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I'm truly saddened by this. One of my favorite artists. Loved his work all around.


Easy. "Here, hold my beer"


“I’m Johnny Knoxmammoth, and this is Tar Pit Challenge”


I think we should always have at least one joke thread, if nothing to lighten to mood!


I think when you here, hold my beer to death, most of those situations are ones where you wouldn't expect fossil preservation of the remains, unless the La Brea Tar Pits are involved.


Fossilized jackasses.


There was a 2020 report. Haven't looked for a later one.

https://www.bondcap.com/report/onw/#view/1


I'm retiring in 3 months. I'll miss the work and people, won't miss the stress and hours.

During my career, I've repaired mainframes and graphics systems. I've managed Unix systems for over 25 years. SysVr4 on NCR frames, AIX systems, Sun Systems and now a mixed environment of Linux and AIX. I think I'm reasonable good at it, at least no ones complained.

I've worked in a variety of industries, finance, food service, distribution. I've work at a PAAS startup that successfully exited. I know the business world better then when I started and can relate to business employees a lot better than I did when I was younger. I've also learned how to coax a problem out of a non IT employee, especially when they really can't describe the problem.

I've found as I got older, I mellowed a bit, I don't rush to judgement as fast, and I've learned to look at a problem and try to understand it before I try to fix it. I've also got a long history of troubleshooting to lean on when I need it. If I did something wrong or screwed up, I admitted it and apologize. If I didn't understand something, I also admitted it and asked for help. I can also use Google with the best of them. I've found out that though the joints are creaking a bit, I have no problems keeping up.

I believe that I've given fair work to whatever company I worked for, for the compensation they gave me. Consider I'm still employed in the field after so long, I have to believe it's so.

I've also learned not to put anything in writing where it can be used against me in the future. I would never post this question on such an emotional and inflammatory topic. I really hope no one knows your real id, otherwise this could bite you in the future.

I also hope you keep this someplace and read it when you are in the middle of your career. I think you will be dismayed at how callous you were.

Good luck.


Well said.


There was a completed cabinet devoted to outputs for the field engineer. All the register were displayed, as well as buttons to set them. At least on later systems, they were in a big square, and someone patched the OS to display the Burroughs, big B, logo during the systems idle time.


I recall; miniature incandescent bulbs embedded into push switches that could display/set registers, it was very important to test the bulbs before trusting them (a long press) else a burned out bulb may catch you off guard. Right next to the core memory cabinet, someone accurately patched it to show huge "$" during idle time!!


The lamp test was the only button I was allowed to press on my company’s 4341.


Not a class per se, but a former company I worked at was trying to get the technical staff working closer to the business side a little better. There were several books we were asked to read. Dale Carnegies, "How to make Friends and Influence People" was one of them, along with a few others. Since I read a lot, and they were going to let me do it on company time, I gladly did it. Then we had to discuss them with our manager on our one on ones.

It made me look at my behavior a little bit closer, but a lot of that book was BS from what I remember...


You might check out https://libre.space

I believe there have been some small sat projects documented in Make magazine also.


Great!

Wow, hardware already made it to low-orbit, https://upsat.gr/?p=418 (2017-04-20)

> At April 18th 11:11 EDT at Cape Canaveral in Florida, an Atlas-V rocket launched a Cygnus cargo spacecraft to dock to the Internation Space Station with supplies and scientific experiments. Among its cargo UPSat, the first open source hardware and software satellite bound to be released in orbit by the NanoRacks deployment system on-board ISS in the coming weeks.


The rocket was called Orion. You would probably need more than 200 nukes for it.

Proxima Centauri is ~4 light years away, not a half of a light year.


If you would have checked, they've scaled back the party to family and close friends. Before they scaled it back, invitees were asked if they were vaccinated and results of a Covid test.

https://amp.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/aug/04/barack-obama...


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