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>>> She is definitely in the wrong job then ;)
>>
>> Well yah. ;-)
>>
>> But if you can't do anything else, gotta earn a living somehow...
>
> Too true.
As you know, *I* am in the wrong job too. ;-)
>> The doctor has signed her off work with depression. She doesn't have
>> to go back to work until next month.
>
> That’s a start :) Give her my best and she might spend some time on
> jobserve.com ;)
Nah. She's going to spent some time SLEEPING. At least, I damned well
*hope* she is. This is getting silly...
...but sure, _after_ that, we'll see.
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scott wrote:
> you suggest that a company does something a *harder* way and then
> make *less* money?
Indeed, that was one of our standard (internal) responses to some of the
customer requests on the systems I wrote for First Virtual.
"What a good idea! Let's do *more* work for *less* money! We'll get right
on that!"
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Is God willing to prevent naglams, but unable?
Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing, to prevent naglams?
Then he is malevolent.
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>> I'm not sure how much of that would be relevant to mobile phone
>> network technology.
>
> What about cable TV, or internet companies? It's the same basic stuff,
> with different bits going over wires with different connectors on the end.
>
> It's not like she knows how the inside of the test equipment works.
> She's using the equipment to do the diagnostics.
A rectified loop is a rectified loop, no matter what the wire's supposed
to carry. (BTW, I have no clue WTF that means.)
On the other hand, all Internet companies use BT's wires, so.......
Cable TV might work though.
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Invisible wrote:
> No, no I was not... I thought it was just general corporate brokenness.
> Didn't realise it was specific to the telecomms industry. ;-)
It's not, but a lot of his jokes (especially early on) have inside
references to the telco business.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Is God willing to prevent naglams, but unable?
Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing, to prevent naglams?
Then he is malevolent.
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Invisible wrote:
> A rectified loop is a rectified loop, no matter what the wire's supposed
> to carry. (BTW, I have no clue WTF that means.)
Rectified electricity flows in only one direction. You know what a loop is.
> On the other hand, all Internet companies use BT's wires, so.......
Only on the outside. And indeed, if she's a trouble-shooter at an ISP,
knowing what department to call when BT screws up the ISP's lines is
actually a plus. After working at the phone company, I got hired by many
companies wanting to do something funky with phones, just because I knew the
lingo.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
Is God willing to prevent naglams, but unable?
Then he is not omnipotent.
Is he able, but not willing, to prevent naglams?
Then he is malevolent.
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Invisible wrote:
>>>> She is definitely in the wrong job then ;)
>>>
>>> Well yah. ;-)
>>>
>>> But if you can't do anything else, gotta earn a living somehow...
>>
>> Too true.
>
> As you know, *I* am in the wrong job too. ;-)
>
No! Never, you don't say?
I would never have guessed :P
>>> The doctor has signed her off work with depression. She doesn't have
>>> to go back to work until next month.
>>
>> That’s a start :) Give her my best and she might spend some time on
>> jobserve.com ;)
>
> Nah. She's going to spent some time SLEEPING. At least, I damned well
> *hope* she is. This is getting silly...
>
> ....but sure, _after_ that, we'll see.
Yeah, depression does that for you. If she is on medication that can
take time to kick in and sometimes it not the right thing.
There is a difference between depression, down-in-the dumps and what a
f’n rotten situation. Often doctors can’t tell the difference :(
Buy her flowers :)
--
Best Regards,
Stephen
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Invisible wrote:
>>> I just ment that her existing knowledge is largely only useful to her
>>> current employer.
>>
>> No wonder you’ve never changed jobs :P
>
> Hey, *my* knowledge isn't even useful to my *current* employer! :-P
>
But it could be useful to another employer :-P
>> Now, just put your mother on the newsgroup so we can speak to someone
>> sensible. ;)
>
> Not at the speed she types at...
That might mean we got quality instead of quality :-)
--
Best Regards,
Stephen
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Darren New wrote:
> Invisible wrote:
>> I just ment that her existing knowledge is largely only useful to her
>> current employer.
>
> That's what we're telling you. You're mistaken.
>
> That's like saying your knowledge about computers is only applicable to
> maintaining machiens for medical labs.
>
True to all!
--
Best Regards,
Stephen
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Darren New wrote:
> "What a good idea! Let's do *more* work for *less* money! We'll get
> right on that!"
>
It’s called a fixed price contract that some B*ST*RD salesman sold. LOL
--
Best Regards,
Stephen
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Jim Henderson wrote:
> I'm not sure I follow....
I mean, real-life based TV/movies trial cases show, in a dramatized way,
how things happened to some people, the abuse, the trial and the output
of the trial. Of course is not any guarantee that things will go that way.
> It's an interesting experience.
Hmmm, I suppose it is... being part of the human attempt to brig balance
to their own existence...
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