already.
Those who eat my brisket call it "beef bacon".
It is considerably more moist and tender than bacon, but I appreciate the comparison.
Cooked on a Traeger pellet stove, which is essentially this device, including a thermal controller for the pellet feeder. Set a temp, and forget it.
Thinking the same thing. It is just a cross between a Traeger pellet smoker and a Big Green Egg.
Considering they used the Big Green Egg as a "competitor" it would have been easier.
If it is any consolation, we are usually bitching about how the 9 is slow....
Yep.
Can't tell you how many times a day I hear or say "The 9".
Won't be the same unless... maybe we could get the range DEAD:BEEF assigned to IBM?
Meh.
Whatever.
Error: V404 Not Found
That seems a lot more complex of an argument if the document says what Bartlies says is in the definitions section.
So why are they arguing that if the definitions section makes it clear without a typo?
(A typo an author of the bill says is not there, that is exactly what they intended to do: punish states that did not set up an Exchange)
"Johnathan Gruber? Who's that?" - Obama administration
Seems straightforward if that is what it says.
Why did they need to use other arguments than that one?
If that is what says, it is prima facie and there would have been no case.