There is an explanation as to why companies are beginning to mandate work from offices.
Companies with a multitude of remote workers can state: All workers must now work from an office... effectively getting a layoff that isn't legally a layoff.
They are giving employees a 'choice' to either commute or relocate (or not be employed). They are certain to get a RIF without all of the normal protections employees would otherwise have.
At first I was excited that maybe Gary Larson was creating another comic strip... then I fully parsed the sentence and realized it was just about a county district judge...
As prices rose in the mid 00s, suddenly there was a booming market for cigarette runners into the US and an abundance of indian/native american cigarettes selling 200 cigarettes in a bag for $10... instead of $70 per carton.
I think you're trying to condemn their decision, but personally, that sounds great to me. Horses, fireplaces, and physical security... not much to complain about... Given that your alternatives are cheap automobiles, dependence on fossil fuels for heating, and a security system that can track your every moment, and still get hacked and end up locked in (or out) of your room.
I'll take a wired home phone instead of a cell phone and eat food that was harvested locally as well.
Everyone still needs someone to bitch at when equipment or services don't work. Call centers are still actually surprisingly profitable. There are great margins in a call center, and the CC business probably the only reason why Avaya is still afloat (And thus the reason they are not selling of the Call Center portion of their business to pay off the debtors).
Avaya provides and creates a lot more than just Call Recording Software. The real money is quickly turning in to multi channel delivery. Phone calls are still king, but being able to answer text, email and social is becoming increasingly important. Integration and reporting on the different delivery methods is definitely a growth market.
In terms of the different platforms: I've used many. Here's my general opinion
Avaya -- Good, has been expensive. Supports a lot of legacy equipment -- that's a blessing and a curse. Cisco -- Not good for a call center, great for office environments Open Source -- Freeswitch / Asterisk. You can certainly do a lot with them. But interoperability between systems, and support can be a problem. Cloud based stuff -- Interactive Intelligence / Amazon ACD / etc. I would only use them for small deployments (less than 50 seats).
"Racing only would be useful for avoiding cars that happen to be going the same direction as you. It has no oncoming or cross traffic or stopped vehicles. It doesn't have inexperienced or bad driver"
You must have never seen Kamui Kobayashi race in F1. There was a significant chance he'd end up, backwards, stopped, sliding across the circuit... And making a few exceptional passes.
Thank you for the memories of upgrading my Pentium 200 with a 3DFX Voodoo card. At the time, a mind boggling feat to have a whopping 4 megs of ram just for 3D.
Maybe there will be a boom sales of fire extinguishers... a fleet of firefighting drones instead of a firetruck. Might be useful in certain circumstances.
While working IT support back in the day -- in the summer 2002: The company I was working for was opening a new location up, and the day before the building inspectors came to give us our occupancy inspection the IBM PS/2 computer that was originally installed to control the HVAC system on some bizarre serial connection had it's motherboard fry completely. I guess the life of span of it didn't match original poster's...
However,I had an old PS/2 in a closet, and it was the same model. We swapped the hard drive out, installed my old system, and had it up and running with enough time adequately cool the building...
It was still running in 2010 when I was last in that building.
The best part of story was when the manager of the HVAC company came with $3000 to compensate me. I probably would have just been happy with getting the job done. But apparently PS/2 parts are fairly hard to find on a day's notice, even back in the early 2000s. I've always wondered what sort of penalty structure the HVAC company had built into their contract.
I get this, I actually felt the same way. I still maintain an old 86 Toyota MR2. Mid engined, RWD, no ABS... A hoot to drive. However it certainly isn't my daily driver, and my eyes were opened when buying a new car.
I thought, BAH! begone with your technological answers to questions I didn't have. I don't want a car that parks itself. But what I've found is that my car will now beep if a pedestrian is about to walk behind my vehicle when reversing out of a parking spot. I've never reversed into anyone before, but is this warning a bad thing? Does it make me a worse driver? I now try to make sure it doesn't beep.
My car will now has front collision avoidance. If I'm following a car and it starts slowing down to the point where a collision is imminent my car will break to avoid a collision. Has this ever happened to me? No. Is it something to complain about? Would I think I'm a horrible driver if it ever did kick in? Yes I probably would, and I'd also thank my lucky stars that it a potential collision was potentially avoided?
Are you so much in control that you can never make a mistake? Never look down to change the radio station? Never look at a your passenger? If that's all true, then maybe you are the automated system that's in my car.
Daylight Savings is actually a hardship on farmers. It tacks on an extra waking hour to their day.
Farmers generally get up with the animals, at first light. While the cattle may get sleepy an hour earlier the businesses (and other people) that farmers need to interface with all stay open and up later.
in my Experience with a webrtc phone... Chrome leaks it. Firefox doesn't.
contrary to you belief that last minute mergers are asshats (and some may be) but zipper merging is actually more effective.
Zipper merging is effectively using both lanes until reaching the obstruction, then merging (calmly) into the open lane
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
What happened? Been jonesin' for the /. for a while.
Thank you.
There is an explanation as to why companies are beginning to mandate work from offices.
Companies with a multitude of remote workers can state: All workers must now work from an office... effectively getting a layoff that isn't legally a layoff.
They are giving employees a 'choice' to either commute or relocate (or not be employed). They are certain to get a RIF without all of the normal protections employees would otherwise have.
As someone who daily needs VT-100 emulation... I appreciate the imagery behind horse-drawn computers.
And your user name was the 3rd car into the pile up. Your user name was also my second car.
At first I was excited that maybe Gary Larson was creating another comic strip... then I fully parsed the sentence and realized it was just about a county district judge...
Oh well,
Bummer of a birthmark, Hal.
Congratulations: it's the Archtech Law.
Now go get a wikipedia page and it's official.
The irony of an Canadian Newspaper as the citation for a comment on Trump election seems appropriate to the conversation.
Exactly this happened in Canada.
As prices rose in the mid 00s, suddenly there was a booming market for cigarette runners into the US and an abundance of indian/native american cigarettes selling 200 cigarettes in a bag for $10... instead of $70 per carton.
If there is a demand, there will be a supply.
I think you're trying to condemn their decision, but personally, that sounds great to me. Horses, fireplaces, and physical security... not much to complain about... Given that your alternatives are cheap automobiles, dependence on fossil fuels for heating, and a security system that can track your every moment, and still get hacked and end up locked in (or out) of your room.
I'll take a wired home phone instead of a cell phone and eat food that was harvested locally as well.
Everyone still needs someone to bitch at when equipment or services don't work. Call centers are still actually surprisingly profitable. There are great margins in a call center, and the CC business probably the only reason why Avaya is still afloat (And thus the reason they are not selling of the Call Center portion of their business to pay off the debtors).
Avaya provides and creates a lot more than just Call Recording Software. The real money is quickly turning in to multi channel delivery. Phone calls are still king, but being able to answer text, email and social is becoming increasingly important. Integration and reporting on the different delivery methods is definitely a growth market.
In terms of the different platforms: I've used many. Here's my general opinion
Avaya -- Good, has been expensive. Supports a lot of legacy equipment -- that's a blessing and a curse.
Cisco -- Not good for a call center, great for office environments
Open Source -- Freeswitch / Asterisk. You can certainly do a lot with them. But interoperability between systems, and support can be a problem.
Cloud based stuff -- Interactive Intelligence / Amazon ACD / etc. I would only use them for small deployments (less than 50 seats).
Wow really ??? Get the 'L' outta here!!
because they were told to get the L outta there.
I think it's more aptly called the Mac Book Err
"Racing only would be useful for avoiding cars that happen to be going the same direction as you. It has no oncoming or cross traffic or stopped vehicles. It doesn't have inexperienced or bad driver"
You must have never seen Kamui Kobayashi race in F1. There was a significant chance he'd end up, backwards, stopped, sliding across the circuit... And making a few exceptional passes.
Damn sorry, misclicked. Posting to remove incorrect moderation. Damn touchpads.
Thank you for the memories of upgrading my Pentium 200 with a 3DFX Voodoo card. At the time, a mind boggling feat to have a whopping 4 megs of ram just for 3D.
GLQuake.exe here we come!
Maybe there will be a boom sales of fire extinguishers... a fleet of firefighting drones instead of a firetruck. Might be useful in certain circumstances.
While working IT support back in the day -- in the summer 2002: The company I was working for was opening a new location up, and the day before the building inspectors came to give us our occupancy inspection the IBM PS/2 computer that was originally installed to control the HVAC system on some bizarre serial connection had it's motherboard fry completely. I guess the life of span of it didn't match original poster's...
However,I had an old PS/2 in a closet, and it was the same model. We swapped the hard drive out, installed my old system, and had it up and running with enough time adequately cool the building...
It was still running in 2010 when I was last in that building.
The best part of story was when the manager of the HVAC company came with $3000 to compensate me. I probably would have just been happy with getting the job done. But apparently PS/2 parts are fairly hard to find on a day's notice, even back in the early 2000s. I've always wondered what sort of penalty structure the HVAC company had built into their contract.
Dr Suess in 2016...
I get this, I actually felt the same way. I still maintain an old 86 Toyota MR2. Mid engined, RWD, no ABS... A hoot to drive. However it certainly isn't my daily driver, and my eyes were opened when buying a new car.
I thought, BAH! begone with your technological answers to questions I didn't have. I don't want a car that parks itself. But what I've found is that my car will now beep if a pedestrian is about to walk behind my vehicle when reversing out of a parking spot. I've never reversed into anyone before, but is this warning a bad thing? Does it make me a worse driver? I now try to make sure it doesn't beep.
My car will now has front collision avoidance. If I'm following a car and it starts slowing down to the point where a collision is imminent my car will break to avoid a collision. Has this ever happened to me? No. Is it something to complain about? Would I think I'm a horrible driver if it ever did kick in? Yes I probably would, and I'd also thank my lucky stars that it a potential collision was potentially avoided?
Are you so much in control that you can never make a mistake? Never look down to change the radio station? Never look at a your passenger? If that's all true, then maybe you are the automated system that's in my car.
I now welcome the technology.
It's hardly freaking ruined. Spend $5, get registered, nothing else changes. Except they know who you are if you fly like a retard.
And if you aren't registered and fly like a retard, they now have legal recourse.
I'm all for the government minding their own business... But RC Helicopters are hardly ruined by a $5 tax.
Daylight Savings is actually a hardship on farmers. It tacks on an extra waking hour to their day.
Farmers generally get up with the animals, at first light. While the cattle may get sleepy an hour earlier the businesses (and other people) that farmers need to interface with all stay open and up later.