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Post by markoholiker on May 31, 2017 2:14:07 GMT -5
worked in a hospital for several months, _really_ do disinfect your hands whenever you walk into and out of one of those institutions because most of the (elderly?) nurses sure as hell don't do it even though they're obligated to and it's disgusting and you will get sick no matter what you touch lmao i had a patients norovirus just from touching the nurses office stuff i can confirm that. Hospitals are a disgusting place and people there tend to spread the shit
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Post by evolbunny1 on Jun 2, 2017 19:48:27 GMT -5
I do HVAC in hospitals, and those places are filthy. Disinfect!
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Post by stfubaker on Jun 2, 2017 23:50:19 GMT -5
I'm a barber. So, I have a lot of bones to pick with you fuckers.
"Do whatever you want" or "I don't know" are the worst possible things you can say to me. Please don't ever say that to a barber. If you don't have a personal relationship with said barber, don't say "what you did last time". We don't remember.
Don't move your head unless I tell/make you. DON'T turn your head to talk to me.
Now some things you should know.
We probably will make fun of you if you say something dumb, after hours. A lot of people really get cheesed if you don't tip. I personally don't care. But it's like restaurants, if you don't tip, don't go to a professional.
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Post by jaime on Jun 3, 2017 0:32:49 GMT -5
I work in a bank as Relationship Manager, I evaluate businesses and see if I can lend them credit/money.
1. Invest your money, letting them just stay in a normal savings account won't do you any good, inflation will it up the value of your cash 2. Don't be dicks to front-liners in banks, they have a lot of responsibility handling the public's cash, if there is any loss/miscount they will shoulder ALL the expenses 3. Have good credit, pay any obligation you may have (credit card, utility bills etc.) on time, or else it will adversely affect your record and you WILL have a hard time getting credit from banks
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Post by essien on Jun 3, 2017 2:20:45 GMT -5
• Don't ever smoke, chances are you will get lung cancer and it will be a slow and painful death. • Don't ever ride a motorbike, you will probably die. Your chances of dying also increase dramatically if you ride a bicycle. • Don't assume that just because you have something to say, people want to listen.
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Post by stfubaker on Jun 3, 2017 2:57:41 GMT -5
I work in a bank as Relationship Manager, I evaluate businesses and see if I can lend them credit/money. 1. Invest your money, letting them just stay in a normal savings account won't do you any good, inflation will it up the value of your cash 2. Don't be dicks to front-liners in banks, they have a lot of responsibility handling the public's cash, if there is any loss/miscount they will shoulder ALL the expenses 3. Have good credit, pay any obligation you may have (credit card, utility bills etc.) on time, or else it will adversely affect your record and you WILL have a hard time getting credit from banks Question. I have a credit card that I have an outstanding balance. I use it a lot and pay it off a lot. But it's also outstanding. I've missed a small handful of payments in the past few years (2/3), but I never pay minimum payments, always large amounts (just paid 1200 off today). Is constantly paying off a credit card I get lots of debt on a good thing even if it doesn't go to 0? In 3 years it's never gone down to 0, but I pay it off alot. Moreso curious. Not looking to take out a loan or anything.
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Post by jaime on Jun 3, 2017 4:35:22 GMT -5
I work in a bank as Relationship Manager, I evaluate businesses and see if I can lend them credit/money. 1. Invest your money, letting them just stay in a normal savings account won't do you any good, inflation will it up the value of your cash 2. Don't be dicks to front-liners in banks, they have a lot of responsibility handling the public's cash, if there is any loss/miscount they will shoulder ALL the expenses 3. Have good credit, pay any obligation you may have (credit card, utility bills etc.) on time, or else it will adversely affect your record and you WILL have a hard time getting credit from banks Question. I have a credit card that I have an outstanding balance. I use it a lot and pay it off a lot. But it's also outstanding. I've missed a small handful of payments in the past few years (2/3), but I never pay minimum payments, always large amounts (just paid 1200 off today). Is constantly paying off a credit card I get lots of debt on a good thing even if it doesn't go to 0? In 3 years it's never gone down to 0, but I pay it off alot. Moreso curious. Not looking to take out a loan or anything. For me here in the Philippines, having someone frequently not paying in full their credit card bill means something negative, we would think that they are not capable of paying off the credit due to insufficient income, which would lead the bank or financial institution to be hesitant in lending out more credit. But I've heard from some clients that it's a different thing in other countries, an example would be in the US. There it's the complete opposite, if you pay in full your outstanding balance, they most probably WILL NOT raise your credit or improve your credit score because it doesn't test out the individual's capability of paying off his credit more so than they actually need, so what you're doing would look good for your credit standing in the USA. It's a bit confusing to me as we have a different standard here, but yeah. I'm not quite sure what Canada's policies are on credit, you could probably ask someone in the same industry inside your country for that to get a better answer, hope I enlightened you a bit on the topic though!
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Post by Zeke on Jun 3, 2017 5:23:14 GMT -5
I'm a barber. So, I have a lot of bones to pick with you fuckers. "Do whatever you want" or "I don't know" are the worst possible things you can say to me. Please don't ever say that to a barber. If you don't have a personal relationship with said barber, don't say "what you did last time". We don't remember. Don't move your head unless I tell/make you. DON'T turn your head to talk to me. Now some things you should know. We probably will make fun of you if you say something dumb, after hours. A lot of people really get cheesed if you don't tip. I personally don't care. But it's like restaurants, if you don't tip, don't go to a professional. What about "what hairstyle do you think would suit me best?"
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Post by xNickyUrinex on Jun 3, 2017 12:11:33 GMT -5
Marking a message as spam in most email services will create a feedback loop to the email marketing service and unsubscribe you from receiving future messages.
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Post by bear on Jun 3, 2017 14:30:00 GMT -5
Older people (45+ years) love using voice search features on their phones. They also tend to be way more polite when using Siri or whatever assistant is on their mobile device when searching for some reason (saying please and thank you's in their queries).
Never enter sensitive information or make transactions on sites without SSL certificates, look for https:// in the URL (or the secure lock green lock symbol if you use Chrome)
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Post by Zeke on Jun 3, 2017 15:10:35 GMT -5
Older people (45+ years) love using voice search features on their phones. They also tend to be way more polite when using Siri or whatever assistant is on their mobile device when searching for some reason (saying please and thank you's in their queries). Never enter sensitive information or make transactions on sites without SSL certificates, look for https:// in the URL (or the secure lock green lock symbol if you use Chrome) What do you do for a living Albert?
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Post by chainbreaker on Jun 3, 2017 15:30:02 GMT -5
man i love smoking so much, like so so much. we still friends tho right
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Post by bear on Jun 3, 2017 15:35:46 GMT -5
Older people (45+ years) love using voice search features on their phones. They also tend to be way more polite when using Siri or whatever assistant is on their mobile device when searching for some reason (saying please and thank you's in their queries). Never enter sensitive information or make transactions on sites without SSL certificates, look for https:// in the URL (or the secure lock green lock symbol if you use Chrome) What do you do for a living Albert? I work for a small digital marketing agency. I mainly work with Search Engine Optimization/Marketing, website management and analytics, and I used to manage social media campaigns for a few clients but they've focused me more towards overall strategy instead of specific social websites.
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Post by Glitch on Jun 3, 2017 17:29:45 GMT -5
Never enter sensitive information or make transactions on sites without SSL certificates, look for https:// in the URL (or the secure lock green lock symbol if you use Chrome) * That. * Please, never blindly trust any e-mail with a link or attachment in it. Always check the domain it's coming from (what comes after the @ sign). If you don't know who it is, delete the e-mail instantly and mark it as spam. * Managers are mostly the worst with any piece of technology. * 50 percent of the problems you're having with your computer are your own fault. * Not having a life password is actually a good thing. Use a passphrase, not a password. Passwords really are important. * Don't use the "I don't care if I'm hacked, I have nothing to hide" mindset. If you're being hacked, you're a huge leak for your entire job environment.
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Post by chainbreaker on Jun 3, 2017 17:55:23 GMT -5
i learnt so much from work, i dnno what to share.
Currently do what would be classed as alot of different roles, developer, 1st/2nd/3rd line support, Escalation/2nd Escalation support, computer security, hardware maintenance, software maintenance. All round puzzle solver and catastrophe escaper. You name it in IT, i do it.... :/
google is ur most important knowledge base, even the best don't know everything
"ur it man, you should know"
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