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Sometimes it's mission impossible to please people. All you have to do is give it your all, so you can always say with good conscious that you did your best.
Good luck on the job hunt! Every end brings a new beginning.
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Good riddance to bad management. I hope you do well at the next stop along the way.
I'm waiting to win a lottery so I can retire, myself. My former boss, the GM, retired last month, and I'm the only one qualified to replace him. In fact, I've been planning to do so for ten years. But the reason I refuse to apply for the position is the same reason he retired - the tribe that owns the company recently appointed our most incompetent, irresponsible and downright dangerous employee to the Board of Directors. Such a conflict of interest is appalling, and entirely inappropriate; I can't blame our GM for leaving, and envy him for being financially able to do so. I can't.
I'd look elsewhere, but in my profession - engineering - age discrimination is alive and well, and completely ignored by the law.
Will Rogers never met me.
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Quote: I'd look elsewhere, but in my profession - engineering - age discrimination is alive and well, and completely ignored by the law.
Oh nice to know it isn't only this side O' the pond!
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glennPattonWork wrote: The last mess I was (am still partly) involved in has taught me the value emails so when you do 'thing' and 'thing' gets complained about ('I told you to do it differently to that!', 'No, you said do it like I have done it here, here is the email',
I am glad you followed the advice people gave you about documenting what was requested, but that doesn't mean they won't blame you for their bad decisions, especially when you are gone; "last out first blamed". BTW you won't be invited to the meeting where it is decided that you are to blame and your services are no longer needed.
Unfortunately, that will be your legacy in repayment for all those long days and weekends you put in whilst your manager was out playing golf. Glen was the one who messed it up! He should have alerted us to any hardware instability, ... (add a litany of other things for which you were responsible)
I hope this is a lesson to you that no job lasts forever so you should not do extraordinary things to make things work unless it is your company and you will reap the rewards if things go well. If there isn't time to do it in a regular work day then the project is understaffed.
I am not saying that an occasional long day or weekend day (notice I didn't say days) may be required, but if it becomes a regular occurrence then get another job. Life is too short to waste it on other peoples problems only to be blamed when you are given a kick out the door.
No one ever on their death bed lamented "I wish I had worked more". Usually they lament that I worked too much at the expense of their personal lives.
Actually, this is one of life's experiences where you can learn a lesson. It could have been worse, you could have slaved away for years working unreasonable hours only to be let go in the end.
Life is short. Do the things that are important to you.
Once you lose your pride the rest is easy.
I would agree with you but then we both would be wrong.
The report of my death was an exaggeration - Mark Twain
Simply Elegant Designs JimmyRopes Designs
I'm on-line therefore I am.
JimmyRopes
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For example:
If you want to peruse the news in the morning, do you just go to news.google.com (or whatever your favorite website(s) is)?
Do you just go to the Code Project home page and see what's new?
Do you just scroll through social media and forum posts until you find something amusing or interesting to actually read?
In other words, do you use any special software (not that any actually exists, methinks) to do any preprocessing so you don't have to spend all that time bouncing between websites to see if anything is of interest?
Yes, there's feed readers, but how many people actually use them or set up triggers for keywords or, say, a post by your favorite authors?
What I'm getting at is, it seems like we're still in the stone ages when it comes to using computers to filter out the crap and alert us to when something that we have said we're actually interested in occurs. Is that not the case?
So I ask you, how time consuming is your "process" of perusing information on the Internet, that you do every day as part of your routine, and how do you think that could be improved?
Marc
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I (use/used)* to use 'Pulse' on my tablet.
Basically, News.google, TheRegister, Engadget, CodeProject, Facebook, LinkedIn, Mashable.........that's where I live. Haven't really found any other site that has me hooked that I keep going back to it over and over. (Well any I would want to mention here! )
*wtf, I just confused myself....which is it
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In this context: 'used'
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That is what I put on my 2nd revision, then it didn't look /read right......
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English never does look right. It's a massive kludge!
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Everything I need to know, I get here at CP or in the lounge.
Marc Clifton wrote: it seems like we're still in the stone ages when it comes to using computers to
filter out the crap and alert us to when something that we have said we're
actually interested in occurs. As with anything created by people, there's going to be a spin, gimmick or some kind of pitch or method to extract something of value from you. That will never, ever change.
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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Well, I have a couple of papers I read online - one local and one national. I also read the CP news digests and the BBC. Beyond that, I have Flipboard set up just the way I like it to aggregate things for me.
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: I have Flipboard set up just the way I like it to aggregate things for me.
Interesting -- my new phone wanted me to set up flipboard, it seemed too invasive.
Marc
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5 REM CODEPROJECT FIRST!
7 GOTO 30
10 READ GMAIL
20 READ BBC
30 READ CODEPROJECT
40 GOTO 10
50 END
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I usually start in *cough* Yahoo, which redirects me on real websites, where I can read news. (In case you wonder: Yahoo, because I have a private mail account there that I opened in 2001).
No active social media reading.
No special software ( was not aware that something like that exists, but hey, there is an app for everything today).
I use my tablet a lot while watching TV : to get answers to games before the contestants, to check for actor bio, to check for movie reviews or read about the start if I catch up after it started, to follow live tweets (especially on soccer or special live broadcasts), to read some news items I usually receive via newsletters in my mail.
Midday routine : www.viedemerde.fr[^], xkcd (and what-if), which usually has me surf on news or scientific articles.
Night routine : www.imgur.com[^], www.alt-tab.com[^]
Workday routine : CP !
~RaGE();
I think words like 'destiny' are a way of trying to find order where none exists. - Christian Graus
Entropy isn't what it used to.
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I used to have iGoogle. From there I could read the news headlines.
I haven't found anything like it that I like though, so I just stopped reading news altogether. I'm a happier person now (ignorance really is bliss!)
As for CP I check the homepage to see what's new.
And of course the Daily Insider
It's an OO world.
public class SanderRossel : Lazy<Person>
{
public void DoWork()
{
throw new NotSupportedException();
}
}
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I miss iGoogle, tried a couple of wannabes but they were nowhere as useful.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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What exactly is it that you guys miss about it? Not saying that I'll get around to it soon, but I've been thinking about building a similar thing for myself for a while. If others have use for it, all the better.
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Fast, easily configurable with plenty of sources and a good range of widgets. NO ADS.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Mostly I go directly to the sites I'm interested in. I'd estimate that's 70-85% of my reading total. RSS feeds to low volume (generally once/day or less) sites that tend to have interesting content is maybe 5%. Stuff sent by friends/linked on forums/etc makes up the rest.
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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- Lounge
- Soapbox
- Insider News
- Facebook
When I have my son's iPad, I also use Flipboard.
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I use RSS feeds. A quick check of BBC and PhysicsWorld is usually ample.
I wrote the reader program while learning about threading, socket programming and custom controls. Third most used program I have after the IDE and a browser.
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enhzflep wrote: I wrote the reader program while learning about threading, socket programming and custom controls.
Very cool!
Marc
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But how would you filter it?
Keywords wouldn't be much use, because they would restrict you to a few topics (half of which you're probably not interested in), and would have to be updated/added to so much that they'd end up filtering nothing out.
Theoretically, a backprop routine could be trained to provide you with lists of pages that would be of interest, but that would probably take so long to train that your interests would change three times before it was finished.
I can't really see a locally-installed app being able to deliver "pages that will be of interest to Markie" (or perhaps "Marcie", in your case), so maybe it would have to be down to some on-line giant to deliver pages-that-might-be-of-interest.
But, to avoid being bombarded with sites that pay the on-line giant, just use the newspaper method, and only "buy" the news sites that you like/trust/enjoy reading, or use some kind of crowd-sourcing/social-sharing/message-board solution, and only visit pages recommended by other individuals involved in the solution.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Mark_Wallace wrote: But how would you filter it?
NLP (Natural Language Processing). Extracts the semantic meaning of the content. I'm putting together an article on that at the moment.
Mark_Wallace wrote: Keywords wouldn't be much use, because they would restrict you to a few topics (half of which you're probably not interested in), and would have to be updated/added to so much that they'd end up filtering nothing out.
True, and even with NLP, one would have to set up triggers of entities, concepts, etc.
Mark_Wallace wrote: I can't really see a locally-installed app being able to deliver "pages that will be of interest to Markie" (or perhaps "Marcie", in your case), so maybe it would have to be down to some on-line giant to deliver pages-that-might-be-of-interest.
Not necessarily -- give it some RSS feeds, have the app know how to read through Facebook/Twitter/whatever, etc.
Marc
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Marc Clifton wrote: NLP (Natural Language Processing). Extracts the semantic meaning of the content. I'm putting together an article on that at the moment.
I wanna read it!
Jeremy Falcon
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