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User: Cheezlbub

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  1. if you plan it well and have either some good people and nature or at the very least a good music selection if you're alone, the length of the trip isn't a bad thing. I think most people try to do stuff like watch tv or some other activity that requires at least a little bit of brain power to keep track of. Just listing to music on the back porch, swimming, or playing with pets can make the 10 - 14 hours entirely enjoyable =)

    In terms of TFA, this seems like a fairly well known aspect of LSD to me. Time takes on this feeling of a very long hallway filled with doors. Each moment is a room that the trip gives you the opportunity to explore much more fully than you would otherwise. What seems like 30 - 45 minutes is really 2 or 3 minutes. (Also, to my point above, doing that too much can make even a good trip seem like you'll never escape it and it becomes a somewhat pleasant annoyance.)

    Shrooms give light a much warmer feeling and I tend to get that happier "at one" feeling, but I don't get the visuals, time distortion, or altered thinking patterns that some good acid provides. Plus, they're hell on my stomach.

    Definitely a sometimes treat though.

  2. Re:OS X Upgrade Fear on Inside OS X Mavericks · · Score: 1

    I'm curious how this method works with the recovery partition - does it restore the lion one or do you still have the recovery tools for ML?

  3. Re:Move along... on The Hidden Costs of Microsoft's Free Office Online · · Score: 1

    If you're going to do anything but be an end-user, using firefox with sharepoint is not as exciting. (this is on windows, btw)

    For instance
    - no opening up lists in datasheet view
    - can't open up lists in access or excel - have to export a spreadsheet
    - can't use the directory browser thing to add people to permissions groups
    - Editing content editor webparts gives you a tiny source editor form box in the toolbox rather than giving a popup window

    So yeah, not quite the same

  4. work at a university while going there on Getting Beyond the Helldesk · · Score: 5, Interesting

    you could go back to school & work at the university while you're there. Generally, the IT Departments at universities are pretty big and they give you a good idea of anything you're going to encounter. At my university when someone shows initiative and they're competent and not a douche they pretty much always get the chance to prove themselves - ymmv, but I get the impression that quite a few universities are like this.

    If you get on as a student, that's cool, part time, focus on school, show some initiative and try to get a full time job

    If you get on as a full timer - awesome for you - most universities offer pretty good benefits, a lot of them include stuff like tuition wavers (full or partial - either way, you're going to end up paying less.)

    and finally, working at a university IT department doesn't necessarily mean being in a support role -

    our it department has an application development group, a services group (support), a project management group, a system administration/network admin group, a business group that handles contracts & such with other departments/companies, a research computing group (super computers), a dedicated security group, an administration group (payroll), and an HR group. Of those, sysadmins, services, and app devs have to do support. Everyone else is only rarely customer facing. The likelihood that you're going to get into the non-support groups right away is pretty slim, but movement has a tendency to be really fluid.

    In case you didn't get the main point of this - the important thing is showing initiative. Show that you're interested in doing something new and interesting - show it by talking to people who do it already and trying to shadow them. Work with your bosses to get involved in projects, do things to get noticed. =)

  5. Re:i know what you DONT want to do.. on Interesting Computer Science Jobs? · · Score: 1

    Call center jobs are very stressful. They're thankless. They don't have any sort of support from the rest of the organization. No one understands that the value of the call center is removed when processes that define productivity in the organization don't link to it. Not to mention the fact that most call centers are judged on completely irrelevant metrics that do more to harm the relationship with the customer than to actually provide good service.

    It feels like you're stuck there. What sucks is that with an attitude like that, you probably are. Most organizations like to hire from within. Most of them will take people with a go-getter kind of attitude. The problem is that a call center is kind of a horrible emotional sink. You're doing the same thing over & over again. It's easy to get bogged down in the banality of it all.

    So how do you do it? Meet other people in IT or in other departments. Offer to help with projects. Mentor with someone. Learn about what your company does - what the overall mission of your IT department is & then figure out what you can do to move that along.

    It's something that may be easier or harder depending on where you work and what value your business puts on the growth of their employees. At least where I work, it's so much easier to move someone into another position than it is to hire externally. So go for that.

    Call centers suck. It's hard to think of a way to design them so that they don't. Even in the most open of environments, there's still something completely draining about them.

    You can get out of it & do something in the same company. It seriously is all about attitude. People get hired because of attitude. More importantly, people *don't* get hired because of attitude.

    In short: "FIND YOUR HAPPY PLACE, MAGGOT" or something.

  6. back in the day.... on Facebook Apps Facing Delays and Uncertainties · · Score: 4, Insightful

    before all the craplets that people push on unsuspecting facebookers, I really enjoyed the site. It was an excellent work alternative(tm) Now, however, it's just becoming a more cluttered myspace. I'm expecting the facebook people to next open up the possibility to 'personalize' their profile with gaudy poorly written code that crashes web browsers (or maybe just safari, which - to be honest - isn't the most stable inmate in the asylum). So much for being elegant, simple, and unique.

  7. Re:Not all lame on Apple releases iPod · · Score: 1

    Actually, it's about the same size as a nomad II, which has a practical limit of 128 MB on flash memory...

    5 GB > 128 MB obviously, and it looks nifty, and it will work with OS X out of the box. Not lame, not worth the hype - certainly - but cool in it's own right.

    k

  8. Re:West coast? on Star Trek: Enterprise Reactions? · · Score: 1

    Than don't read it.

    Easy enough.