109 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2024
  2. Jan 2024
  3. Dec 2023
  4. Sep 2023
      • for: climate change - false binary, jobs vs environment, example, example climate change - false binary, climate departure, leverage point

      • example: false environmental binary

        • activists need to better communicate the false binary that climate denialists keep using to pull the wool over people's eyes.
        • jobs vs environment ignores the short term threat of environmental degradation
        • this is where participatory climate departure can show the threat in a visceral, concrete way that is far more compelling you the average person than any intellectual attempt to explain the differences example - climate change - false binary
    1. For a socially and economically sustainable growth path, the labor displacement in the sectors ofapplication must be counterbalanced by job creation within the same and other sector

      it's 2023 and I don't see anyone planning for this massive job displacement, I think that the hollywood strikes are a sign of things to come

  5. Aug 2023
  6. Jun 2023
    1. Unemployment among those who have attained secondary education (vocational) isnearly 12% compared with the country average of about 6.25%. The government’spolicy push, and a budget allocation of almost 20% of GDP for education have notonly helped expand the network of educational institutions across 6000 inhabitedislands but have also improved the progression of cohorts. For example, thoseachieving lower secondary education went up from 31% in 1994 to 52% in 2013
  7. Mar 2023
    1. Industrial concerns doubtless suffer enormous losses from the employment of persons whose mental ability is not equal to the tasks they are expected to perform. The present methods of trying out new employees, transferring them to simpler and simpler jobs as their inefficiency becomes apparent, is wasteful and to a great extent unnecessary. A cheaper and more satisfactory method would be to employ a psychologist to examine applicants for positions and to weed out the unfit. Any business employing as many as five hundred or a thousand workers, as, for example, a large department store, could save in this way several times the salary of a well-trained psychologist.

      I think this is interesting because they are saying that intelligence testing could be used to determine job positions. I agree that employing a psychologist to examine applications for positions would be beneficial because the employer doesn't have to worry about certain things the psychologist would look for. I agree that using a psychologist to weed people out of decision of employment could be effective because many people are applying, but the employers only want certain people for that job. I think this is relevant to the history of psychology because there are some companies who use people to determine who is deemed fit for the company, and this is what they wanted to start doing so they could find the best employees for that particular job.

  8. Jan 2023
    1. I've seen a bunch of people sharing this and repeating the conclusion: that the success is because the CEO loves books t/f you need passionate leaders and... while I think that's true, I don't think that's the conclusion to draw here. The winning strategy wasn't love, it was delegation and local, on the ground, knowledge.

      This win comes from a leader who acknowledges people in the stores know their communities and can see and react faster to sales trends in store... <br /> —Aram Zucker-Scharff (@Chronotope@indieweb.social) https://indieweb.social/@Chronotope/109597430733908319 Dec 29, 2022, 06:27 · Mastodon for Android

      Also heavily at play here in their decentralization of control is regression toward the mean (Galton, 1886) by spreading out buying decisions over a more diverse group which is more likely to reflect the buying population than one or two corporate buyers whose individual bad decisions can destroy a company.

      How is one to balance these sorts of decisions at the center of a company? What role do examples of tastemakers and creatives have in spaces like fashion for this? How about the control exerted by Steve Jobs at Apple in shaping the purchasing decisions of the users vis-a-vis auteur theory? (Or more broadly, how does one retain the idea of a central vision or voice with the creative or business inputs of dozens, hundreds, or thousands of others?)

      How can you balance the regression to the mean with potentially cutting edge internal ideas which may give the company a more competitive edge versus the mean?

  9. Dec 2022
    1. I think one of the the things that 00:00:27 really separates us from the high primates is that we're tool builders and I read a a study that measured the efficiency of locomotion for various species on the planet the Condor used 00:00:41 the least energy to move a kilometer and humans came in with a rather unimpressive showing about a third of the way down the list it was not not too proud of a showing for the crown of 00:00:53 creation so that didn't look so good but then somebody at Scientific American had the insight to test the efficiency of locomotion for a man on a bicycle and a man on a bicycle or human on a bicycle 00:01:07 blew the Condor away completely off the top of the charts and that's what a computer is to me what a computer is to me is it's the most remarkable tool that we've ever come up with and it's the 00:01:19 equivalent of a bicycle for our minds

      Cleaned up quote:

      I think one of the [the] things that really separates us from the high primates is that [uh] we're tool builders. And I read a [uh] study that measured the efficiency of locomotion for various species on the planet. The Condor used the least energy to move a kilometer and [uh] humans came in with a rather unimpressive showing about a third of the way down the list. It was not [not] too proud of a showing for the crown of creation. So [uh] that didn't look so good, but then somebody at Scientific American had the insight to test the efficiency of locomotion for a man on a bicycle. And a man on a bicycle or human on a bicycle blew the Condor away—completely off the top of the charts and that's what a computer is to me. [uh] What a computer is to me is: it's the most remarkable tool that we've ever come up with and it's the equivalent of a bicycle for our minds.<br /> —Steve Jobs in Memory & Imagination: New Pathways to the Library of Congress. Documentary. Krainin Productions, 1990.

      Snippet from full documentary: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ob_GX50Za6c

    1. Musical Chairs

      The authors analogize educational levels and unemployment rates to playing musical chairs to underline the zero sum game being played in the labor market.

      This becomes a useful argument for why a universal basic income ought to be implemented, not to mention the bullshit job thesis which pairs with it.

  10. Nov 2022
    1. At one point, Eno had to earn money as paste-up assistant for the advertisement section of a local paper for three months. He quit and became an electronics dealer by buying old speakers and making new cabinets for them before selling them to friends.[12]

      One moment this article describes Eno as eschewing conventional jobs, but then describes him going back to two different ones. The second one as an electronics dealer is at least tangential to his music/sound career and may have helped give him some tools for operating in the space which he wanted to be.

    2. In 1964, after earning four O-levels, including one in art and maths, Eno had developed an interest in art and music and had no interest in a "conventional job".[12]

      When did the definition of a so-called "conventional job" emerge? Presumably after the start of the industrial revolution when people began moving from traditional crafts, home work, farm work, and other general subsistence work.

      What defines a non-conventional job? Does it subsume caring work? What does David Graeber have to say about this in Bullshit Jobs?

    1. I've been told since the first day I started working at the Division of Hospital Medicine at @UCSF that my work doesn't bring in $ to cover my salary. It's a narrative of manufactured scarcity, a common tactic in capitalism. The CEO is making $1.85 million plus bonuses.

      — Rupa Marya, MD (@DrRupaMarya) November 4, 2022
      <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

      A Hospitalist’s economic value is in what we *save* the system in terms of quality-driven care and patient throughput (DC/unit time), not in how much we bring in through profees. Because of how the system is structured, you’ll only see our value when we aren’t there.

      — Rupa Marya, MD (@DrRupaMarya) November 4, 2022
      <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>

      This sounds a lot like hospitalists fall under David Graeber's thesis in Bullshit Jobs that the more necessary and useful you are the less you're likely to get paid and be valued.


      I suspect the ability to track an employees' direct level of productivity also fits into this thesis. One can track the productivity of an Amazon warehouse worker or driver, but it's much more difficult to track the CEOs direct productivity.

  11. Jul 2022
    1. Think about the sad essay we all used to write for your (insert language here) class: back then you didn’t have permission to generate original ideas.

      I'm not sure that's the correct diagnosis.

      Alternative take: you were not, at that point in your life, equipped to understand that you could be generating new ideas and that you should walk away from that writing course with an appreciation for writing as a vehicle for what you'd like to accomplish with a given subject/format. It's fine that you didn't—many people don't—and your instructors, institution, parents, community, etc. probably could have done a better job at communicating this to you, but it was there, and it was the point all along.

  12. Jun 2022
  13. May 2022
    1. Remote Design Jobs

      Find the latest remote design jobs from the best companies in the world. You’ll find junior and senior positions for a web designer, graphic designer, UI/UX designer, product designer, and many more!

      Remote Design Jobs

      See the latest remote design jobs from the best companies in the industry. You’ll find junior and senior positions for web designer, graphic designer, UI/UX designer, product designer, visual designer, design researcher, creative director and many more!

      About Smooth Remote

      Smooth Remote is simply the smoothest remote job board around for anyone on the lookout for remote work. Whether you’re looking for smooth sailing in an established corporation or a new adventure in an innovative startup — your journey starts here. Breeze through the latest remote jobs and find your next destination.

      Calling all budding design geniuses and crafty creatives! Remote design jobs are here and ready for the taking! It doesn’t matter what level of experience you have, as we cover everything from entry-level work right up to senior C-Level positions. Have you done other remote design jobs before? That’s great. We’ve also got photography work listed, so it’s not just computer-created imagery you can work on. Similarly, if you’re more the conceptual type with an artistic flair for the unique — we’ll have something for you to get your paws into on our remote design jobs board.

      Remote design jobs can include work for small companies on their first set of business cards, to wholescale work like defining a new brand identity for a business seeking to diversify their offering. Whether you’re keen to craft a logo for a brand-new business, or help a larger corporation on its rebrand mission — you’ll find what you’re after on our specialised remote design jobs board. If you want to make sure you land the dream role you’re after, you can always check our blog for some pointers on how best to apply for remote design jobs.

      Click here to know more about remote design jobs.

    1. Remote Marketing Jobs

      About Smooth Remote

      Smooth Remote is simply the smoothest remote job board around for anyone on the lookout for remote work. Whether you’re looking for smooth sailing in an established corporation or a new adventure in an innovative startup — your journey starts here. Breeze through the latest remote jobs and find your next destination.

      Whether you’re looking for a junior or senior position, remote marketing jobs are on the rise with plenty of exciting and flexible positions tailored around your remote requirements.

      Remote marketing jobs include everything from writing small-scale product descriptions all the way up to Marketing Directors. There are entry-level remote marketing jobs here, to roles that require a decade or more of experience. From high-flying, high-growth startups to fully fledged blue-chip corporations, they all need a marketing department.

      And marketing departments are chock-full of the kind of remote marketing jobs you’re looking for, no matter your level of experience. And, because it covers so many different areas like writing, design, SEO, and strategy — it won’t be long before you start interviewing for the kind of remote marketing jobs you’ve got your eye on. It’s not a bad idea if you haven’t got the right level of experience to look out for some smaller entry-level freelance positions, and then once you’ve built up a bigger portfolio to try your hand at applying for the more senior remote marketing jobs we’ve got available.

      Smooth Remote covers it all! And, if you have any questions about any of our positions, please don’t hesitate to drop us a message and we’ll give you some handy hints to help get you on your way to the remote marketing jobs you’re looking for. You can also check our blog for some helpful interview tips. Whether you’re a word wizard with an eye for catchy headlines, or a designer with an eye for cool concepts, you’ll find what you’re after on our remote marketing jobs board.

      Click here to know more about remote marketing jobs.

    1. Remote HR Jobs

      Find the latest remote HR jobs from the most people-centric companies. Whether you’re looking for recruiter jobs, talent acquisition jobs, or anything related to benefits coordination, people operations, or employee relations, we've got you covered.

      About Smooth Remote

      Smooth Remote is simply the smoothest remote job board around for anyone on the lookout for remote work. Whether you’re looking for smooth sailing in an established corporation or a new adventure in an innovative startup — your journey starts here. Breeze through the latest remote jobs and find your next destination.

      Remote HR Jobs

      Find the latest remote HR jobs here. Whether you’re looking for recruiter jobs, talent acquisition jobs or anything related to benefits coordination, people operations or employee relations, we make sure to list the best remote offers around for HR professionals.

      You know what else? Remote HR jobs cover everything from basic administration like file organisation and data input to jobs to more senior remote HR jobs like handling a company’s entire backroom operations! Whether you’re looking to help a startup soar to new heights or you’re looking to use your previous experience in remote HR jobs to help an enterprise go to the next level of growth, you’re sure to find something you like on our remote HR jobs board. So why not take a look, assess your options, and apply. In no time at all you’ll find the kind of work you’re looking for. Need any help? Don’t hesitate to check our blog to point you in the right direction for remote HR jobs.

      Click to know more about remote hr jobs.

    1. Find remote jobs, smoothly!

      Find the best curated latest remote jobs from home in top categories and work anywhere! For remote developers, designers, and more. The smoothest board with 100% fully remote jobs.

      About Smooth Remote

      Smooth Remote is simply the smoothest remote job board around for anyone on the lookout for remote work. Whether you’re looking for smooth sailing in an established corporation or a new adventure in an innovative startup — your journey starts here. Breeze through the latest remote jobs and find your next destination.

      Remote Marketing Jobs

      Whether you’re looking for a junior or senior position, remote marketing jobs are on the rise with plenty of exciting and flexible positions tailored around your remote requirements.

      Remote marketing jobs include everything from writing small-scale product descriptions all the way up to Marketing Directors. There are entry-level remote marketing jobs here, to roles that require a decade or more of experience. From high-flying, high-growth startups to fully fledged blue-chip corporations, they all need a marketing department. And marketing departments are chock-full of the kind of remote marketing jobs you’re looking for, no matter your level of experience.

      And, because it covers so many different areas like writing, design, SEO, and strategy — it won’t be long before you start interviewing for the kind of remote marketing jobs you’ve got your eye on. It’s not a bad idea if you haven’t got the right level of experience to look out for some smaller entry-level freelance positions, and then once you’ve built up a bigger portfolio to try your hand at applying for the more senior remote marketing jobs we’ve got available.

      Click here to know more about fully remote jobs.

  14. Apr 2022
    1. Benefits:

      5 weeks flexible time off (vacation and sick time)
      10 paid holidays
      10% Growth Time each week
      Up to 14 weeks parental leave (8 weeks at 100% of salary)
      1 week of conference attendance (and up to $3,000 of expense)
      ESOP Employee stock ownership program - Test Double is 100% employee owned
      New computer hardware purchase every 3 years
      Co-working space reimbursement (1/2 rent up to $500 monthly)
      2 week Sabbatical leave after 5th year
      2 company-wide retreat experiences each year
      Health, Dental & Vision Insurance (we pay 100% of premiums for agents and their families)
      Short and Long Term Disability
      Retirement contribution match up to 3% of salary
      Life Insurance
      AD&D (Canadian-base Agents Only)
      
  15. Dec 2021
    1. you are going to have social, functional, emotional jobs to be done that you’re solving for with your donation.  You might have some functional goals around wanting to achieve a certain result in society and some sort of some benefit whether it’s eradicating a disease or helping to educate an underserved population. Or maybe you’re donating to your university that you went to that you feel a strong sense of affiliation to.  Then, I suppose there are, there are emotional social jobs to be done as well related to how you feel about fulfilling your personal values. Maybe you’re trying to project, demonstrate to your family a certain set of values. 

      Jobs To Be Done that donors are fulfilling - three potential types of jobs to be done: social, functional and emotional

  16. Nov 2021
    1. Ο κ. Θάνος Παράσχος, Entrepreneur, Συνιδρυτής Συλλόγου Νεανικής Επιχειρηματικότητας με τη θεματική: «Ευκαιρίες για επιχειρηματίες τεχνολογίας μέσω του Greek Startup Universe»

      Listed people to know for startups.

    2. Ο κ. Γρηγόρης Ζωντανός, Serial Entrepreneur, με τη θεματική: «Πρακτικά παραδείγματα του Work from anywhere»

      Informative presentation for working in remotely.

  17. Oct 2021
    1. There were multiple and important jobs that could come out of crating A manuscript. you have scribes, Artist to create the drawings in the manuscript to keep the reader interested.

  18. Sep 2021
    1. c. 19, s. 700

      Jobs, Growth and Long-term Prosperity Act, SC 2012, c 19, s. 700:

      • removed the previous s. 2(2)
      • replaced it with: "(2) Unless otherwise indicated, references in this Act to “this Act” include regulations made under it and instructions given under subsection 14.1(1)."
    1. Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday announced that Terran Orbital will invest $300 million in Florida’s Space Coast by bringing its commercial spacecraft and constellation facility -- and 2,000 new jobs -- to Space Florida on Merritt Island.

      This is a micro starlight company which is also into the idea of the swarm.

  19. Jul 2021
    1. Employees are less likely to work in manufacturing (7.2 percent in blue districts, 11 percent in red districts) and more likely to work in digital services (2.5 percent compared to 1.1 percent).
    2. Blue districts have attracted the expanding segments of the U.S. population and workforce; half their residents are non-white. Red districts are 27 percent non-white.
  20. Jun 2021
    1. Mike: Yeah. But we were used to it though. I was used to it at least, because growing up my mom didn't have a job so she couldn't provide for us even if she wanted to, because she's illegal. So what we would do is we would make fake CDs, and every morning I would just wake up, go to different little towns and stuff, sell CDs.

      Time in the US, Homelife, Parents/ Step-Parents/ Jobs

  21. May 2021
    1. The problem with US Big Tech is bigger, deeper – iceberg-dimensioned, you might say – and not even remotely blockchain-sized or shaped. Leslie Daigle has described the consolidation of the entire Internet stack under the hierarchical and totalizing business models of US tech firms as “climate change for the Internet’. If we don’t fix it, I personally do not believe we will be able to fix much else. That’s why my life’s work is helping to fix it. And by fix, I mean destroy.

      I want this career!

  22. Feb 2021
    1. To be selected for the Top 100 is to be anointed by Jobs, an honor not necessarily based on rank. Jobs referred to the group, but not the conclave, in an interview several years ago with Fortune. “My job is to work with sort of the Top 100 people,” he said. “That doesn’t mean they’re all vice presidents. Some of them are just key individual contributors. So when a good idea comes … part of my job is to move it around [and] … get ideas moving among that group of 100 people.” Privately Jobs has spoken even more strongly about the Top 100’s importance. “If he had to recreate the company, these are the 100 people he’d bring along” is how one former Apple executive describes Jobs’ characterization.

      进入前100名是由乔布斯指定的,这一荣誉不一定基于排名。几年前接受《财富》杂志(Fortune)采访时,乔布斯提到了这个组织,但没有提到秘密会议。"我的工作是和最顶尖的100个人一起工作,"他说。"这并不意味着他们都是副总裁。其中一些只是关键的个人贡献者。因此,当一个好的想法出现时......我的工作之一就是把它传播出去......让创意在100人的团队中传播。" 私下里,乔布斯更强烈地表达了 "100人"的重要性。一位苹果前高管这样描述乔布斯:"如果他要重新创建公司,他会带的就是这100人"。

    1. 总结下来有以下三点:

      1.在 Jobs 看到 Alto(第一台基于 GUI 的计算机)和 Smalltalk(面相对象编程语言)之前,其实已经有几百万人看过它们了。一方面,是因为 PARC 相对开放;另一方面,则是因为相关文章已经被发表在了科学美国人(Scientific American)等杂志上。那么,我们是该赞叹 Jobs,还是该让其他人面壁呢?

      2.Jobs 太过被 GUI 吸引,以至于忽略了同时展示给他的另外两个重要产品,有多重要?它们分别是以太网(Ethernet)和面向对象编程(object-oriented programming),所以你懂的……

      3.就算被惊艳到且不吝赞美,Jobs 还是会说「还不够完美」(but it was flawed and incomplete),这也是他在不是屋子里最聪明的人却又想表现得顶尖(top gun)时的常用办法。

    1. “Look Steve. You know, you’ve made something that is perfect for 2-year-olds and perfect for 92-year-olds. But everybody in-between learns to use tools.”

      「看 Steve。你知道,你所做的对于 2 岁和 92 岁的人来说都是完美的。但中间的每个人需要学习使用工具」。

  23. Jan 2021
  24. Nov 2020
    1. The GUI was initially developed as one of many innovative new research projects at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center1. Silicon Valley being a small place back then, Steve Jobs got himself a tour one day, and just flat out fell in love with their GUI.

      The GUI was first developed at Xerox's Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). Silicon Valley being a small place at the time, Steve Jobs had people around him prod him to take a tour, which he took them up on. When he first saw the GUI they were working on, he knew it would be the future.

    1. In 1995 Steve Jobs could still remember it exactly. In an interview with Robert X. Cringely for the PBS show “Triumph of the nerds” he said:I had three or four people (at Apple) who kept bugging that I get my rear over to Xerox PARC and see what they are doing. And, so I finally did. I went over there. And they were very kind. They showed me what they are working on. And they showed me really three things. But I was so blinded by the first one that I didn’t even really see the other two. One of the things they showed me was object oriented programming – they showed me that but I didn’t even see that. The other one they showed me was a networked computer system… they had over a hundred Alto computers all networked using email etc., etc., I didn’t even see that. I was so blinded by the first thing they showed me, which was the graphical user interface. I thought it was the best thing I’d ever seen in my life. Now remember it was very flawed. What we saw was incomplete, they’d done a bunch of things wrong. But we didn’t know that at the time but still thought they had the germ of the idea was there and they’d done it very well. And within – you know – ten minutes it was obvious to me that all computers would work like this some day. It was obvious. You could argue about how many years it would take. You could argue about who the winners and losers might be. You could’t argue about the inevitability, it was so obviousSteve Jobs about his visit to Xerox PARC – Clip from Robert Cringley’s TV documentation “Triumph of the Nerds“.

      Steve Jobs when given a tour at the Xerox PARC in 1979 was so struck by the GUI that they were developing that he could not even process the other things he was shown (Object Oriented Programming and Networked Computing).

      "And within - you know - ten minutes it was obvious to me that all computers would work like this some day. It was obvious. You could argue about how many years it would take. You could argue about who the winners or losers might be. You couldn't argue about the inevitability, it was obvious."

      This reminds me of the moment Roam first clicked for me.

  25. Oct 2020
    1. I can't help but wonder what Jonah Goldberg's review of this book will be given his prior effort earlier this year?

      I'm also reminded here of Mark Granovetter's ideas that getting a job is more closely tied to who you know. One's job is often very closely tied to their identity, and even more so when the link that got them their job was through a friend or acquaintance.

  26. Aug 2020
    1. Remote jobs for junior developers.

      Remote jobs board for junior developers.

  27. Jul 2020
    1. raditional pathways through schooling toward stable careers are an option for fewer young people; in their current form, schools can only deliver opportunity to a shrinking proportion of youth.

      New jobs are being created; we may be preparing students for jobs that don't even exist yet

  28. May 2020
  29. Apr 2020
    1. Where to Find Freelance Jobs Online

      More than a third of the US workforce is made up of freelancers, and this is a trend that is set to grow in the future. Freelancing can offer a great platform for achieving a better work-life balance, it can offer improved flexibility and control, and it can open you up to a more diverse range of professional opportunities.

      Finding freelance work is not always a walk in the park. With freelance sites offering different kinds of jobs, pay scales and terms, it can be challenging to root out the best jobs. Using the wrong sites can cause you to waste time and effort, and it may also prevent you from finding genuine freelance jobs that suit your skill set. To save you time and maximize your chances of success in the search for freelance work, we’ve put together a list of the best places to find freelance positions and projects online.Freelance Jobs Online

  30. Mar 2020
    1. Creativity is just connecting things. When you ask creative people how they did something, they feel a little guilty because they didn’t really do it, they just saw something. It seemed obvious to them after a while. —Steve Jobs (via lifehacker and Zettel no. 201308301352)

      in other words, it's just statistical thermodynamics. Eventually small pieces will float by each other and stick together in new and hopefully interesting ways. The more particles you've got and the more you can potentially connect or link things, the better off you'll be.

  31. Jan 2020
    1. "Apple research transferred more stuff into product than any other lab I can think of, including Hewlett-Packard and IBM," the source said, but Jobs wasn't aware enough of the role ARL played in developing current Apple technology before deciding to cut the group's funding, he noted.
  32. Dec 2019
    1. During 1995, a decision was made to (officially) start licensing the Mac OS and Macintosh ROMs to 3rd party manufacturers who started producing Macintosh "clones". This was done in order to achieve deeper market penetration and extra revenue for the company. This decision lead to Apple having over a 10% market share until 1997 when Steve Jobs was re-hired as interim CEO to replace Gil Amelio. Jobs promptly found a loophole in the licensing contracts Apple had with the clone manufacturers and terminated the Macintosh OS licensing program, ending the Macintosh clone era. The result of this action was that Macintosh computer market share quickly fell from 10% to around 3%.
  33. Aug 2019
  34. doc-0k-c0-docs.googleusercontent.com doc-0k-c0-docs.googleusercontent.com
    1. But these policies have become much more expensive in recent years. Annual premiums for a family plan cost almost $20,000, on average, last year,with workers contributing about $5,550 and employers paying the rest, according to another Kaiser survey.Since 2008, average family premiums have increased 55%, twice as fast as workers' earnings and three times as fast as inflation, according to Kaiser

      Family insurance 20k, which meas workers and employers have to pay the rest.

    2. Roughly half of Americans --or more than 150 million people --get their health insurance through their jobs today.Three-quarters of the public have favorable views of work-based coverage, according to a new poll by the Kaiser Family Foundation. Of those with such plans, 86% rate their coverage as either "excellent" or "good

      Half of the US pays health insurance with they work benefits,which is amazing but it has getting more expensive in the recent years. PT.1

  35. Jul 2019
    1. The Apple of Steve Jobs needed HyperCard-like products like the Monsanto Company needs a $100 home genetic-engineering set.
    2. The reason for this is that HyperCard is an echo of a different world. One where the distinction between the “use” and “programming” of a computer has been weakened and awaits near-total erasure.  A world where the personal computer is a mind-amplifier, and not merely an expensive video telephone.  A world in which Apple’s walled garden aesthetic has no place. What you may not know is that Steve Jobs killed far greater things than HyperCard.  He was almost certainly behind the death of SK8. And the Lisp Machine version of the Newton. And we may never learn what else. And Mr. Jobs had a perfectly logical reason to prune the Apple tree thus. He returned the company to its original vision: the personal computer as a consumer appliance, a black box enforcing a very traditional relationship between the vendor and the purchaser. Jobs supposedly claimed that he intended his personal computer to be a “bicycle for the mind.” But what he really sold us was a (fairly comfortable) train for the mind. A train which goes only where rails have been laid down, like any train, and can travel elsewhere only after rivers of sweat pour forth from armies of laborers. (Preferably in Cupertino.) The Apple of Steve Jobs needed HyperCard-like products like the Monsanto Company needs a $100 home genetic-engineering set. The Apple of today, lacking Steve Jobs — probably needs a stake through the heart.
  36. May 2019
    1. Mateus Prado - DevOps Engineers: por que é tão difícil contratar?

      Há falte de profissionais prontos para o mercado que exige DevOps. Compare o que o Mateus precisa com os tópicos que cobrimos em nossa certificação LPI DevOps Tools. Aproveite para seguir os tópicos em https://wiki.lpi.org/wiki/DevOps_Tools_Engineer_Objectives_V1 para criar seu programa de estudos para se tornar um bom profissional DevOps.

    1. Field Engineer Story

      First field engineer in the field of telecommunications and networks:

      Telecommunication engineering has seen immense advances in the recent years and thus, the role of a field engineer has also evolved. Telecommunication engineering is among the most evolving industries in the world. It is a branch of electrical engineering and it dates back to the 18th century when there were beacons and telegraphs used for communication.

      The first field engineer in the field of telecommunications and networks was Claude Chappe, who was a French engineer. Then we have a long list of field engineers such as Thomas Edison, Carlos Slim, and many more. After the advent of computer networks and the internet in the 20th century, the role of a field engineer completely changed.

      Who created the first telecom company that offers a link between consumer and employees?

      The telecom industry is expected to expand even more in the coming years, but to date, the world's top telecommunication companies have reached a market value of over $50 billion. China Mobile Ltd., Verizon Communications Inc., and AT&T Inc. are the leaders in the world of telecommunication service providers. These companies serve as a link between the consumer and the employees, allowing them to communicate whether they're using traditional wired telephones or mobile phones.

      We created the FE On Demand Freelance Marketplace Platform to streamline engagement between field engineers and businesses looking for them.

  37. Mar 2019
    1. Welcome to AAACE The mission of the American Association for Adult and Continuing Education (AAACE) is to provide leadership for the field of adult and continuing education by expanding opportunities for adult growth and development; unifying adult educators; fostering the development and dissemination of theory, research, information, and best practices; promoting identity and standards for the profession; and advocating relevant public policy and social change initiatives.

      This is the website of the American Association for Adult and Continuing Education. This website offers information on the annual conference, as well as online journals and scholarly publications. There is information about membership. Rating 3/5 The site does not contain a great deal of information but it seems important to include a professional association in this set of links.

    1. Resources & Tools

      This is the web page of the Association for Talent Development, formerly know as the American Association for Training and Development. The specific page that I am bookmarking is for their resource collection. There are job aids, job announcements, discussion boards, and professional conferences, though some items can only be accessed with membership. Rating 4/5

    1. WorkIt comes first. Creative projects from around the network.WorkingAll about working here, and the people who do.NewsThe latest media coverage + insights from us.AboutWho we are, where to find us.ContactHow to get in touch.Follow us onFacebookTwitterInstagramOfficesPortland224 NW 13th AvePortland, OR 97209USA503 937 7000AmsterdamHerengracht 258-2661016 BV AmsterdamThe Netherlands+31 20 712 6500New York150 Varick StNew York, NY 10013USA917 661 5200Tokyo1-7-13, KamimeguroMeguro-ku, TokyoJapan 153-0051+81 3 5459 2800London16 Hanbury StLondon E1 6QRUK+44 20 7194 7000Shanghai1035 Changle RoadShanghai 200031ChinaDelhi314, DLF South CourtSaketNew Delhi 110017 India+91 11 4200 9595 São PauloRua Natingui, 442 Vila MadalenaSão Paulo – SP 05443-000Brazil+55 11 3937-9400Click to revealPlay VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:09/Duration Time 0:09Loaded: 0%Progress: 100.00%Non-Fullscreen+PDX Nike: Dream Crazier Click to revealPlay VideoPauseCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:12Loaded: 0%Progress: 3.41%Non-Fullscreen+NYC Bud Light: Ingredients Click to revealPlay VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:11/Duration Time 0:11Loaded: 0%Progress: 100.00%Non-Fullscreen+PDX Coca-Cola: A Coke is a Coke Click to revealPlay VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:05/Duration Time 0:14Loaded: 0%Progress: 38.53%Non-Fullscreen+PDX TurboTax: 2019 Tax Season Campaigns Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:08Loaded: 0%Progress: 6.70%Non-Fullscreen+PDXOld Spice: Men Have Skin TooOld Spice’s Newest Global Brand Ambassador Deon Cole Reminds the World: Men Have Skin Too.View work Back to Back: Fast Company Names W+K #1 Most Innovative In Advertising for the Second Year in a RowFor staying two steps ahead of culture—for Nike, KFC, and more.Read the story Wieden+Kennedy is a global, independent agency that creates strong and provocative relationships between good companies and their customers. +AMSØrsted: Hello To A Better FutureEncouraging the next generation to make green choices.View work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:10Loaded: 0%Progress: 7.64%Non-Fullscreen+SHNike: DRIBBLE &___DRIBBLE &___ is a reminder that athletes can be much, much more than just athletes. View work From Fast Company: "Wieden+Kennedy just keeps doing it"The largest remaining independent agency strives to make advertising that transcends branding and drives the pop-culture conversation.Read the story Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:14Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+SHNike: Shanghai's Never Done Nike’s “Shanghai's Never Done” celebrates the never-satisfied spirit of Shanghai athletes by centering on a man who seems stuck in the past.View work +LDNDeliveroo: Food FreedomOur debut campaign for Deliveroo celebrates the freedom to have what you want, when you want it, where you want itView work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:09Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+NYCFord: Built Ford Proud Our first Ford work spotlights the innovation and manufacturing might of America’s favorite automotive brand.View work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:06Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+PDXNike: Dream CrazyDon’t ask if your dreams are crazy. Ask if they’re crazy enough.View work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:07Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+AMSInstagram: Parent ToolsA series of online videos showcasing the instant power of Instagram’s tools.View work +AMSThe Case For ChaosW+K Amsterdam's Martin Weigel breaks down the difference between what the corporation wants and what creativity needs.Read the story Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:08Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+SPNike BrasileiragemFor the 2018 World Cup, we celebrated a new generation while throwing back to an iconic spot.View work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:12Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+LDNThree: Phones Are GoodThree takes on the phone cynics with a new brand campaign.View work Play VideoPlayCurrent Time 0:00/Duration Time 0:06Loaded: 0%Progress: 0.00%Non-Fullscreen+NYCBud Light: Dilly DillyA cultural phenomenon starts with two simple words.View work <div class="video-react-controls-enabled video-react-paused video-react-user-active video-react-workinghover video-react content__preview__image__video_preview " style="width:100%px;height:100%px;" tabindex="-1"><video class="video-react-video content__preview__image__video_preview " muted="" preload="auto" loop="" playsinline="" src="//videos.ctfassets.net/ckso4uqg4vio/4JxXPjosgwW6Iiw4Ea2gCc/ef88449c842f6ff4300dc88cdd3f7578/Shiseido-previewvideo.mp4"></video><div class="video-react-loading-spinner content__preview__image__video_preview "></div><button class="video-react-big-play-button video-react-big-play-button-left content__preview__image__video_preview big-play-button-hide" type="button" aria-live="polite" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Play Video</span></button><div class="video-react-control-bar video-react-control-bar-auto-hide content__preview__image__video_preview "><button class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-play-control video-react-control video-react-button video-react-paused" type="button" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Play</span></button><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-volume-menu-button-horizontal video-react-vol-3 video-react-volume-menu-button video-react-menu-button-inline video-react-control video-react-button video-react-menu-button" role="button" tabindex="0"><div class="video-react-menu"><div class="video-react-menu-content"><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-slider-horizontal video-react-slider" tabindex="0" aria-label="volume level" aria-valuenow="100.00" aria-valuetext="100.00%" aria-valuemin="0" aria-valuemax="100"><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-volume-level" style="width:100.00%;"><span class="video-react-control-text"></span></div></div></div></div></div><div class="video-react-current-time video-react-time-control video-react-control content__preview__image__video_preview "><div class="video-react-current-time-display" aria-live="off"><span class="video-react-control-text">Current Time </span>0:00</div></div><div class="video-react-time-control video-react-time-divider content__preview__image__video_preview " dir="ltr"><div><span>/</span></div></div><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-duration video-react-time-control video-react-control"><div class="video-react-duration-display" aria-live="off"><span class="video-react-control-text">Duration Time </span>0:00</div></div><div class="video-react-progress-control video-react-control content__preview__image__video_preview "><div class="video-react-progress-holder content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-slider-horizontal video-react-slider" tabindex="0" aria-label="video progress bar" aria-valuenow="NaN" aria-valuetext="0:00" aria-valuemin="0" aria-valuemax="100"><div data-current-time="0:00" class="video-react-play-progress video-react-slider-bar" style="width:NaN%;"><span class="video-react-control-text"><span>Progress</span>: NaN%</span></div></div></div><button class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-icon-fullscreen video-react-fullscreen-control video-react-control video-react-button video-react-icon" type="button" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Non-Fullscreen</span></button></div></div>+TYOShiseido WASO: All Things Beautiful Come From NatureTo launch a new product for a new audience, we created a digital/mobile campaign that fused nature, technology and art.View work It’s Not (All) Rocket Science: How Brand Mission Guided KFC’s TurnaroundHow the Colonel became the King of branded everything. Read the story <div class="video-react-controls-enabled video-react-paused video-react-user-active video-react-workinghover video-react content__preview__image__video_preview " style="width:100%px;height:100%px;" tabindex="-1"><video class="video-react-video content__preview__image__video_preview " muted="" preload="auto" loop="" playsinline="" src="//videos.ctfassets.net/ckso4uqg4vio/gRmHQGU4QoYIKooaUsCGY/4a4ef51b1efa473aef02399ab7067d64/Nike-dadading-previewvideo.mp4"></video><div class="video-react-loading-spinner content__preview__image__video_preview "></div><button class="video-react-big-play-button video-react-big-play-button-left content__preview__image__video_preview big-play-button-hide" type="button" aria-live="polite" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Play Video</span></button><div class="video-react-control-bar video-react-control-bar-auto-hide content__preview__image__video_preview "><button class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-play-control video-react-control video-react-button video-react-paused" type="button" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Play</span></button><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-volume-menu-button-horizontal video-react-vol-3 video-react-volume-menu-button video-react-menu-button-inline video-react-control video-react-button video-react-menu-button" role="button" tabindex="0"><div class="video-react-menu"><div class="video-react-menu-content"><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-slider-horizontal video-react-slider" tabindex="0" aria-label="volume level" aria-valuenow="100.00" aria-valuetext="100.00%" aria-valuemin="0" aria-valuemax="100"><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-volume-level" style="width:100.00%;"><span class="video-react-control-text"></span></div></div></div></div></div><div class="video-react-current-time video-react-time-control video-react-control content__preview__image__video_preview "><div class="video-react-current-time-display" aria-live="off"><span class="video-react-control-text">Current Time </span>0:00</div></div><div class="video-react-time-control video-react-time-divider content__preview__image__video_preview " dir="ltr"><div><span>/</span></div></div><div class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-duration video-react-time-control video-react-control"><div class="video-react-duration-display" aria-live="off"><span class="video-react-control-text">Duration Time </span>0:00</div></div><div class="video-react-progress-control video-react-control content__preview__image__video_preview "><div class="video-react-progress-holder content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-slider-horizontal video-react-slider" tabindex="0" aria-label="video progress bar" aria-valuenow="NaN" aria-valuetext="0:00" aria-valuemin="0" aria-valuemax="100"><div data-current-time="0:00" class="video-react-play-progress video-react-slider-bar" style="width:NaN%;"><span class="video-react-control-text"><span>Progress</span>: NaN%</span></div></div></div><button class="content__preview__image__video_preview video-react-icon-fullscreen video-react-fullscreen-control video-react-control video-react-button video-react-icon" type="button" tabindex="0"><span class="video-react-control-text">Non-Fullscreen</span></button></div></div>+DLNike: DaDaDingWe made a music video to show the power of women in sport. And it was FIERCE. AS. (You Know)View work +NYCLyft: StaycationGetting New Yorkers off their block and into an exotic (local) destination.View work The work comes f |WorkWorkingNewsAboutContactPortland224 NW 13th AvePortland, OR 97209USA503 937 7000New BusinessMaggie Jenningsmaggie.jennings@wk.com1 503-937-7838AmsterdamHerengracht 258-2661016 BV AmsterdamThe Netherlands+31 20 712 6500New BusinessBen Proutben.prout@wk.com+316 52 86 71 49New York150 Varick StNew York, NY 10013USA917 661 5200New BusinessJacqueline Steelejacqueline.steele@wk.com1 917-661-5265Tokyo1-7-13, KamimeguroMeguro-ku, TokyoJapan 153-0051+81 3 5459 2800New BusinessRyan Fisherryan.fisher@wk.com81-80-4753-8114London16 Hanbury StLondon E1 6QRUK+44 20 7194 7000New BusinessZoe Mitchellwklondon.newbiz@wk.com+44 207 194 7000Shanghai1035 Changle RoadShanghai 200031ChinaNew BusinessBryan Tilsonbryan.tilson@wk.com86 21 5158 3975Delhi314, DLF South CourtSaketNew Delhi 110017 India+91 11 4200 9595 New BusinessGautham Narayanannewbizdelhi@wk.com+91 11 4200 9595São PauloRua Natingui, 442 Vila MadalenaSão Paulo – SP 05443-000Brazil+55 11 3937-9400New BusinessFernanda Antonellifernanda.antonelli@wk.com+55 11 3937 9401© Wieden Kennedy 2018 · Legal StuffFollow us onFacebookTwitterInstagram

      I applied for an internship here 3 years in a row after graduating from portfolio school. Never got an interview. This is me failing harder.

  38. Dec 2018
    1. SELECT sj.name , sja.* FROM msdb.dbo.sysjobactivity AS sja INNER JOIN msdb.dbo.sysjobs AS sj ON sja.job_id = sj.job_id WHERE sja.start_execution_date IS NOT NULL AND sja.stop_execution_date IS NULL

      View current running jobs SQL

  39. May 2018
  40. Dec 2017
  41. Oct 2017
    1. mong other things, guild regulations set up different rates of taxation and quotas for the distribution of raw materials and jobs among members.5
    2. Most people were employed in manufacturing or the retail trade, largely in the areas of food, clothing, and construction, in which the bulk of demand was concentrated

      Most people were employed in manufacturing or the retail trade, largely in the areas of food, clothing, and

      construction, in which the bulk of demand was concentrated

  42. Nov 2016
    1. Online tutoring with its growth and popularity in all over the world has become an excellent place for the job seekers with mastery in almost any subject, academic or others like music and arts. Click on the website of any online tutoring company in UK and you will find that they require teacher for any subject you know. However, the demand of the tutors varies from subject to subject.

  43. Oct 2016
  44. Jul 2016
    1. But rather than allowing a massive reduction of working hours to free the world’s population to pursue their own projects, pleasures, visions, and ideas, we have seen the ballooning not even so much of the “service” sector as of the administrative sector, up to and including the creation of whole new industries like financial services or telemarketing, or the unprecedented expansion of sectors like corporate law, academic and health administration, human resources, and public relations. And these numbers do not even reflect on all those people whose job is to provide administrative, technical, or security support for these industries, or for that matter the whole host of ancillary industries (dog-washers, all-night pizza deliverymen) that only exist because everyone else is spending so much of their time working in all the other ones. These are what I propose to call “bullshit jobs.”
  45. Jun 2016
    1. Title: The dying breed of craftsmen behind the tools that make scientific research possible - LA Times

      Keywords: government-funded research opened, snake glass coils, fuse glass beakers, organic chemistry, research hubs, world war, experienced glassblowers, glassblowers remain, church laboratory, befallen glassblowing, glass manufacturer, glass technicians, cost-cutting world, jobs tend, entry-level jobs

      Summary: Hunkered down in the sub-basement of the Norman W. Church Laboratory for Chemical Biology, underneath a campus humming with quantum teleportation devices, gravity wave detectors and neural prosthetics, Rick Gerhart chipped away at a broken flask.<br>Peering into the dancing flames, he examined his work for wrinkles — imperfections invisible to the untrained eye.<br>“It not only should be functional,” he said, smoothing the rim with a carbon rod, “it has to look good.”<br>Here in Caltech’s one-man glass shop, where Gerhart transforms a researcher’s doodles into intricate laboratory equipment, craftsmanship is king.<br>In a cost-cutting world of machines and assembly plants, few glassblowers remain with the level of mastery needed at research hubs like Caltech.<br>“He’s a somewhat dying breed,” said Sarah Reisman, who relied on Gerhart to create 20 maze-like contraptions for her synthetic organic chemistry lab.<br>Rick Gerhart, scientific glass blower at Caltech, has been helping to make scientific research possible at the campus since 1992.<br>(Dillon Deaton/Los Angeles Times)<br>Similar fates have befallen glassblowing at UCLA and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory.<br>Across the U.S., those who land such jobs tend to stay until retirement.<br>He chuckled: “Looks like we have to steal somebody.”<br>To master scientific glassblowing, proper training and apprenticeships are key.<br>In addition to the hands-on training, which requires a knack for precision as well as coordination, students must take courses in organic chemistry, math and computer drawing.<br>So it really takes a long time to get to a position like Rick’s.”<br>Gerhart enrolled in the Salem program in 1965, after dropping out of college to give his father’s profession a try.<br>The craft, which dates back to alchemy in the 2nd century, took hold in America by the 1930s and 1940s, after World War I cut off glassware supply from Germany.<br>The profession peaked after World War II, when booms in oil and government-funded research opened up numerous glassblowing jobs in many a lab.<br>At first, Gerhart hopped around a number of firms and worked alongside more experienced glassblowers at TRW Inc. and UCLA.<br>When he settled at Caltech in 1992, the glassblower before him handed over the key to the shop and said, “Good luck.” On his own, Gerhart pieced together his patchwork of experience to twist and fuse glass beakers and snake glass coils over vacuum chambers.<br>“That’s when I really started learning.”<br>Social media videos have sparked new interest in the craft, Briening said.<br>But while his students have no trouble getting entry-level jobs at companies like Chemglass Life Sciences, a glass manufacturer, and General Electric Global Research, rarely are universities willing to budget the overhead costs for more than one glassblower, if any.<br>“Years ago, all the universities had two or three people,” Briening said.<br>One of the few resources left for the next generation is the American Scientific Glassblowers Society, a close-knit group that hosts national workshops and swaps ideas when a researcher’s custom order stumps one of its members.<br>Its members also serve as Caltech’s best — and possibly only — options once Gerhart leaves.<br>“Rick’s one of those glass technicians that I put in the top 5%,” Ponton said.<br>

    1. Twixters put off life choices because they can choose from a huge array of career options, some of which, like jobs in social media, didn’t exist 10 years ago. What idiot would try to work her way up at a company when she’s going to have an average of seven jobs before age 26?
    1. According to federal rules, temporary visas known as H-1Bs are for foreigners with “a body of specialized knowledge” not readily available in the labor market. The visas should be granted only when they will not undercut the wages or “adversely affect the working conditions” of Americans.But in the past five years, through loopholes in the rules, tens of thousands of American workers have been replaced by foreigners on H-1B and other temporary visas, according to Prof. Hal Salzman, a labor force expert at Rutgers University.
    1. Nowhere are there as many bullshit jobs, however, as in Silicon Valley. A survey of 5,000 software developers and engineers last year found that, in the words of The Economist, “many of them feel alienated, trapped, underappreciated and otherwise discombobulated.” Only 19% of tech employees say they are satisfied with their jobs. A mere 17% feel valued. Or, as a former math whiz working at Facebook lamented a few years ago: “The best minds of my generation are thinking about how to make people click ads.”
  46. Mar 2016
    1. Credentalism is economic discrimination disguised as opportunity. Over the past 40 years, professions that never required a college degree began demanding it. "The United States has become the most rigidly credentialised society in the world," write James Engell and Anthony Dangerfield in their 2005 book Saving Higher Education in the Age of Money. "A BA is required for jobs that by no stretch of imagination need two years of full-time training, let alone four."
  47. Feb 2016
    1. It’s not just in America that this practice is increasing. In Europe, it’s called the “zero hour” job — you’re promised work, but guaranteed nothing. And these contracts have been causing controversy in Britain ever since the financial crisis, which saw a dramatic rise in the number of just-in-time jobs as employers offloaded their risks onto the workforce. Today, almost 2 million jobs in the U.K. are now on-call. In some cases, workers are denied the benefits of full-time employees, or are prevented from finding other paying gigs without the permission of their employer — even if that employer cancels all of their shifts.
  48. Jan 2016
    1. Chelsea Rustrum

      The term "sharing economy" was stolen a few years ago, by firms that aren't sharing anything.

      The technology of these platforms is not expensive to build. Meanwhile, these companies have skyrocketing valuations (exceeding even the growth trajectory of Facebook) because they are absorbing value from the people actually creating and providing the value.

      Everyone on the Internet is being exploited without noticing.

      "Our personal data is not unlike labor -- you don’t lose by giving it away, but if you don’t get anything back you’re not receiving what you deserve. Information ... is inherently valuable."

      An economy where workers get fair exchange for the value they produce is possible. Rustrum points out these means:

      • Cooperatives. In particular, platform coops
      • ESOP, employee stock ownership plans
      • Crowd funding
      • Blockchain - digital peer-to-peer secure transactions
    1. Uber presented itself as a refreshing alternative to the over-bureaucratized world of urban transportation. But that’s a false choice. We can streamline sclerotic city regulators, upgrade taxi fleets and even provide users with fancy apps that make it easier to call a cab. The company’s binary presentation – us, or City Hall – frames the debate in artificial terms.

      Neither business nor government is automatically good or bad. But both tend toward bad when unconstrained. Government should be of the people, for the people, and by the people. We should not allow anyone to use wealth and power to amass ever greater wealth and power.

    2. Uber claims that its driver rating system is a more efficient way to monitor drivers, but that’s an entirely unproven assumption. While taxi drivers have been known to misbehave, the worldwide litany of complaints against Uber drivers – for everything from dirty cars and spider bites to assault with a hammer, fondling and rape – suggest that Uber’s system may not work as well as old-fashioned regulation. It’s certainly not noticeably superior.

      Several links to other stories about Uber.

      Neither Uber nor Taxi companies should have a monopoly. Cities should issue cab licenses to independent drivers. They should issue enough to make it easy to get a cab when you need one. Some licenses could be part-time, to provide extra cars during busy times. The licenses should go to the applicants with the best driving records and work histories.

    3. Even without surge pricing, Uber and its supporters are hiding its full costs. When middle-class workers are underpaid or deprived of benefits and full working rights, as Uber’s reportedly are, the entire middle-class economy suffers. Overall wages and benefits are suppressed for the majority, while the wealthy few are made even richer.
    4. A “sharing economy,” by definition, is lateral in structure. It is a peer-to-peer economy. But Uber, as its name suggests, is hierarchical in structure. It monitors and controls its drivers, demanding that they purchase services from it while guiding their movements and determining their level of earnings. And its pricing mechanisms impose unpredictable costs on its customers, extracting greater amounts whenever the data suggests customers can be compelled to pay them.This is a top-down economy, not a “shared” one.

      The true sharing economy is about things like sharing unused tools and resources, community property, and combining purchasing power. (People should not say "there is no such thing" when pointing out that Uber, Lyft, and Airbnb are not examples.)

    1. But even from this remove it was possible to glean certain patterns, and one that recurred as regularly as an urban legend was the one about how someone would move into a commune populated by sandal-wearing, peace-sign flashing flower children, and eventually discover that, underneath this facade, the guys who ran it were actually control freaks; and that, as living in a commune, where much lip service was paid to ideals of peace, love and harmony, had deprived them of normal, socially approved outlets for their control-freakdom, it tended to come out in other, invariably more sinister, ways.
  49. Dec 2015
    1. Imagine if we could actively facilitate conversations between college-bound high school students and professionals in the fields in which they believe they want to enter. Wouldn’t this have the potential to dramatically increase a student’s understanding of the industry before they commit an exorbitant amount of time and money towards it?
    1. Guide to freelancing from Due, an online invoicing and time-tracking company. They also have guides for programmers, designers, consultants, photographers, and payroll.

    1. Zach Holman on remote work. Tech companies need to start accepting remote workers, or they're going to have more trouble finding people. To use remote workers successfully, you have to put priority on asynchronous communication for everyone. Otherwise, the remote people get left out of the loop.

    1. The Division of Teaching and Learning Technologies at University of Mary Washington is hiring an Online Learning and LMS Specialist.

      We are looking for an innovative, pedagogically-engaged individual who will collaborate with faculty to harness the potential of our current LMS, Canvas, in online and hybrid learning environments. We are especially interested in someone that can think with and beyond the LMS, helping UMW explore ethical approaches to online learning and intersections between Canvas and the Domain of One’s Own initiative spearheaded by DTLT.

    1. If you've ever felt bad about working a very low-status job, or looked down on someone else for it, this might change your attitude.

      • It's ironic that many low-wage jobs are jobs that many people couldn't tolerate.
      • These days, one should be embarrassed to admit working for Wall Street, the NSA, or Congress.
      • Our government is full of people who should be mopping floors and wiping tables instead.
      • The military shouldn't be the only obvious opportunity for working-class kids.
  50. Nov 2015
    1. BitSource would like to hire a second class of coders at the beginning of the new year. He, Parrish, and Hall want to fill up their buildings, create an incubator for entrepreneurs, a makerspace for craftsmen, and, someday, if they play their cards incredibly well, a bonafide Pikeville tech scene. You know, make Bloomberg in his smart suit eat crow for once.

      https://www.bitsourceky.com/ https://twitter.com/bitsourceky BitSource - agile software and web development. Pikeville, Kentucky Founders Rusty Justice and M. Lynn Parrish

    2. Outsiders have never gotten Appalachia — or else, they get the version they want: the one with the meth and Mountain Dew mouth, the incest, the painkillers, the welfare, all captured by journalists parachuting in for their regular dose of poverty porn. They find the toothless guy, the trailers with shotguns racked up on the wall and the yard strewn with diapers and beer cans, and they film some dude saying weird shit in a backcountry accent that needs subtitles to comprehend, they give it an ominous title like “A Hidden America: Children of the Mountains,” and they leave. You bet people here have a chip on their shoulder. It’s not that stuff like that doesn’t exist—but if the world always insisted on zooming in on your warts, you’d be resentful, too.
    1. In a sense, employers and employees used to be married to each other, and there was a sense of commitment and a joined destiny. Now, employers just want a bunch of one-night stands with their employees, a promiscuousness that promises to be not only fleeting but destabilizing to the broader macroeconomy. Set to replace the crumbling New Deal society is a darker world in which wealthy and powerful economic elite are collaborating with their political cronies to erect the policy edifice that allows them to mold their proprietary workforce into one composed of a disjointed collection of 1099 employees.
  51. Sep 2015
  52. Jul 2015