Do you really think all pages are created equal you fucking moron?
#allpagesmatter.:-) But seriously, there are 381,517 words in the Affordable Care Act. That's less than half the words in the Harry Potter series (and less than half th bible - and if you can read the whole bible in 1 year by reading a couple of pages a day, you can certainly make your way through the ACA in 7 years at 150 words a day.
The problems you list aren't the problems. Not having a universal public health-care system is the problem. Get the insurers out and watch costs drop. After all, they're in it for the profit. That profit has to come from somewhere. It's extra burden and overhead that public single payer systems don't have to support.
Trump's policies are toxic. They're destroying the republican party (which was predictable, btw, and why I was quite happy to see him elected). Think of what they would do to the country if people "compromised" to help get them through.
Now both major parties need to clean up their acts, or die (which is probably how Trump will be "removed from office" - they'll "find he choked to death on a big mac at 3 in the morning while tweeting" just in time to run someone else as a sympathy candidate.
The wife of the GOP presidential nominee, who sometimes worked as a model under just her first name, has said through an attorney that she first came to the U.S. from Slovenia on Aug. 27, 1996, on a B1/B2 visitor visa and then obtained an H-1B work visa on Oct. 18, 1996.
The documents obtained by the AP show she was paid for 10 modeling assignments between Sept. 10 and Oct. 15, during a time when her visa allowed her generally to be in the U.S. and look for work but not perform paid work in the country. The documents examined by the AP indicate that the modeling assignments would have been outside the bounds of her visa.
One proposal was a "job mortgage." Industry would guarantee a job if someone took the training, so you could take that job offer and get a loan against it for your education, and the bank would know you had a job after graduation so the loan would be secure.
There are all sorts of problems with this, but at least having businesses with skin in the game would add some realism to the current education scam - I mean scheme.
So your advice to a 22 year old fresh STEM grad in Canada is to be Germany?
No, the advice to anyone going into STEM is to move to Germany, where tuition, even for foreigners, is free because they hope enough people will come for the education but stay for the lifestyle and contribute back. You can even take most, if not all, courses in English. And if you're from certain parts of Canada and already know both English and French, having German under your belt is going to be a big plus.
The goal posts have most certainly been moved. Mechanical engineers aren't going to have projects outside of class to point to - no "Here, I built this bridge in my spare time" stuff. No "I stress-tested a jet engine to destruction." The barrier to outside projects is a lot higher in mechanical engineering than it is in coding.
If they call it a severance package it is a severance package.
Abraham Lincoln once said, if we call a tail a leg, how many legs does a dog have? When the listener responded "Five", he said "No, four. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg."
Same as Trump saying he had a "wonderful plan" to defeat ISIS in 30 days didn't mean he actually had a plan to defeat ISIS at all, never mind in 30 days. Or saying that Obama was wiretapping him made it true. Or that his health care plan that he said would cover more people for less actually existed. It never did, which is why the abortion of a plan that was finally presented was such a disaster to his own party that they had to sabotage the vote.
I don't think HR even knows what stackoverflow (and certainly not what a stack overflow) is. But seriously, have you really said that you were "going to post on stackoverflow and level up my career" to anyone? It sounds so much like what kids who want to break into coding by being game testers would say.
You don't need "servers, redundant storage, backup hardware, software and media, software licenses, and IT staff" to store boxes of documents. You fail.
Let me turn that around for you - if it's so important, why did MS wait until c# 4.0? Hint - it's not.
Also, maybe we need a bit more rigour, because too much crap that's released is still obviously in the proptotyping stage. "We'll fix it after release" is bs. Used to be that the cost of distributing bug fixes was entirely on the vendor (duplication and mailing of media) so there was a lot more incentive to get it right the first time.
Don't forget, most of them are on stackoverflow because they want to, as stackoverflow says in their PR puff piece - "level up their careers." Feel free to punch anyone in the face who says that. It's not like you'll cause any real damage.
Yeah, statically typed languages look overwhelming/verbose and take more time to type and plan out
That nasty "planning" - there's no time for it in today's culture, where everything is just thrown together after a few "planning sessions" that are basically verbal diarrhea pushed by "big vision" marketing and bosses who may have had a clue in the past, but don't any more and are flailing about to find some project to justify their jobs, same as almost everyone else chasing the big-money exit strategy dream instead of doing the hard stuff like, you know, planning.
The whole "vision thing" has turned software into the cesspool it is today.
Javascript variables are the way they are so that you can use them on the fly without having to pre-declare each and every variable along with it's type which is a god send not a problem.
If you think that's not a problem, you're the problem.:-)
They're not charging "0.004 cents per page per month. It's 4/10 of a cent per page per month:
$0.004 per page, per month
4.8 cents per page per year, or $48/year per 1,000 pages. A banker's box holds 5,000 pages, so $240 a year per box of documents just for storage. That adds up pretty quickly for a large business. You could probably store the physical boxes cheaper and more securely (and you probably have to keep the physical copies anyways) at a place that specializes in secure document storage.
The original article does not say " $0.004 cents per page, per month". It says " $0.004 per page, per month", or 4/10 of a cent per page per month. That works out to $0.72 per page for 15 years, as per my post.:-)
Prisons have conjugal visits. They also have all the sex you never wanted. And in the female prisons, a lot of unwanted sex with the guards. If it weren't for the prison rapes and coerced sex, there are plenty of people who would be better off in prison than on the streets or in a shelter (shelters also have lots of unwanted sex for women who don't want to sleep outside - it's so bad in some areas that women are actually safer outside a shelter than in).
Do you really think all pages are created equal you fucking moron?
#allpagesmatter. :-) But seriously, there are 381,517 words in the Affordable Care Act. That's less than half the words in the Harry Potter series (and less than half th bible - and if you can read the whole bible in 1 year by reading a couple of pages a day, you can certainly make your way through the ACA in 7 years at 150 words a day.
The problems you list aren't the problems. Not having a universal public health-care system is the problem. Get the insurers out and watch costs drop. After all, they're in it for the profit. That profit has to come from somewhere. It's extra burden and overhead that public single payer systems don't have to support.
Trump's policies are toxic. They're destroying the republican party (which was predictable, btw, and why I was quite happy to see him elected). Think of what they would do to the country if people "compromised" to help get them through.
Now both major parties need to clean up their acts, or die (which is probably how Trump will be "removed from office" - they'll "find he choked to death on a big mac at 3 in the morning while tweeting" just in time to run someone else as a sympathy candidate.
He would be more than twice as rich if he had just put daddy's money in an index fund.. And of course his brand, which he claimed was worth $3 billion, now has a negative worth. Investors are suing to have his name removed prom projects because it brings the value down.
Melania Trump did not come over on an H2B visa. She came over on a B1/B2 visitor visa and worked illegally. The H2B visa story is yet another alternate fact.
The wife of the GOP presidential nominee, who sometimes worked as a model under just her first name, has said through an attorney that she first came to the U.S. from Slovenia on Aug. 27, 1996, on a B1/B2 visitor visa and then obtained an H-1B work visa on Oct. 18, 1996.
The documents obtained by the AP show she was paid for 10 modeling assignments between Sept. 10 and Oct. 15, during a time when her visa allowed her generally to be in the U.S. and look for work but not perform paid work in the country. The documents examined by the AP indicate that the modeling assignments would have been outside the bounds of her visa.
So she was an illegal worker.
And yet there are people today who will still say that all his lies were true. Useful idiots.
One proposal was a "job mortgage." Industry would guarantee a job if someone took the training, so you could take that job offer and get a loan against it for your education, and the bank would know you had a job after graduation so the loan would be secure.
There are all sorts of problems with this, but at least having businesses with skin in the game would add some realism to the current education scam - I mean scheme.
He was preparing for his new career - it wasn't how tall he grew, it was what he was growing. Hint - it grows like weeds.
Got news for you - your toilet still uses gravity to flush. Same as in roman times.
So your advice to a 22 year old fresh STEM grad in Canada is to be Germany?
No, the advice to anyone going into STEM is to move to Germany, where tuition, even for foreigners, is free because they hope enough people will come for the education but stay for the lifestyle and contribute back. You can even take most, if not all, courses in English. And if you're from certain parts of Canada and already know both English and French, having German under your belt is going to be a big plus.
The goal posts have most certainly been moved. Mechanical engineers aren't going to have projects outside of class to point to - no "Here, I built this bridge in my spare time" stuff. No "I stress-tested a jet engine to destruction." The barrier to outside projects is a lot higher in mechanical engineering than it is in coding.
Again, that's not a severance package.
If they call it a severance package it is a severance package.
Abraham Lincoln once said, if we call a tail a leg, how many legs does a dog have? When the listener responded "Five", he said "No, four. Calling a tail a leg doesn't make it a leg."
Same as Trump saying he had a "wonderful plan" to defeat ISIS in 30 days didn't mean he actually had a plan to defeat ISIS at all, never mind in 30 days. Or saying that Obama was wiretapping him made it true. Or that his health care plan that he said would cover more people for less actually existed. It never did, which is why the abortion of a plan that was finally presented was such a disaster to his own party that they had to sabotage the vote.
A new contract is NOT a severance package.
I don't think HR even knows what stackoverflow (and certainly not what a stack overflow) is. But seriously, have you really said that you were "going to post on stackoverflow and level up my career" to anyone? It sounds so much like what kids who want to break into coding by being game testers would say.
What can I say? Forced early retirement must have mellowed me a bit :-)
You don't need "servers, redundant storage, backup hardware, software and media, software licenses, and IT staff" to store boxes of documents. You fail.
Let me turn that around for you - if it's so important, why did MS wait until c# 4.0? Hint - it's not.
Also, maybe we need a bit more rigour, because too much crap that's released is still obviously in the proptotyping stage. "We'll fix it after release" is bs. Used to be that the cost of distributing bug fixes was entirely on the vendor (duplication and mailing of media) so there was a lot more incentive to get it right the first time.
Don't forget, most of them are on stackoverflow because they want to, as stackoverflow says in their PR puff piece - "level up their careers." Feel free to punch anyone in the face who says that. It's not like you'll cause any real damage.
Yeah, statically typed languages look overwhelming/verbose and take more time to type and plan out
That nasty "planning" - there's no time for it in today's culture, where everything is just thrown together after a few "planning sessions" that are basically verbal diarrhea pushed by "big vision" marketing and bosses who may have had a clue in the past, but don't any more and are flailing about to find some project to justify their jobs, same as almost everyone else chasing the big-money exit strategy dream instead of doing the hard stuff like, you know, planning.
The whole "vision thing" has turned software into the cesspool it is today.
Javascript variables are the way they are so that you can use them on the fly without having to pre-declare each and every variable along with it's type which is a god send not a problem.
If you think that's not a problem, you're the problem. :-)
Better watch it. All those stack overflow knobs are going to hate you. The whole thing stinks of selection bias:
About Stack Overflow
Stack Overflow is the largest, most trusted online community for developers to learn, share their knowledge,and level up their careers.
"I'm going to post on stack overflow and level up my career" said no real developer ever.
$0.004 per page, per month
4.8 cents per page per year, or $48/year per 1,000 pages. A banker's box holds 5,000 pages, so $240 a year per box of documents just for storage. That adds up pretty quickly for a large business. You could probably store the physical boxes cheaper and more securely (and you probably have to keep the physical copies anyways) at a place that specializes in secure document storage.
The original article does not say " $0.004 cents per page, per month". It says " $0.004 per page, per month", or 4/10 of a cent per page per month. That works out to $0.72 per page for 15 years, as per my post. :-)
From the original article: " $0.004 per page, per month". Not 0.004 cents per page.
Prisons have conjugal visits. They also have all the sex you never wanted. And in the female prisons, a lot of unwanted sex with the guards. If it weren't for the prison rapes and coerced sex, there are plenty of people who would be better off in prison than on the streets or in a shelter (shelters also have lots of unwanted sex for women who don't want to sleep outside - it's so bad in some areas that women are actually safer outside a shelter than in).