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Covid economy non real estate

Putting this out there because weed is very popular, and everyone thinks there are no side effects: there are 100% side effects. Don't abuse it like us.
The only people that believe that weed has no side effects are the idiots that trip up saying 'it's all natural man, no issues here'....and refuse to believe anything else besides that narrative.

First article I thought of from a few days ago...


I smoke very rarely, through a PAX vaporizer which I feel is much easier on my lungs as I can't stand smoking a simple joint. Maybe 1-2 times / month...sometimes do the liquid drinks / drops though. Always get a good night sleep.
 
The only people that believe that weed has no side effects are the idiots that trip up saying 'it's all natural man, no issues here'....and refuse to believe anything else besides that narrative.

First article I thought of from a few days ago...


I smoke very rarely, through a PAX vaporizer which I feel is much easier on my lungs as I can't stand smoking a simple joint. Maybe 1-2 times / month...sometimes do the liquid drinks / drops though. Always get a good night sleep.
Cyanide is all natural too.
 
Sorry....actually working here...falling behind!
I wrote 3 lines of code today.

I did overtime everyday last week. I'm playing video games, **** this lol
 
please, lets not compare ourselves to glorified server monkeys.
We all know the tier list:

God Tier: Software engineers/devs (architects and others are included because they often implement)
Angel Tier: DevOps, programmer
I'm Not Good Enough for the Above Tiers: Database admin, network engineer, business analyst
"i'm complete garbage" Tier: IT support

<___< Not being serious, don't have hurt feelings anyone lol
 
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We all know the tier list:

God Tier: Software engineers/devs (architects and others are included because they often implement)
Angel Tier: DevOps, programmer
I'm Not Good Enough for the Above Tiers: Database admin, network engineer, business analyst
"i'm complete garbage" Tier: IT support

<___< Not being serious, don't have hurt feelings anyone lol
Depends which side of the aisle you're on. If you're on the producing side, yea, R&D and devs are more coveted. However, when you're in the consumptions side, it's Operations that rule the world. Good luck getting anything pass the ZOS/DB2 admin or EMC/Fujitus guys to push through your upgrade at the bank...even if it's only you creating a stupid ass index on some obscure table.
 
Depends which side of the aisle you're on. If you're on the producing side, yea, R&D and devs are more coveted. However, when you're in the consumptions side, it's Operations that rule the world. Good luck getting anything pass the ZOS/DB2 admin or EMC/Fujitus guys to push through your upgrade at the bank...even if it's only you creating a stupid ass index on some obscure table.
Isn't this why many talented fresh grads stay away from government and banks?

I've never wanted to work for either because of the reputation they have within the dev community. Fintech on the other hand....that's a goldmine.
 
Isn't this why many talented fresh grads stay away from government and banks?

I've never wanted to work for either because of the reputation they have within the dev community. Fintech on the other hand....that's a goldmine.
Depends, there is no monolith structure to any of this. The "Bank" or anything enterprise has tons of different teams and they all kind of operate within their own kind of way. Generally, it's kind of a bore if you're stuck doing some silly "make work" project or there is ton of structure if you want to do something quick to fix an issue.

But, if you want to play with anything cool, they'll be the first to get it. There will be multiple projects at any given time and for the most part, if you're hungry enough to do something cool, you will. I focus mainly on large implementation SW lifecycles at enterprises with greater than 100K employees or so, so it's a different animal altogether from the "fintechs" and consumer space app devs. An SAP implementation at Singapore Airlines is about 3 year cycle with about 100+ resources and about $350M USD budget, this is where IT meets business and you get to see it front and center.

Also, most big enterprises don't really want new grads, it's all about the perceived experience and an entrenched mentality of the incumbents to hire people who have been in the system for a while for their own self serving reasons. I think, all new grads should work in some dev shop and cut their teeth and go from there.
 
We all know the tier list:

God Tier: Software engineers/devs (architects and others are included because they often implement)
Angel Tier: DevOps, programmer
I'm Not Good Enough for the Above Tiers: Database admin, network engineer, business analyst
"i'm complete garbage" Tier: IT support

<___< Not being serious, don't have hurt feelings anyone lol

That hurt 🤕
 
Depends, there is no monolith structure to any of this. The "Bank" or anything enterprise has tons of different teams and they all kind of operate within their own kind of way. Generally, it's kind of a bore if you're stuck doing some silly "make work" project or there is ton of structure if you want to do something quick to fix an issue.

But, if you want to play with anything cool, they'll be the first to get it. There will be multiple projects at any given time and for the most part, if you're hungry enough to do something cool, you will. I focus mainly on large implementation SW lifecycles at enterprises with greater than 100K employees or so, so it's a different animal altogether from the "fintechs" and consumer space app devs. An SAP implementation at Singapore Airlines is about 3 year cycle with about 100+ resources and about $350M USD budget, this is where IT meets business and you get to see it front and center.

Also, most big enterprises don't really want new grads, it's all about the perceived experience and an entrenched mentality of the incumbents to hire people who have been in the system for a while for their own self serving reasons. I think, all new grads should work in some dev shop and cut their teeth and go from there.
The biggest company I worked for was IBM but I got pigeon holed into some low level compiler crap so I get what you mean.

My experience is a bit weird: I've managed to do "green" projects for the vast majority of my career.

My current job is all over that teir, I am their jack of all trades IT / 3D modeling guy
That's why I've seen that joke before. The higher you are, the more likely you have skills from the lower tiers. Going up, however, is far harder.
 
ah yes...the "you do multiple peoples job, but only take home 1 persons salary"
Honestly sounds like he works for a **** company. Like my old one!

Company I'm working at pays me for multiple hats, and recognizes this by giving $$$ without me asking. This is how it should be right?
 
ah yes...the "you do multiple peoples job, but only take home 1 persons salary"
Lol it is worse.

Government won't give us enough for a full time position so we will manipulate your compassion working with people, throw in a pension and benefits but you only work part time :)

The nurses have it way worse.

But these are people so it is hard to leave they aren't a peice of code
 

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