Making A PowerPoint Power Move

Jul. 3rd, 2025 08:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Making A PowerPoint Power Move

I've just been offered a new job in another company, so I am a few days from handing in my two-week notice at my current office. I am very excited to leave, mostly due to my boss, who is lazy, incompetent, and effectively sabotages those who work for him to make him look good and earn promotions and bonuses. I have decided that in these final weeks, I will set the record straight.

Read Making A PowerPoint Power Move

[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read This Story Contains Gluten And Apathy

Customer: "Hey, just letting you know, I think these got mislabeled. Says ‘gluten-free’ on the front, but the ingredients list wheat flour."
I take the bag and look. Sure enough, the front has a big green “GLUTEN-FREE” label, and right below it: 'enriched wheat flour' in bold.
Me: "Huh. That's... not right."

Read This Story Contains Gluten And Apathy

Dumplings for lunch

Jul. 3rd, 2025 04:50 pm
[syndicated profile] sharonlee_feed

Posted by Sharon

What went before: Did some handwritten work; tomorrow I’ll be typing. I still haven’t figured out who XX are, but I’m sure they’ll tell me bye-n-bye.

Coon Cat Happy Hour has been served up; I’ve got a couple more things to do, then I’ll be pouring a glass of wine.

Everybody have a good evening; stay safe. I ‘ll see you tomorrow.

Oh. For some reason, this got kicked up by the photo program — this would be me on my 61st birthday at The Lindsey House B&B in Rockland Maine. FWIW.

#

Thursday. Sunny and warm. Thunderstorms called for, later, with hail.

Breakfast was cream cheese on an English muffin with grapes on the side. I am back from the chiropractor, and thought I was in for the weekend, but! There’s a Dumpling Truck at the KMD Food Truck Court today, and — it just might be that I’ll have to go out again in a few. We’ll see. I mean; it’s not like I don’t have food. OTOH — dumplings.

Today, I do intend to devote most of my time to writing, dumplings or no dumplings. Tomorrow, Saturday, and Sunday will be more of the same. I know what I’m doing first off, so — all good there.

I spent some time with my Garmin Watch this morning, and to hear it tell the tale, I live a Very Stressful Life. Which I’m supposing is not impossible, Given Everything. It’s worth noting that the days when I’m, err, less stressed, are days when I’m writing, so — I’m going with that.

Tali’s fan club will be happy to know that I’ve finally found a brush that Tali likes; she was purring the whole time, and even turned over for me, so I could brush her belly.

In other news, I’m listening to Faking It by Jennifer Crusie. I’m having an OK time with it, but something about the narration itches at me. Maybe some books just aren’t meant to be read aloud? Though Steve read it to me when I was being bathed in the energy of one thousand angry suns every day. OTOH — I found Steve’s voice soothing.

My reading is A Gentleman of Questionable Judgment, the 9th Lord Julian novel, which I had somehow missed, so now catching up.

. . . and, yeah; I’m for dumplings. I was going to have stir-fry chicken and veggies for lunch, anyhow. Dumplings will go great. And it’s not like they can’t be steamed and heated up for later.

See me convince myself?

So — who has a long weekend coming up? Plans?

Sometime Later:  The chicken and mushroom dumplings are to die for.

And the lavender honey latte is good, too.

Yeah, I went crazy.

It’s summer. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

Here’s a picture of Tali, post-brushing, and the boys, Judging me:

 

Dumplings for Lunch

Jul. 3rd, 2025 12:55 pm
rolanni: (Default)
[personal profile] rolanni

What went before: Did some handwritten work; tomorrow I'll be typing. I still haven't figured out who XX are, but I'm sure they'll tell me bye-n-bye.

Coon Cat Happy Hour has been served up; I've got a couple more things to do, then I'll be pouring a glass of wine.

Everybody have a good evening; stay safe. I 'll see you tomorrow.

Oh. For some reason, this got kicked up by the photo program -- this would be me on my 61st birthday at The Lindsey House B&B in Rockland Maine. FWIW.

[caption id="attachment_13888" align="aligncenter" width="225"] OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA[/caption]

#

Thursday. Sunny and warm. Thunderstorms called for, later, with hail.

Breakfast was cream cheese on an English muffin with grapes on the side. I am back from the chiropractor, and thought I was in for the weekend, but! There's a Dumpling Truck at the KMD Food Truck Court today, and -- it just might be that I'll have to go out again in a few. We'll see. I mean; it's not like I don't have food. OTOH -- dumplings.

Today, I do intend to devote most of my time to writing, dumplings or no dumplings. Tomorrow, Saturday, and Sunday will be more of the same. I know what I'm doing first off, so -- all good there.

I spent some time with my Garmin Watch this morning, and to hear it tell the tale, I live a Very Stressful Life. Which I'm supposing is not impossible, Given Everything. It's worth noting that the days when I'm, err, less stressed, are days when I'm writing, so -- I'm going with that.

Tali's fan club will be happy to know that I've finally found a brush that Tali likes; she was purring the whole time, and even turned over for me, so I could brush her belly.

In other news, I'm listening to Faking It by Jennifer Crusie. I'm having an OK time with it, but something about the narration itches at me. Maybe some books just aren't meant to be read aloud? Though Steve read it to me when I was being bathed in the energy of one thousand angry suns every day. OTOH -- I found Steve's voice soothing.

My reading is A Gentleman of Questionable Judgment, the 9th Lord Julian novel, which I had somehow missed, so now catching up.

. . . and, yeah; I'm for dumplings. I was going to have stir-fry chicken and veggies for lunch, anyhow. Dumplings will go great. And it's not like they can't be steamed and heated up for later.

See me convince myself?

So -- who has a long weekend coming up? Plans?

Sometime Later:  The chicken and mushroom dumplings are to die for.

And the lavender honey latte is good, too.

Yeah, I went crazy.

It's summer. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.

Here's a picture of Tali, post-brushing, and the boys, Judging me:

 


Hair-Cut The Day Short

Jul. 3rd, 2025 04:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Hair-Cut The Day Short

Suddenly, the regional manager appeared at my side. He says quietly:
Regional Manager: "I want you to put down what you’re doing, clock out, and not come back until you get a haircut."

Read Hair-Cut The Day Short

2025.07.03

Jul. 3rd, 2025 07:03 am
lsanderson: (Default)
[personal profile] lsanderson
A Wisconsin brewery owner wants to shut down Fourth of July parades, both in Minocqua, where the brewery is located, and across the nation. Kirk Bangstad “says he ‘will not allow this town to comfortably celebrate its most important event of the year’ because he believes he’s been targeted by city officials,” according to Bring Me The News. Via MinnPost
https://bringmethenews.com/wisconsin-news/wisconsin-brewery-owner-plans-to-disrupt-parade-over-feud-with-officials

Scientists warn US will lose a generation of talent because of Trump cuts
Political interference and chaotic cuts to staff, programs and grants at the National Science Foundation are producing ‘devastating consequences’
Nina Lakhani
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/03/national-science-foundation-trump-cuts

New Orleans teacher fired by Catholic school for being gay says ‘it’s just time’ for discrimination to stop
Mark Richards was fired from St Francis Xavier school after an obituary identified him as his late husband’s widower
Ramon Antonio Vargas in New Orleans
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/03/new-orleans-teacher-mark-richards Read more... )

Delayed Karma Is Quite The Ride

Jul. 3rd, 2025 01:30 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysfriendly_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Delayed Karma Is Quite The Ride

Luckily, the queues aren’t very long, but on the water ride, it was thirty-five minutes. Five minutes in, we notice that somebody in the group ahead of us is telling two women to join them.
Queue jumping is not accepted under any circumstances in this theme park, and my twelve-year-old son tells them they can’t do that.

Read Delayed Karma Is Quite The Ride

james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll


Director of the nation formerly known as Canada Quinn Atherton is determined to deliver much mass murder as it takes to achieve peace, order, good government. Why do so many ingrates object?

Blight(Sleep of Reason, volume 2) by Rachel A. Rosen

Abandoning Afghan Allies

Jul. 3rd, 2025 03:24 am
[personal profile] ndrosen
The current administration is disgracing itself by denying Afghan allies any chance at admission to the United States. If you are a foreigner, I cannot blame you for being infuriated at my country; if you are a decent American, you will not be able to read the article without shame. I have to wonder about the morally vacant people who have flocked to jobs serving our current president. Even if they have made themselves deaf to the claims of honor, justice, and benevolence, can’t they see that this kind of disgraceful inhospitality is contrary to an amoral assessment of America’s national interest? In any future conflict at all like Afghanistan, any informed person considering working with us will likely keep in mind what happened to the anti-Taliban Afghans.

Are Trumpublicans, who generally wrap themselves in the flag and loudly proclaim their patriotism, too stupid to see this? Do they figure that since the big boss is a xenophobe, it would be useless to try to appeal to him? Is their proclaimed American nationalism a complete lie, and are they all Putin’s bitches? Are they confident that the country will never again be in a situation where foreign friends are needed? Are their real values: “America second (if that), Me first?”
[syndicated profile] mpr_daily_download_feed

Henry Hadley - Symphony No. 4 "North, East, South, and West": South


Ukraine National Radio Symphony Orchestra


John McLaughlin Williams, conductor


More info about today’s track: Naxos 8.559064


Courtesy of Naxos of America Inc.



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My alt-Mummy film

Jul. 2nd, 2025 11:51 pm
james_davis_nicoll: (Default)
[personal profile] james_davis_nicoll
The inspiration being the 1999 Mummy movie is not without problematic elements.

Imagine an Egyptian film company wanting to make a movie about idiots waking a horror in Canada that only the Egyptian lead can resolve.
Read more... )

Manual Override

Jul. 3rd, 2025 12:00 am
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Manual Override

Customer: "Hi. I picked this up yesterday. It's missing the manual."
My coworker glances at the box without opening it.
Coworker: "That model doesn’t come with a printed manual. You have to download it online."
Customer: "It says 'Quick Start Guide Included' on the side."

Read Manual Override

It Must Be Time For a Vacation

Jul. 2nd, 2025 05:32 pm
billroper: (Default)
[personal profile] billroper
It is clearly time for me to take some vacation days. Most everyone else is at work. :)

We use Gradle for our builds and to automate a number of tasks. One of those tasks is fetching the project files for JDeveloper from our Artifactory, which has the advantage of keeping developers who are less familiar with how things *ought* to work from accidentally checking in changes. Unfortunately, this gave me a problem over the last few days, because I am working on a big, ugly merge. I had loaded the JDeveloper files for the combined project, but the merge had left me with a ton of compile errors and JDeveloper was doing its little trick of "I can't see this perfectly good code over here" during the compile, even after I fixed things.

I decided that the right thing to do was to switch to the JDeveloper files that just look at my group's source code, get that fixed, and then go back to the integrated project. It was a great idea.

Except that Gradle would insist on compiling the code on the branch before it would let me download the JDeveloper files. That would fail (which was not a surprise; it was why I was trying to get the JDev files downloaded) and when that failed the process was done and the JDeveloper files were not downloaded.

Swearing ensued. Asking the build team for a fix ensued, but our U.S. guy is on vacation in India and the rest of the build team is in India as well and didn't seem to grasp the problem. I eventually sent one guy a screenshot of the directory listing showing that I did not actually *have* the JDeveloper files on my machine in this directory. This didn't get me a solution to the problem, but it made me feel better.

I figured I would take most of today off if I didn't get a solution. And I didn't. I answered some emails, went out for a nice lunch with Gretchen, came home, and went upstairs to take care of a few things.

And then I started researching Gradle, because I really know very little about it.

I figured out that what I needed to do was to tell Gradle to pretty please, don't run a compile when running this particular task. I still haven't figured out how to put this in the build.gradle file, but I did figure out how to get the files downloaded by changing my command line options. To wit:

"gradlew loadJDevFiles -x compileJava"

And look! I got my files.

I sent an email with the solution and went off to spend the rest of the day in the studio, because I deserve a vacation.

Starting now. :)

(More about the studio later...)
[syndicated profile] seaofstarsrpg_feed

Posted by seaofstarsrpg

Hornet all terrain droneHow dark can the future get?  Pretty dark it seems by current trends.  So, watch out, because they are watching you.

Again, we are seeing more drones and drone-related tech.  Drones are constantly in the news as they are used in warfare (in Ukraine and the Middle East) and everyone is trying to work out the best ways to deploy and to counter them. Additionally, we have ships for science and salmon, new ways to make ceramics, a post-modern town and some pop culture collectibles.

If you need to kill expensive aerial drones the in-progress Red Wasp missile (an evolution of the Stinger system) might be just the thing to do so.  The Red Wasp uses a solid fuel ramjet for greater range, something thought impossible to build into a missile of that small size just a few years ago.  Another interesting leap of technology.

A Czech company has developed a small, self-guiding transport robot which will be deployed in some numbers to Ukraine.  I would not want to be transported on a stretcher on one but they could be very useful for getting supplies around the modern battlefield.

While the US Army is working on drones that will fit in your pocket for soldiers to use for scouting.  Sounds useful to me.

But the more drones you have, the more anti-drone tech is developed.  Much of the anti-drone tech uses drones as well (go figure), such as the Iron Drone Raider system, which has drones that launch mesh nets with parachutes the immobilize and drop the offending drones gently to the ground.  The NYPD is looking into using this system.

Aboard the largest scientific ship afloat, scientists drill miles into the Earth’s crust . . . I mean the scenarios write themselves.  While it is presented as a purely scientific endeavor, I suspect grubby commercial motives are in play too.

From science to salmon, a Chinese company has launched a ship-based salmon-farming operation.  That would be an interesting place to be sent to on a mission.

Using lasers to create ceramics that can withstand immense temperatures.  I do not claim to understand how it works but the idea that you could apply the liquid ceramic precousor to it items and them convert it into a ceramic coating with a laser seems amazing to me.

This is why you want the corporations at each other’s throats and unwilling to cooperate with each other (or the government): How three Tesla vandals were caught.  The amount of cameras and interlocking data gathering systems make it very hard to do anything without being observed.  They are watching you.

An interesting place to visit and inspiration for a corporation built “utopia”, the post-modernist Italian town of Gibellina Nuova.  A fascinating place to go to but maybe not as nice to live in.

There are always the latest collectible craze and people willing to spend way to much money on them.  What will be the Labubu of the Dark Future?

Image from LPP and used without permission.

Return to another Dark Future.  See what is in other futures.

 

Tell OSHA It’s A Performance Piece

Jul. 2nd, 2025 10:00 pm
[syndicated profile] notalwaysworking_feed

Posted by Not Always Right

Read Tell OSHA It’s A Performance Piece

I work in an office supply warehouse. It’s hour six of a long shift on a national holiday, and productivity has slowly eroded into chaos. I’m organizing a shipment of printer paper while my coworker is standing on a pallet, stacking reams of paper into a wall.
Coworker: "This is my Roman Empire. I will not rest until this wall of paper is perfect."

Read Tell OSHA It’s A Performance Piece

JR Dawson launch party!

Jul. 2nd, 2025 04:41 pm
mrissa: (Default)
[personal profile] mrissa
 

My friend J.R. Dawson is launching their second book, The Lighthouse at the End of the World, and I get to be part of the festivities! We'll be at Moon Palace Books at 6:00 p.m. on July 29, having a lovely conversation about this book and the previous book and other stories and life in general, and you can come join in the fun!

Wednesday reading

Jul. 2nd, 2025 04:46 pm
redbird: full bookshelves and table in a library (books)
[personal profile] redbird
Boston's Orange Line, by Andrew Elder and Jeremy C. Fox. This is a collection of black-and-white photos, going back to the start of the old elevated orange line, with captions. This was for the "explore Boston history" square on the BPL summer reading bingo. If I'd noticed the "images of rail" series title, I wouldn't have borrowed this book. The captions are just about enough to confirm that there's more than enough to be said on the subject to make a book, but this isn't. This has a disjointed discussion of the lengthy "realigmnent" of the orange line to its current route, and a couple of paragraphs on the decision not to run an 8-lane interstate through the middle of Boston and Cambridge, and no suggestion that anything similar had happened elsewhere. Ah, well.

There are suggestions on the library website for some of the squares (including "with a green cover"), but not this one. Searching the catalog for "Boston histpry" got me this, along with, among other things, a book about the Big Dig, a book about the Great Molasses Flood (which is at least mentioned in this, with a picture of damage to the orange line), and Hawthorne's The Scarlet Letter.

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