Yeah I gave up trying to do work from home a few years ago mostly. Because if you get extra shit done, that sets a baseline you either get more work or fewer resources. The expectation to work 50, 60 hour weeks is what kills you. But lately the other highly competent programmer in my area has been signing up for 2nd/3rd on-call shifts (for which he gets paid) so the extra work has to go elsewhere. And its hard to tell your boss's boss's, his boss, her boss, and half a dozen director level staff plus the CEO of the client who paid your company 8 figures for a product and pays 7 figures a year for maintenance that you're busy watching Dr Who on Netflix.
The last call I was literally one of two sub-Director level people on the call, and they haven't even gotten around to giving me a "Senior" in my title because there's 8 out of 20 guys with at least 2 years more seniority than me in my module without it, and only 1 in 20 that has been with the company in my area that is less tenured than I am in general. The CEO is railing about not having our most senior people working on an issue (when a competent 22 year senior programmer is) so they call me, the 5 year non-senior, in for reinforcements.
/probably won't do much today as passive aggressive revenge
I heard they are always a great way to show someone how much you love them.
I'm going to spend all of my money and then take out a loan for 100 thousand dollars just to buy a diamond so big it puts strain on my wife's finger, just so she knows that I love her.
Also it has to be a blood diamond, because those are more rare.
are YOU on the beer list?
0
Options
DynagripBreak me a million heartsHoustonRegistered User, ClubPAregular
and it's almost time for another dude's going away lunch. Hope I don't seem like I'm trying to upstage him.
You just be, Winky. You can't be mopey one day then all manic the next so... fix that.
It's like you've never heard of bipolar disorder
Dude, we're talking about a mythical concept. I am saying it's like a unicorn since everyone suffers from being sad then happy to varying degrees. I realize that comment could've used some sort of sarcastic emoticon as maybe you thought I was actually believing in MPDGs or MPDGs. OH SHIT THE ACRONYM IS THE SAME FOR GUYS AND GIRLS. AIIIIEEEEEEEE.
Anyway, if you have bipolar, I hope you're being treated! I lost a friend to it.
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
edited May 2012
Chu is gentle. Like Fezzik.
I remember thinking Chu was like six inches taller than I was but maybe that was incorrect.
OnTheLastCastle on
0
Options
amateurhourOne day I'll be professionalhourThe woods somewhere in TennesseeRegistered Userregular
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
are YOU on the beer list?
0
Options
VanguardBut now the dream is over. And the insect is awake.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
/notanuclearphysicist
0
Options
TL DRNot at all confident in his reflexive opinions of thingsRegistered Userregular
Chu, I would like to fight you in an MMA-style gym setting.
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
Yeah, we went over for pages why the anti nuke crowd is dead wrong in the global warming thread.
The constant retort was BUT RADIATION! GOOD JOB PLAYING POKER WITH OUR LIVES!
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
OK look. If your wife is talking about Fifty Shades and you haven't tied her to the bed recently, It's a good bet you have missed out on some important hints she is dropping.
0
Options
OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
Oh god, can we get Donkey Kong to read some more stuff. I miss his movie trailer tones.
The Fifty Shades Trilogy was developed from a Twilight fanfiction originally entitled Master of the Universe and published episodically on fanfiction websites under the penname "Snowqueen's Icedragon". The piece featured characters named after Stephenie Meyer's characters in Twilight, Edward Cullen and Bella Swan. After comments concerning the sexual nature of the material James removed the story from the fanfiction websites and published it on her own website, FiftyShades.com. Later she decided to rewrite Master of the Universe as an original piece with the principal characters renamed Christian Grey and Anastasia Steele, and shortly prior to its publication withdrew the fanfiction version from her website.[1]
This reworked and extended version of Master of the Universe was split into three parts. The first, entitled Fifty Shades of Grey, was released as an e-book and a print-on-demand paperback in May 2011 by The Writers' Coffee Shop, a virtual publisher based in Australia. The second volume, Fifty Shades Darker, was released in September 2011, and the third, Fifty Shades Freed, followed in January 2012. The Writers' Coffee Shop had a restricted marketing budget and relied largely on book blogs for early publicity, but sales of the novel were boosted by word-of-mouth recommendation. The book's erotic nature and perceived demographic of its fanbase as being composed largely of married women over thirty led to the book being dubbed "Mommy Porn" by some news agencies.[2][3]
By the release of the final volume in January of 2012, news networks in the United States had begun to report on the Fifty Shades trilogy as an example of viral marketing and of the rise in popularity of female erotica, attributing its success to the discreet nature of e-reading devices.[4][5] Due to the heightened interest in the series, the license to the Fifty Shades trilogy was picked up by Vintage Books for re-release in a new and revised edition in April 2012.
The IRS sent my Tax forms back! AGAIN!!! I guess it was because of my response to the question : "List all dependents?" I replied -"12 million illegal immigrants; "3 million crack heads; "42 million unemployable people on food stamps, "2 million people in over 243 prisons; "Half of Mexico ; and "535 fools in the U.S. House and Senate.”
Apparently, this was NOT an acceptable answer
Have you learned your lesson about getting tax advice from Wesley Snipes.
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
/notanuclearphysicist
Indian Point isn't on an oceanic flood plane. I do agree it's an interesting place to put some reactors, but the likelihood of there being a major tidal event there are quite a bit smaller than Fukashima. I know they found that fault in 2008, and that's a concern, but Indian Point was built years before that fault was found. I think the biggest risk of Indian Point is that it's so close to NYC, it makes it a huge target for attack.
I'll concede it's not where I would have built that plant though.
The problem is radiation is a fucking scary thing. A flood or an oil fire you can understand, because you can see the dangerous thing and get out of the way, but radiation is mostly invisible, and by the time you might discover you're covered in it, you might be already dead.
The plot traces the relationship between recent college graduate Anastasia Steele and manipulative billionaire Christian Grey. Steele is required by Grey to sign a contract allowing him complete control over her life. As she gets to know him she learns that his sexual tastes involve bondage, domination and sadism, and that childhood abuse left him a deeply damaged individual. In order to be his partner she agrees to experiment with BDSM, but struggles to reconcile who she is (a virgin who has never previously had a boyfriend) with who Christian wants her to be: his submissive, to-do-with-as-he-pleases partner in his "Red Room of Pain." [6][4]
0
Options
VanguardBut now the dream is over. And the insect is awake.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
Look guys, you can build the best house you want but if an asteroid hits it you're still going to die.
YAWN
Wake me up the next time we have a-quite literal-perfect storm of horrible events like Fukushima.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
/notanuclearphysicist
Indian Point isn't on an oceanic flood plane. I do agree it's an interesting place to put some reactors, but the likelihood of there being a major tidal event there are quite a bit smaller than Fukashima. I know they found that fault in 2008, and that's a concern, but Indian Point was built years before that fault was found. I think the biggest risk of Indian Point is that it's so close to NYC, it makes it a huge target for attack.
I'll concede it's not where I would have built that plant though.
It's more because it exists very close to a fault line. Granted, they were unaware of this when it was constructed, that doesn't mean shit couldn't go wrong because of it.
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
It's not that the book is erotic or well-written; it's all to do with timing. There hasn't been a romance novel to melt women like butter in such and such years so the next novel publicized as erotic will be regarded as erotic by default even if it isn't good at all. It scratches an itch and that's good enough.
0
Options
VanguardBut now the dream is over. And the insect is awake.Registered User, __BANNED USERSregular
The plot traces the relationship between recent college graduate Anastasia Steele and manipulative billionaire Christian Grey. Steele is required by Grey to sign a contract allowing him complete control over her life. As she gets to know him she learns that his sexual tastes involve bondage, domination and sadism, and that childhood abuse left him a deeply damaged individual. In order to be his partner she agrees to experiment with BDSM, but struggles to reconcile who she is (a virgin who has never previously had a boyfriend) with who Christian wants her to be: his submissive, to-do-with-as-he-pleases partner in his "Red Room of Pain." [6][4]
I just don't understand why people can't read good BDSM literature. Like De Sade or Sacher Von Masoch.
0
Options
TL DRNot at all confident in his reflexive opinions of thingsRegistered Userregular
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
Middle class, suburban wives are long overdue for a sexual revolution.
America in general, really, still has huge issues with a Puritan conception of sex and sexualit.
TL DR on
0
Options
amateurhourOne day I'll be professionalhourThe woods somewhere in TennesseeRegistered Userregular
Okay, what the fuck is up with the Fifty Shades of Grey?
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
OK look. If your wife is talking about Fifty Shades and you haven't tied her to the bed recently, It's a good bet you have missed out on some important hints she is dropping.
She hasn't read it yet. Are you saying that I'm in for sexy times? Cause I'm all about that.
The plot traces the relationship between recent college graduate Anastasia Steele and manipulative billionaire Christian Grey. Steele is required by Grey to sign a contract allowing him complete control over her life. As she gets to know him she learns that his sexual tastes involve bondage, domination and sadism, and that childhood abuse left him a deeply damaged individual. In order to be his partner she agrees to experiment with BDSM, but struggles to reconcile who she is (a virgin who has never previously had a boyfriend) with who Christian wants her to be: his submissive, to-do-with-as-he-pleases partner in his "Red Room of Pain." [6][4]
Oh.
So that's the book I overheard two mom's at work talking about!
Posts
The last call I was literally one of two sub-Director level people on the call, and they haven't even gotten around to giving me a "Senior" in my title because there's 8 out of 20 guys with at least 2 years more seniority than me in my module without it, and only 1 in 20 that has been with the company in my area that is less tenured than I am in general. The CEO is railing about not having our most senior people working on an issue (when a competent 22 year senior programmer is) so they call me, the 5 year non-senior, in for reinforcements.
/probably won't do much today as passive aggressive revenge
QEDMF xbl: PantsB G+
"No," and now that you know that, you'll understand why I can never go back to the Gracie Academy in Houston.
It's like you've never heard of bipolar disorder
I'm going to spend all of my money and then take out a loan for 100 thousand dollars just to buy a diamond so big it puts strain on my wife's finger, just so she knows that I love her.
Also it has to be a blood diamond, because those are more rare.
submission grappling sounds pretty homoerotic too
look why don't you be like pony and just embrace the gayness of it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fJ9rUzIMcZQ&ob=av3e
Dude, we're talking about a mythical concept. I am saying it's like a unicorn since everyone suffers from being sad then happy to varying degrees. I realize that comment could've used some sort of sarcastic emoticon as maybe you thought I was actually believing in MPDGs or MPDGs. OH SHIT THE ACRONYM IS THE SAME FOR GUYS AND GIRLS. AIIIIEEEEEEEE.
Anyway, if you have bipolar, I hope you're being treated! I lost a friend to it.
i guess i am sensitive to this because some dudes at my gym are gay and do not find this funny
Isn't that from a scene in Fifty Shades of Grey?
You are missing out. It is the Omega of Civ games.
It also feels cool as hell when the tech you research leads to the "Edit Universe" project.
Well keep in mind that when I make fun of it that you could totally beat the shit out of me.
Every American thinks Chernobyl is going to happen in their backyard, because they don't understand nuclear power or reactor construction. Our worst nuclear accident, Three Mile Island, was a partial meltdown, and to this day, medically negligible amounts of radiation are all we can find. This was in 1979, when the regulatory climate was quite a bit more lax than it is today.
I'm not saying it can't happen, shit happens, but it's pretty fucking unlikely in the US. We build our reactor chambers to stand up to a 747 slamming in to them. This isn't soviet era Russia, and we don't generally build our reactors on oceanic flood planes.
I remember thinking Chu was like six inches taller than I was but maybe that was incorrect.
My wife was talking about it last night and some a-hole on tv was saying it's going to cause the next baby boom because erotic books make women horny and then they fuck and have babies.
I like me some books, but I don't get how a book is ::movietrailervoice:: So erotic, it changes the course of a civilization's breeding habits...
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
/notanuclearphysicist
I'd want a few adderall to even the odds, obvs.
Awesome, thanks for asking.
Yeah, we went over for pages why the anti nuke crowd is dead wrong in the global warming thread.
The constant retort was BUT RADIATION! GOOD JOB PLAYING POKER WITH OUR LIVES!
So
UGH
This series has 150 shades of grey in it.
...
The round of chess comes first... right? Right?
OK look. If your wife is talking about Fifty Shades and you haven't tied her to the bed recently, It's a good bet you have missed out on some important hints she is dropping.
Oh god, can we get Donkey Kong to read some more stuff. I miss his movie trailer tones.
oh
my god
Have you learned your lesson about getting tax advice from Wesley Snipes.
Indian Point isn't on an oceanic flood plane. I do agree it's an interesting place to put some reactors, but the likelihood of there being a major tidal event there are quite a bit smaller than Fukashima. I know they found that fault in 2008, and that's a concern, but Indian Point was built years before that fault was found. I think the biggest risk of Indian Point is that it's so close to NYC, it makes it a huge target for attack.
I'll concede it's not where I would have built that plant though.
I think there are legitimate concerns, particularly about existing plants. Indian Point, for example, seems like it exists in a pretty absurd location.
/notanuclearphysicist
It's more because it exists very close to a fault line. Granted, they were unaware of this when it was constructed, that doesn't mean shit couldn't go wrong because of it.
Let me go fetch the flamethrower...
It's not that the book is erotic or well-written; it's all to do with timing. There hasn't been a romance novel to melt women like butter in such and such years so the next novel publicized as erotic will be regarded as erotic by default even if it isn't good at all. It scratches an itch and that's good enough.
I just don't understand why people can't read good BDSM literature. Like De Sade or Sacher Von Masoch.
Middle class, suburban wives are long overdue for a sexual revolution.
America in general, really, still has huge issues with a Puritan conception of sex and sexualit.
She hasn't read it yet. Are you saying that I'm in for sexy times? Cause I'm all about that.
Oh.
So that's the book I overheard two mom's at work talking about!