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I do not.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Haven't had a flu shot but one other day in my life and got one today at the VA and I fell like crap. Feel like I've got the flu and all I want to do is sleep, moan at my aches and pains and stay near the loo.
Why did I get this shot again? arg...other explicative's!
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Why did you get it? Do you get the flu often?
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Got the 3 day flu last year not bad and it had been probably 3 years before that I got my last but when I get it I can't do anything for 3-4 days and as I'm getting older they say it's more dangerous. Oh hell it was free.
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If it was only 3 days it wasn't the flu.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, waging all things in the balance of reason?
Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful?
--Zachris Topelius
Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies.
-- Sarah Hoyt
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Dan Neely wrote: If it was only 3 days it wasn't the flu.
One might suppose that the post wasn't suggesting that the symptoms were all gone in the period of time but rather the worst part of it was. Which could mean it was the flu.
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Mike Hankey wrote: I fell like crap.
Did you make a little splash, too?
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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See how bad I feel can't even spell...oh wait a minute couldn't before either. Well I guess I know how crap fells now.
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This[^] comes to mind...
The United States invariably does the right thing, after having exhausted every other alternative. -Winston Churchill
America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between. -Oscar Wilde
Wow, even the French showed a little more spine than that before they got their sh*t pushed in.[^] -Colin Mullikin
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Oh yeah heading for the Nyquil in the ta-ta room.
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One day of feeling like crap is totally worth not getting a 2-3 week flu with the weeks of coughing afterwards.
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djdanlib wrote: One day of feeling like crap is totally worth not getting a 2-3 week flu with the weeks of coughing afterwards.
You got that right!
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Quote: 2-3 week I've never heard of anyone getting it for that long. That's bad.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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YMMV. I get hit really hard with them, so a flu shot is totally worth it to me.
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Yeah, I've never gotten it for that long...
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"This is my VA. There are many like it, but this one is mine."
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The same thing happened to me last year and lasted two (or maybe three) days. When the symptoms went away, it happened very fast - when I started feeling better, everything just lifted and within an hour I was fine again.
I have gotten the flu shot several times before without getting any symptoms, so I guess it's just one of those things. Anyway, I do think it is preferable to actually getting the flu.
Just hang in there.
Soren Madsen
"When you don't know what you're doing it's best to do it quickly" - Jase #DuckDynasty
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SoMad wrote: Just hang in there.
Thanks I'll be alright hope it ain't 3 days though, don't have any choice.
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A friend of mine asked me to speak with a another friend of his, who's going through a difficult financial time right now. He's been working as a programmer for a local college for the past 10 years, but apparently, it doesn't pay very well and he's looking for advice on how to switch to a higher paying, corporate career. I think his biggest problem, is he's been doing this single career, inside a university, his whole life. He doesn't really even know where to begin.
I'm going to speak with him tomorrow & I have some personal advice I can offer but was wondering if anyone can offer any additional advice or experiences I can pass over to him? Things like what are the best ways he can land a new programming career? What should he work on improving? Etc. I'm not sure yet which languages he's skilled in but I do know he needs to find a higher paying job sometime between now & the next 9 months (hint hint). With it being a college career though, my "guess", is that he's using Java.
I'd appreciate any advice you can offer. He's a great guy whose just terrified about being not able to provide for his family right now, so I'd love to offer any advice I can.
Thanks
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He should probably be current in programming language skills (perhaps too current), but one of my pet peeves of academic people is that they teach coding in a way that you are writing a program from scratch, using perhaps some libraries but otherwise your own code, and always from a fresh start... "original authorship"
The reality of programming in industry is that you are going to be part of a team working on code that is 10 years old, with a mix of good stuff and garbage that other people wrote, with their own coding style and suite of bugs. Most code in industry is maintenance. Average lines of code per day in college can exceed several hundred. Average code per day in industry is around 8 to 12. For aeronautics, aerospace and NASA lines per day is way less than 1.0.
Also, when you are working on a 'real' program, there are a lot of other activities you do besides code.
Windows 8 is the resurrected version of Microsoft Bob. The only thing missing is the Fisher-Price logo.
- Harvey
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H.Brydon wrote: Average lines of code per day in college can exceed several hundred. Average
code per day in industry is around 8 to 12
Not if you're at a software publisher, or consulting. Then it's tappity tappity tap, click, facepalm for hour after hour. Followed and preceeded by documentation, naturally.
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Sounds like my current work, it's painfully slow....
I might be able to speed up that in the future...
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H.Brydon wrote: but one of my pet peeves of academic people is that they teach coding in a way
that you are writing a program from scratch, using perhaps some libraries but
otherwise your own code, and always from a fresh start... "original authorship"
Nothing in the OP suggests that the person is a teacher/student - they are a programmer working for a school.
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Ex-colleague of mine recently interviewed someone who let him know that the only reason he wanted to move jobs was because he wanted a better paid position to gain experience at that level. Clearly the implication was that once he had a couple of years under his belt he'd be off. He didn't get anywhere near a 2nd interview!
Tell the friend to avoid this kind of slip-up ... he must demonstrate a reason that he wants to work for that company ... flatter them, lie about the reasons if necessary (not the skills) but never, never, never let on that you "need" the role. They need him. As he's worked in education he could push the "I can mentor and develop your junior staff so that you can save on recruitment costs" for example
Round here ASP.NET is the "big thing" in recruitment at the moment but there are a lot of contracts going around the bigger corporates finally realising that they *do* need to do something with their legacy systems if they want them to work for Win7 and beyond ... something to consider for any "pitch"
Also ... sounds corny I know, but get him involved with something like LinkedIn ... and connect to as many recruitment agents as possible (connection only ... I'm not suggesting blind dates here!)... bigger the network bigger the chance of spotting *that* job
Good luck.
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