Long distance swimmers face constant dehydration issues while training in pools due to sweating.
Of course, they also "train" by sitting bathtubs full of ice-water to acclimatize to expected water temperatures...
FedEx Ground was (or so I was told) a separate company initially, purchased by FedEx, and hence did not have the same quality standards. I sent a largish box to Atlanta once for pickup at the depot, following instructions from their 1-800 staff. The package disappeared for days until they finally tracked it down to some poor driver who had been trying to find "Hold At Depot Street" for 4 days. I was then informed they don't offer a hold-at-depot service.
It eventually got returned to me, to my billing address, not shipping address. As a final insult, I opened the door to my flat just in time to see the driver basically throw the box (now mangled beyond belief anyway, trailing styrofoam peanuts and cardboard bits) the last couple of feet onto my stairs. He looked at me and just said "What." then walked off.
Amazingly, the computer stuff inside was undamaged beyond a few bent bits of metal and some cracked plastic. What else to do but to hire a repair consultant (ie. me) to repair the damage (ie. bend the metal back with pliers) fabricate a stack of invoices for a fair repair cost (ie. 99% of the insured value) before reshipping with UPS.
To their credit they paid the claim without question.
My brother has spent several 6 month stints at the Alert encampment (not really a town per se) in Canada (82.5N) and the whole crew starts to a bit barmy both in winter (no light) and summer (too much light). Worst part is there's no where to go even if you wanted to brave the elements.
I think it was originally built as a NORAD base, with room for over 200 but now it's manned by about 25. Sounds like a bad X-Files episode.
I'm not rallying against income disparity here (nor advocating Communism!)-- the world is an inherently cruel & unfair place; we create society to mitigate against that.
I think our analogies are orthogonal:)
The beer *is* everything we need and want, and the role of gov't (the bar) is to ensure that system continues to operate, which necessarily benefits the wealthy more than the poor as it's the same system in which they were able to become wealthy in the first place.
It's disingenuous to examine taxes solely from the perspective of direct benefit to an individual. "Taxes buy civilisation" is the old hackneyed phrase, but there's an amount of truth to it.
Speaking orthogonally, the Government of Ontario used to bottle and sell their own scotch ("GO Scotch" we called it), but I can assure you that was something you neither need nor want.
When did desktop keyboards become standardised? When I moved to the UK, I got one with keys in all the "wrong" places (although evoked fond memories of the Commodore 64). Better, the "wrong" keys produce the right keycodes (ie. the expected keycode for the key in that location) as my XP is configured to use a US-spec keyboard. Confuses the hell out of co-workers. Much better than using a keyboard in Japan though.
I always thought the signature provided the retailer with some degree of security. Which made me very confused when I bought a $400 iPod at the Apple Store in San Francisco and they just swiped my card and sent me on my way. I asked the clerk what they'd do if I denied making the charge and he just looked at my blankly and confused, insisting the card-swipe was sufficient.
The issue is not the JVM/KVM but the MIDP/CLDC implementation layer in mobile phones -- they are always inconsistent and usually buggy. Great strides have been made, but "write once, run anywhere" applied to J2ME is the biggest joke in the industry, as any of the dozen engineers at my company dedicated to porting code to different J2ME devices will agree. Blame Sun's certification tests. Curiously, Motorola is one of the worst offenders.
Ironically, Qualcomm's iron-fisted control of BREW (a C-based competitor to J2ME) has resulted in much higher levels of consistency, approximating "write once run anywhere".
They'll demand loyalty of their employees then screw them over so long as they can continue to do so. There's a line of fresh-out-of-college "Gee, can I be a game programmer?" faces out the door who are willing to work 60 hours for bad pay. Is their work any good? Probably not, compared to an experienced engineer. But that's not the shareholders' problem.
Until engineers start standing up for themselves in the workforce, this will continue to happen. You feel you're underpaid? You probably are! Find a new job! Be proactive on it. Don't wait around, hoping for the company to take care of you as they slowly suck the life out. Go find your own fortune at one of the many companies that do care about quality work and employee morale.
So long as engineers let themselves be treated like crap, they will continue to be treated like crap. Pissed off at EA's 100 hour work week? Quit and work somewhere that respects you. The problem is there are 200 more engineers so obsessed with working in the gaming industry they'll have no problem replacing you.
Hey mate... I just destroyed a company's entire business model and they owe me $10,000 to boot! I'll just be heading to Moscow for a few days. See you soon!....and he was never seen again...
Long distance swimmers face constant dehydration issues while training in pools due to sweating. Of course, they also "train" by sitting bathtubs full of ice-water to acclimatize to expected water temperatures...
FedEx Ground was (or so I was told) a separate company initially, purchased by FedEx, and hence did not have the same quality standards. I sent a largish box to Atlanta once for pickup at the depot, following instructions from their 1-800 staff. The package disappeared for days until they finally tracked it down to some poor driver who had been trying to find "Hold At Depot Street" for 4 days. I was then informed they don't offer a hold-at-depot service.
It eventually got returned to me, to my billing address, not shipping address. As a final insult, I opened the door to my flat just in time to see the driver basically throw the box (now mangled beyond belief anyway, trailing styrofoam peanuts and cardboard bits) the last couple of feet onto my stairs. He looked at me and just said "What." then walked off.
Amazingly, the computer stuff inside was undamaged beyond a few bent bits of metal and some cracked plastic. What else to do but to hire a repair consultant (ie. me) to repair the damage (ie. bend the metal back with pliers) fabricate a stack of invoices for a fair repair cost (ie. 99% of the insured value) before reshipping with UPS.
To their credit they paid the claim without question.
It sounds like a good idea, but what do you do when the robots become sentient and spend all day browsing Slashdot instead of working?
My brother has spent several 6 month stints at the Alert encampment (not really a town per se) in Canada (82.5N) and the whole crew starts to a bit barmy both in winter (no light) and summer (too much light). Worst part is there's no where to go even if you wanted to brave the elements. I think it was originally built as a NORAD base, with room for over 200 but now it's manned by about 25. Sounds like a bad X-Files episode.
Hello Mr. Straw; nice to meet you.
I'm not rallying against income disparity here (nor advocating Communism!)-- the world is an inherently cruel & unfair place; we create society to mitigate against that.
I think our analogies are orthogonal :)
The beer *is* everything we need and want, and the role of gov't (the bar) is to ensure that system continues to operate, which necessarily benefits the wealthy more than the poor as it's the same system in which they were able to become wealthy in the first place.
It's disingenuous to examine taxes solely from the perspective of direct benefit to an individual. "Taxes buy civilisation" is the old hackneyed phrase, but there's an amount of truth to it.
Speaking orthogonally, the Government of Ontario used to bottle and sell their own scotch ("GO Scotch" we called it), but I can assure you that was something you neither need nor want.
You forgot to mention the 10th man got to drink 4 of the 10 beers, while the poorest guy just got to lick the condensation off the table afterwards.
My favourite ROT26 implementation is called "cat".
I thought after zepto came groucho, harpo and chico?
When did desktop keyboards become standardised? When I moved to the UK, I got one with keys in all the "wrong" places (although evoked fond memories of the Commodore 64). Better, the "wrong" keys produce the right keycodes (ie. the expected keycode for the key in that location) as my XP is configured to use a US-spec keyboard. Confuses the hell out of co-workers. Much better than using a keyboard in Japan though.
I always thought the signature provided the retailer with some degree of security.
Which made me very confused when I bought a $400 iPod at the Apple Store in San Francisco and they just swiped my card and sent me on my way. I asked the clerk what they'd do if I denied making the charge and he just looked at my blankly and confused, insisting the card-swipe was sufficient.
The issue is not the JVM/KVM but the MIDP/CLDC implementation layer in mobile phones -- they are always inconsistent and usually buggy. Great strides have been made, but "write once, run anywhere" applied to J2ME is the biggest joke in the industry, as any of the dozen engineers at my company dedicated to porting code to different J2ME devices will agree. Blame Sun's certification tests. Curiously, Motorola is one of the worst offenders.
Ironically, Qualcomm's iron-fisted control of BREW (a C-based competitor to J2ME) has resulted in much higher levels of consistency, approximating "write once run anywhere".
They'll demand loyalty of their employees then screw them over so long as they can continue to do so. There's a line of fresh-out-of-college "Gee, can I be a game programmer?" faces out the door who are willing to work 60 hours for bad pay. Is their work any good? Probably not, compared to an experienced engineer. But that's not the shareholders' problem.
Until engineers start standing up for themselves in the workforce, this will continue to happen. You feel you're underpaid? You probably are! Find a new job! Be proactive on it. Don't wait around, hoping for the company to take care of you as they slowly suck the life out. Go find your own fortune at one of the many companies that do care about quality work and employee morale.
So long as engineers let themselves be treated like crap, they will continue to be treated like crap. Pissed off at EA's 100 hour work week? Quit and work somewhere that respects you. The problem is there are 200 more engineers so obsessed with working in the gaming industry they'll have no problem replacing you.
Hey mate... I just destroyed a company's entire business model and they owe me $10,000 to boot! I'll just be heading to Moscow for a few days. See you soon! ....and he was never seen again...