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    Recent Best Controversial
    • The Truth about America for Americans

      Shared originally on Facebook by @PackMatt73 but this was such an excellent article I felt it'd be appreciated here. @scottalanmiller I'm sure will agree with all of this.

      ARTICLE BELOW:

      Imagine you have a brother and he’s an alcoholic. He has his moments, but you keep your distance from him. You don’t mind him for the occasional family gathering or holiday. You still love him. But you don’t want to be around him. This is how I lovingly describe my current relationship with the United States. The United States is my alcoholic brother. And although I will always love him, I don’t want to be near him at the moment.

      I know that’s harsh, but I really feel my home country is not in a good place these days. That’s not a socioeconomic statement (although that’s on the decline as well), but rather a cultural one.

      I realize it’s going to be impossible to write sentences like the ones above without coming across as a raging prick, so let me try to soften the blow to my American readers with an analogy:

      You know when you move out of your parents’ house and live on your own, how you start hanging out with your friends’ families and you realize that actually, your family was a little screwed up? As it turns out, stuff you always assumed was normal your entire childhood was pretty weird and may have actually [moderated]ed you up a little bit. You know, dad thinking it was funny to wear a Santa Claus hat in his underwear every Christmas or the fact that you and your sister slept in the same bed until you were 22, or that your mother routinely cried over a bottle of wine while listening to Elton John.

      The point is we don’t really get perspective on what’s close to us until we spend time away from it. Just like you didn’t realize the weird quirks and nuances of your family until you left and spent time with others, the same is true for country and culture. You often don’t see what’s messed up about your country and culture until you step outside of it.

      And so even though this article is going to come across as fairly scathing, I want my American readers to know this: some of the stuff we do, some of the stuff that we always assumed was normal, it’s kind of screwed up. And that’s OK. Because that’s true with every culture. It’s just easier to spot it in others (e.g., the French) so we don’t always notice it in ourselves.

      So as you read this article, know that I’m saying everything with tough love, the same tough love with which I’d sit down and lecture an alcoholic family member. It doesn’t mean I don’t love you. It doesn’t mean there aren’t some awesome things about you (BRO, THAT’S AWESOME!!!). And it doesn’t mean I’m some saint either, because god knows I’m pretty screwed up (I’m American, after all). There are just a few things you need to hear. And as a friend, I’m going to tell them to you.

      And to my foreign readers, get your necks ready, because this is going to be a nod-a-thon.

      A Little “What The Hell Does This Guy Know?” Background: I’ve lived in different parts of the US, both the deep south and the northeast. I have visited most of the US’s 50 states. I’ve spent the past three years living almost entirely outside of the United States. I’ve lived in multiple countries in Europe, Asia and South America. I’ve visited over 40 countries in all and have spent far more time with non-Americans than with Americans during this period. I speak multiple languages. I’m not a tourist. I don’t stay in resorts and rarely stay in hostels. I rent apartments and try to integrate myself into each country I visit as much as possible. So there.

      (Note: I realize these are generalizations and I realize there are always exceptions. I get it. You don’t have to send 55 emails telling me that you and your best friend are exceptions. If you really get that offended from some guy’s blog post, you may want to double-check your life priorities.)

      OK, we’re ready now. 10 things Americans don’t know about America.

      1. Few people are impressed by us

      Unless you’re speaking with a real estate agent or a prostitute, chances are they’re not going to be excited that you’re American. It’s not some badge of honor we get to parade around. Yes, we had Steve Jobs and Thomas Edison, but unless you actually are Steve Jobs or Thomas Edison (which is unlikely), then most people around the world are simply not going to care. There are exceptions of course. And those exceptions are called English and Australian people. Whoopdie-[moderated]ing-doo.
      As Americans, we’re brought up our entire lives being taught that we’re the best, we did everything first and that the rest of the world follows our lead. Not only is this not true, but people get irritated when you bring it to their country with you. So don’t.

      1. Few people hate us

      Despite the occasional eye-rolling, and complete inability to understand why anyone would vote for George W. Bush (twice), people from other countries don’t hate us either. In fact — and I know this is a really sobering realization for us — most people in the world don’t really think about us or care about us. I know, that sounds absurd, especially with CNN and Fox News showing the same 20 angry Arab men on repeat for ten years straight. But unless we’re invading someone’s country or threatening to invade someone’s country (which is likely), then there’s a 99.99% chance they don’t care about us. Just like we rarely think about the people in Bolivia or Mongolia, most people don’t think about us much. They have jobs, kids, house payments—you know, those things called lives—to worry about. Kind of like us.

      Americans tend to assume that the rest of the world either loves us or hates us (this is actually a good litmus test to tell if someone is conservative or liberal). The fact is, most people feel neither. Most people don’t think much about us.

      Remember that immature girl in high school, how every little thing that happened to her meant that someone either hated her or was obsessed with her; who thought every teacher who ever gave her a bad grade was being totally unfair and everything good that happened to her was because of how amazing she was? Yeah, we’re that immature high school girl.

      1. We know nothing about the rest of the world

      For all of our talk about being global leaders and how everyone follows us, we don’t seem to know much about our supposed “followers.” They often have completely different takes on history than we do. Here were some brain-stumpers for me: the Vietnamese were more concerned with independence (not us), Hitler was primarily defeated by the Soviet Union (not us), there is evidence that Native Americans were wiped out largely by disease and plague BEFORE Europeans arrived and not just after, and the American Revolution was partly “won” because the British invested more of their resources in fighting France (not us). Notice a running theme here?

      (Hint: It’s not all about us. The world is more complicated.)

      We did not invent democracy. We didn’t even invent modern democracy. There were parliamentary systems in England and other parts of Europe over a hundred years before we created a government. In a recent survey of young Americans, 63% could not find Iraq on a map (despite being at war with them), and 54% did not know Sudan was a country in Africa. Yet, somehow we’re positive that everyone else looks up to us.
      4. We are poor at expressing gratitude and affection

      There’s a saying about English-speakers. We say “Go f[moderated] yourself,” when we really mean “I like you,” and we say “I like you,” when we really mean “Go f[moderated] yourself.”

      Outside of getting shit-housed drunk and screaming “I LOVE YOU, MAN!”, open displays of affection in American culture are tepid and rare. Latin and some European cultures describe us as “cold” and “passionless” and for good reason. In our social lives we don’t say what we mean and we don’t mean what we say.

      In our culture, appreciation and affection are implied rather than spoken outright. Two guy friends call each other names to reinforce their friendship; men and women tease and make fun of each other to imply interest. Feelings are almost never shared openly and freely. Consumer culture has cheapened our language of gratitude. Something like, “It’s so good to see you” is empty now because it’s expected and heard from everybody.

      In dating, when I find a woman attractive, I almost always walk right up to her and tell her that a) I wanted to meet her, and b) she’s beautiful. In America, women usually get incredibly nervous and confused when I do this. They’ll make jokes to defuse the situation or sometimes ask me if I’m part of a TV show or something playing a prank. Even when they’re interested and go on dates with me, they get a bit disoriented when I’m so blunt with my interest. Whereas, in almost every other culture approaching women this way is met with a confident smile and a “Thank you.”

      1. The quality of life for the average american is not that great

      If you’re extremely talented or intelligent, the US is probably the best place in the world to live. The system is stacked heavily to allow people of talent and advantage to rise to the top quickly.

      The problem with the US is that everyone thinks they are of talent and advantage. As John Steinbeck famously said, the problem with poor Americans is that “they don’t believe they’re poor, but rather temporarily embarrassed millionaires.” It’s this culture of self-delusion that allows America to continue to innovate and churn out new industry more than anyone else in the world. But this shared delusion also unfortunately keeps perpetuating large social inequalities and the quality of life for the average citizen lower than most other developed countries. It’s the price we pay to maintain our growth and economic dominance.

      To me, being wealthy is having the freedom to maximize one’s life experiences. In those terms, despite the average American having more material wealth than citizens of most other countries (more cars, bigger houses, nicer televisions), their overall quality of life suffers in my opinion. American people on average work more hours with less vacation, spend more time commuting every day, and are saddled with over $10,000 of debt. That’s a lot of time spent working and buying crap and little time or disposable income for relationships, activities or new experiences.

      1. The rest of the world is not a slum-ridden shithole compared to us

      In 2010, I got into a taxi in Bangkok to take me to a new six-story cineplex. It was accessible by metro, but I chose a taxi instead. On the seat in front of me was a sign with a wifi password. Wait, what? I asked the driver if he had wifi in his taxi. He flashed a huge smile. The squat Thai man, with his pidgin English, explained that he had installed it himself. He then turned on his new sound system and disco lights. His taxi instantly became a cheesy nightclub on wheels… with free wifi.

      If there’s one constant in my travels over the past three years, it has been that almost every place I’ve visited (especially in Asia and South America) is much nicer and safer than I expected it to be. Singapore is pristine. Hong Kong makes Manhattan look like a suburb. My neighborhood in Colombia is nicer than the one I lived in Boston (and cheaper).

      As Americans, we have this naïve assumption that people all over the world are struggling and way behind us. They’re not. Sweden and South Korea have more advanced high speed internet networks. Japan has the most advanced trains and transportation systems. Norwegians—along with Swedes, Luxembourgers, the Dutch and Finns—make more money. The biggest and most advanced plane in the world is flown out of Singapore. The tallest buildings in the world are now in Dubai and Shanghai (and soon to be Saudi Arabia). Meanwhile, the US has the highest incarceration rate in the world.

      What’s so surprising about the world is how unsurprising most of it is. I spent a week with some local guys in Cambodia. You know what their biggest concerns were? Paying for school, getting to work on time, and what their friends were saying about them. In Brazil, people have debt problems, hate getting stuck in traffic and complain about their overbearing mothers. Every country thinks they have the worst drivers. Every country thinks their weather is unpredictable. The world becomes, err… predictable.

      1. We’re paranoid

      Not only are we emotionally insecure as a culture, but I’ve come to realize how paranoid we are about our physical security. You don’t have to watch Fox News or CNN for more than 10 minutes to hear about how our drinking water is going to kill us, our neighbor is going to rape our children, some terrorist in Yemen is going to kill us because we didn’t torture him, Mexicans are going to kill us, or some virus from a bird is going to kill us. There’s a reason we have nearly as many guns as people.

      In the US, security trumps everything, even liberty. We’re paranoid.

      I’ve probably been to 10 countries now that friends and family back home told me explicitly not to go because someone was going to kill me, kidnap me, stab me, rob me, rape me, sell me into sex trade, give me HIV, or whatever else. None of that has happened. I’ve never been robbed and I’ve walked through some of the shittiest parts of Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe.

      In fact, the experience has been the opposite. In countries like Russia, Colombia or Guatemala, people were so honest and open with me, it actually scared me. Some stranger in a bar would invite me to his house for a barbecue with his family, a random person on the street would offer to show me around and give me directions to a store I was trying to find. My American instincts were always that, “Wait, this guy is going to try to rob me or kill me,” but they never did. They were just insanely friendly.

      1. We’re status-obsessed and seek attention

      I’ve noticed that the way we Americans communicate is usually designed to create a lot of attention and hype. Again, I think this is a product of our consumer culture: the belief that something isn’t worthwhile or important unless it’s perceived to be the best (BEST EVER!!!) or unless it gets a lot of attention (see: every reality-television show ever made).

      This is why Americans have a peculiar habit of thinking everything is “totally awesome,” and even the most mundane activities were “the best thing ever!” It’s the unconscious drive we share for importance and significance, this unmentioned belief, socially beaten into us since birth that if we’re not the best at something, then we don’t matter.

      We’re status-obsessed. Our culture is built around achievement, production and being exceptional. Therefore comparing ourselves and attempting to out-do one another has infiltrated our social relationships as well. Who can slam the most beers first? Who can get reservations at the best restaurant? Who knows the promoter to the club? Who dated a girl on the cheerleading squad? Socializing becomes objectified and turned into a competition. And if you’re not winning, the implication is that you are not important and no one will like you.

      1. We are very unhealthy

      Unless you have cancer or something equally dire, the health care system in the US sucks. The World Health Organization ranked the US 37th in the world for health care, despite the fact that we spend the most per capita by a large margin.

      The hospitals are nicer in Asia (with European-educated doctors and nurses) and cost a tenth as much. Something as routine as a vaccination costs multiple hundreds of dollars in the US and less than $10 in Colombia. And before you make fun of Colombian hospitals, Colombia is 28th in the world on that WHO list, nine spots higher than us.

      A routine STD test that can run you over $200 in the US is free in many countries to anyone, citizen or not. My health insurance the past year? $65 a month. Why? Because I live outside of the US. An American guy I met living in Buenos Aires got knee surgery on his ACL that would have cost $10,000 in the US… for free.

      But this isn’t really getting into the real problems of our health. Our food is killing us. I’m not going to go crazy with the details, but we eat chemically-laced crap because it’s cheaper and tastes better (profit, profit). Our portion sizes are absurd (more profit). And we’re by far the most prescribed nation in the world AND our drugs cost five to ten times more than they do even in Canada (ohhhhhhh, profit, you sexy bitch).

      In terms of life expectancy, despite being the richest country in the world, we come in a paltry 35th—tied with Costa Rica and right behind Slovenia, and slightly ahead of Chile, Denmark, and Cuba. Enjoy your Big Mac.

      1. We mistake comfort for happiness

      The United States is a country built on the exaltation of economic growth and personal ingenuity. Small businesses and constant growth are celebrated and supported above all else—above affordable health care, above respectable education, above everything. Americans believe it’s your responsibility to take care of yourself and make something of yourself, not the state’s, not your community’s, not even your friend’s or family’s in some instances.

      Comfort sells easier than happiness. Comfort is easy. It requires no effort and no work. Happiness takes effort. It requires being proactive, confronting fears, facing difficult situations, and having unpleasant conversations.

      Comfort equals sales. We’ve been sold comfort for generations, and for generations we bought bigger houses, separated further and further out into the suburbs, along with bigger TV’s, more movies, and take-out. The American public is becoming docile and complacent. We’re obese and entitled. When we travel, we look for giant hotels that will insulate us and pamper us rather than for legitimate cultural experiences that may challenge our perspectives or help us grow as individuals.

      Depression and anxiety disorders are soaring within the US. Our inability to confront anything unpleasant around us has not only created a national sense of entitlement, but it’s disconnected us from what actually drives happiness: relationships, unique experiences, feeling self-validated, achieving personal goals. It’s easier to watch a NASCAR race on television and tweet about it than to actually get out and try something new with a friend.

      Unfortunately, a by-product of our massive commercial success is that we’re able to avoid the necessary emotional struggles of life and instead indulge in easy, superficial pleasures.

      Throughout history, every dominant civilization eventually collapsed because it became TOO successful. What made it powerful and unique grows out of proportion and consumes its society. I think this is true for American society. We’re complacent, entitled and unhealthy. My generation is the first generation of Americans who will be worse off than their parents, economically, physically and emotionally. And this is not due to a lack of resources, to a lack of education or to a lack of ingenuity. It’s corruption and complacency. The corruption from the massive industries that control our government’s policies, and the fat complacency of the people to sit around and let it happen.

      There are things I love about my country. I don’t hate the US and I still return to it a few times a year. But I think the greatest flaw of American culture is our blind self-absorption. In the past it only hurt other countries. But now it’s starting to hurt ourselves.

      So this is my lecture to my alcoholic brother—my own flavor of arrogance and self-absorption, even if slightly more informed—in hopes he’ll give up his wayward ways. I imagine it’ll fall on deaf ears, but it’s the most I can do for now. Now if you’ll excuse me, I have some funny cat pictures to look at.

      This post originally appeared on MarkManson.net. Follow @iammarkmanson on Twitter.

      Source: http://qz.com/584215/10-things-americans-get-wrong-about-america/

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: How to Lose Customers with Excessive Security

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @thanksaj said:

      The fact is that the answer of totally blocking both is likely not the best answer.

      I don't understand. If you are okay blocking the useful one of the two, why would it ever be allowed to not block the less useful and more risky? This just doesn't make sense. If you are willing to block cloud storage you should be blocking USB by default, no question. Blocking only one doesn't make any general sense. Blocking both or neither, does.

      Scott, just drop it. This discussion has run its course.

      posted in News
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    • RE: Outlook crashing when sending messages

      Yeah, when I see this it's almost always a profile issue, and it can be any of a number of things in the profile. Clearing the autocomplete cache is good, but I'd probably just rebuild the profile to play it safe...

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: USA: Veterans Day

      You beat me to it!
      http://mangolassi.it/topic/6811/happy-veterans-day

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: Firefox 33 Just Dropped

      I switched from Firefox to Chrome at the recommendation of my boss at the time in early spring of 2012. I love that Chrome has the sync feature with my bookmarks especially. I know Firefox has updated significantly over the years but they still feel behind, in my opinion. Whereas once Firefox was considered THE business alternative browser, I feel like Chrome has somewhat taken that place. Most IT people I know use Chrome.

      Did they announce what the new features were in 33? This isn't me talking as a fanboy. Just sharing an experience.

      posted in News
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    • RE: What do you think of Webroot

      @Nic said:

      Can I offer you some bubble wrap as a consolation?

      I offer to build him a bridge so he can get over it. I'm just kidding...

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: RANT: All the Issues are My Fault and You Won't Answer My Questions

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @thanksajdotcom said:

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      @scottalanmiller said:

      For for reference, if Staples just uses your name and theirs, checking via Duck Duck Go, your Spiceworks and MangoLassi (and some other) hits that are you and Staples together come right up. You are surviving simply on the fact that they are not looking to see what their employees are saying, not that any effort would not tie it together.

      And spiceworks people keep coming here just to see this stuff. Look at how many views these types of your topics get. and someone over on spiceworks posted some screenshots of this thread elsewhere online. Chances of this stuff getting see by an employer get higher and higher each time you do it.

      Most of us are trying to help, but obviously there are those that just come here to see the crash and burn.

      I appreciate that. I have a really easy time empathizing with others' pain, whether physical, emotional or mental. However, I have a very hard time empathizing with how other people interpret what I say. I'm working on that but it's a real struggle for me.

      The most important part is to stop saying it. You have recognized that you can't tell how others will see it. Now, how do you action that knowledge in a good way? You avoid the behaviour until you can determine what is safe or not.

      Think about it this way, what if you can't tell if the range top is hot? Do you put your hand on it and get burned sometimes? Or do you stop putting your hand on it at all until you figure out how to determine if it is hot or not?

      When it doubt, avoid. Play it safe.

      The other part of my problem is my own way of viewing myself. If you ever talked to me in person, I could give a more accurate demonstration, but I'm a world-class liar. I know exactly how to work it so that I can make a person totally believe one thing without actually lying most of the time. The devil is in the details. So the odd part is that, while I'm quite amazing at this, I also detest lying. In fact, I think it's pretty obvious I often are a little too honest. The biggest reason I do this has nothing to do with anyone else, but has to do with the fact that it's a coping mechanism for me. I don't do well keeping stuff bottled up. I'd much rather put everything out there and deal with the consequences than keep whatever it might be bottled up. Now the consequences at times are pretty severe, and most people would think I'm nuts. But to me, dealing with that is STILL easier than the feeling and anxiety I get keeping it bottled up. The trick I need to figure out is just knowing when to release that info/those feelings, etc.

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: DDoS Attacks on the Rise

      @scottalanmiller said:

      Or, actually, coincidental 😉

      It is coincidental, but more ironic.

      posted in News
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    • RE: CloudatCost and Pertino

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      @thanksajdotcom said:

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      You could've went over your bandwidth limits.

      First off, they have bandwidth limits? Second, that's doubtful. VERY doubtful. None of these servers use a ton of bandwidth.

      Almost any hosting service does. and they list there's pretty clearly when you buy.

      Never saw anything about a bandwidth limit. That being said, all my most bandwidth intensive servers I host myself. None of these use that much bandwidth. I can guarantee they aren't going over.

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: RANT: All the Issues are My Fault and You Won't Answer My Questions

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      @scottalanmiller said:

      For for reference, if Staples just uses your name and theirs, checking via Duck Duck Go, your Spiceworks and MangoLassi (and some other) hits that are you and Staples together come right up. You are surviving simply on the fact that they are not looking to see what their employees are saying, not that any effort would not tie it together.

      And spiceworks people keep coming here just to see this stuff. Look at how many views these types of your topics get. and someone over on spiceworks posted some screenshots of this thread elsewhere online. Chances of this stuff getting see by an employer get higher and higher each time you do it.

      Most of us are trying to help, but obviously there are those that just come here to see the crash and burn.

      I appreciate that. I have a really easy time empathizing with others' pain, whether physical, emotional or mental. However, I have a very hard time empathizing with how other people interpret what I say. I'm working on that but it's a real struggle for me.

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: DDoS Attacks on the Rise

      I love that their tag is "therealintel"! LOL Given my situation, I find that quite ironic.

      posted in News
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    • RE: CloudatCost and Pertino

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      You could've went over your bandwidth limits.

      First off, they have bandwidth limits? Second, that's doubtful. VERY doubtful. None of these servers use a ton of bandwidth.

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: What Are You Doing Right Now

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      @thanksajdotcom said:

      MSP. In retail, my manager is always waiting for me. But I was checking out of a hotel this morning and was running a bit late, and my phone got left in the car by mistake and so it was dead so I couldn't even call to let them know I was running late. Just a frustrating morning.

      Many employers will fire for being late, especially without a notice.

      Thankfully even though my shift starts at 7AM, there's really never much to do until at least 8AM as it is, so while they don't like you being late, given my current work situation, it's a little easier. I've also explained to my manager that the whole 7AM thing is a REALLY big struggle for me, which is why I'm looking to move to either second or third shift. We actually will be discussing that today, which is good. Everyone as a rule starts on first shift, so moving to second shift wouldn't be a promotion, but it'd be a good sign they are looking to keep me long-term. People they don't plan on keeping just stay on first.

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: Another US Ebola Case

      Why anyone would want to go to a Cowboys game in the first place though...unless they play the Giants or the Broncos...then it's all good.

      posted in News
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    • RE: CloudatCost and Pertino

      Pinging @scottalanmiller , @AmanBhogal and @Josh !

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: RANT: All the Issues are My Fault and You Won't Answer My Questions

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      There are other companies besides MSPs.

      The problem is that I need to either be at an MSP or a company where my hand gets to play with all the different cookie jars.

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: Apple Announcement Sept. 2014

      @Dominica said:

      @Minion-Queen said:

      www.trade-in.vzw.com

      Because of the cracked screen, my phone is worth $36.

      How much is it worth without a cracked screen? Would it be worth it to spend $75-100 to get the screen repaired?

      posted in News
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    • RE: Interview at IBM Tommorrow(26-Apr-2015)

      @scottalanmiller said:

      @thanksajdotcom said:

      @Lakshmana said:

      @scottalanmiller said:
      I have mailed the Manager at IBM,Bangalore and they dont even replied after I have mailed her

      Emailed her I assume?

      While AJ is being a little pedantic, he has a very important point. You continue not to learn from mistakes and advice. You use English slang when you are struggling with the base language. This is a bad idea. You should avoid slang as it gets you into trouble. Don't try to be clever or to fake being a native speaker. Focus on being clear and communicative. Get the point across and avoid ignoring things you don't understand and don't use terms you do not understand fully. Don't shorten words unnecessarily. Using mail instead of email is a pointless shortening, how many posts in this thread have been written because you wanted to save one character?

      While you are working on learning the language stick to trying to clear, concise writing. Work on accuracy.

      This. This times 1000! I may seem like I'm being an ass to you, but I'm trying to make a point you don't seem to be getting. Your word choice, grammar, and spelling all make it obvious you are not a native English speaker. Scott's point about trying to fake being a native English speaker is exactly right. It feels like you're trying to fit in with us or maybe even impress us by writing the way you do. However, all it does is make your message harder to read, it distracts me because all your mistakes are as blatant as a flashing neon sign at midnight, and it's also unprofessional.

      To be honest, even if your technical skills were amazing, which isn't the case, many jobs would probably disqualify you based on your level of competency with English. If it sounds like I'm coming down hard on you, I am. You ask technical questions, we give you a spelled out, step-by-step answer in many cases, and you completely ignore us.

      I want you to understand something: the way you word things might be understood by the people you work with in India, but to the rest of the world, it just makes you look lazy or incompetent. If you aren't sure what the proper use of a word is, don't use it. If you can't find a suitable replacement, ask one of us. I've offered to help you with your wording and also offered to help you improve your English. But right now, from both a technical and grammatical standpoint, it feels like you're asking question after question just to waste our time. You may sincerely want to know the answer, but if you simply refuse the answers your given or ignore them, then we can't help you.

      posted in IT Discussion
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    • RE: RANT: All the Issues are My Fault and You Won't Answer My Questions

      @PSX_Defector said:

      @thecreativeone91 said:

      @thanksajdotcom said:

      It's the reason I'm good at my job and why people come back to see ME and ONLY me

      So the store would close down if you left? Was it not open before you started?

      The first rule of being indispensable is to come to the understanding that you are totally dispensable.

      Given that Staples ran just fine without you for your time in Texas says to me that you are over-inflating your self-importance.

      Now get back to work.

      That's the thing though, they didn't. Sure, the store hasn't closed and life continued on for all its employees, but there is a difference between functioning and thriving. They can certainly function without me. They have the potential to thrive without me, but they need someone like me at the store in the tech department for that to happen, and since I left in 2013, they haven't had anyone like that. And yes, they could get someone who could meet the qualifications to do my job, but they cannot replace me at that store. The reputation I've earned in the community and with the customers is not something I gained overnight and something that no one can just walk in and have or obtain without a lot of time and commitment.

      posted in Water Closet
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    • RE: Google Voice is apparently not being killed off

      Very cool.

      posted in News
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