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kamaz

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So, if any of you guys happen to be on Xing, it would be great if you could send me a contact request.

If you register on LinkedIn an PM me your profile then I will connect with you.
 

jedidia

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Thanks, but Xing is the more appropriate platform for my purposes, and if I make another profile I'll just lose track of both of them (yeah, I'm really bad at multi-tasking...).
 

PhantomCruiser

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There's no such thing as multitasking... It's "rapid task switching", I thought my boss was going to die of apoplexy as he was griping at me to multitask a few years ago.

When I'm going to be yelled at anyway, I always try to make it worth my while. ;)
 

jedidia

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There's no such thing as multitasking...

For some people, there actually is. I know a few that are perfectly capable to have a conversation with you while answering their mail, without apparently either suffering from it. It's two hells of annoying to talk to them, though.

Anyways, I pretty much suck at both :lol:

but there should be enough companies around to ask, at least in Zurich.

There's plenty to ask, problem is most of them expect you to have at least a bachelors degree, better a master... I noticed that without a higher education, internships in this area are really tough to get around here.
And of course if you ask companies that offer apprenticeships, you're too old :facepalm:
 

kamaz

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Youtube thinks my interests are rather limited:

DFCSSh2.jpg
 

mojoey

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There's no such thing as multitasking... It's "rapid task switching", I thought my boss was going to die of apoplexy as he was griping at me to multitask a few years ago.

When I'm going to be yelled at anyway, I always try to make it worth my while. ;)

My brother taught me that the best way to handle being in trouble, is to tell them that it seemed like a good idea at the time.

Mind you, he's been in the same job for 12 years, and well...he's my brother, take this advice with a grain of salt :p
 

Bibi Uncle

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Czech is a weird word. Czech is actually Tchèque in French, and it is pronounced the same way as in English. However, in English, the z is suddenly transformed into an h in order to form the ʃ (ch) sound. In French, the ch is there, and the t prevents from pronouncing like chèque, with a soft ch. The z is meaningless and should be replaced by h, no?

For once, English seems inconsistent. Usually, French is a pro in
inconsistencies...
 
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Linguofreak

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Czech is a weird word. Czech is actually Tchèque in French, and it is pronounced the same way as in English. However, in English, the z is suddenly transformed into an h in order to form the ʃ (ch) sound. In French, the ch is there, and the t prevents from pronouncing like chèque, with a soft ch. The z is meaningless and should be replaced by h, no?

"Cz" was at one point used for /tʃ/ and related sounds in a number of Slavic languages with Latin orthographies. Polish, from what I've read, is the only major east European language that still uses "cz" instead of "č", but the historical usage of "cz" for /tʃ/, and the fact that English tends not to use diacritics, are why "Czech" is spelled that way in English. It's not a native English spelling.
 

PhantomCruiser

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It seems that I'm rarely actually in touble here at work, but I can sure stir some up. Last two weeks have been some evidence of that...

Our work management processes have been heading downhill over the past few years. And I have some oddball qualifications that (every now and again) I have to serve as a QA inspector. As a worker, I "know" how something is supposed to be hooked up, work, etc. But in my capacity as a QA inspector I have to make sure all the i's are dotted and t's are crossed. 3 times in the past 3 weeks the work packages were flat out wrong and I wouldn't sign off (much to the chagrin of the managers). I can be as hard nosed as they can.

The best part is, they cannot "force" me to sign. It's illegal to interfere or coerce a QA rep in the performance of their duty (mandatory jail and fine). And in this environment, just about any bad press would cause some managers to be unemployed.
 

Andy44

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Where I work we had a big wig who liked to send all his emails in bright blue comic sans. The guy was high up on the totem pole but he could never figure why people had trouble taking him seriously. I guess none of his flunkies had the heart to tell him it was his stupid choice of font.

Re. causing trouble at work: I find that being really good at my job and acting professional gives me a lot more leeway in doing things the way I want them done, instead of the way idiots (who suck at their jobs) want them done. It causes trouble sometimes, but in the end they can't do what I do, so they lose. And I've been there long enough and gotten good enough to build people's confidence in me.
 

MaverickSawyer

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It seems that I'm rarely actually in touble here at work, but I can sure stir some up. Last two weeks have been some evidence of that...

Our work management processes have been heading downhill over the past few years. And I have some oddball qualifications that (every now and again) I have to serve as a QA inspector. As a worker, I "know" how something is supposed to be hooked up, work, etc. But in my capacity as a QA inspector I have to make sure all the i's are dotted and t's are crossed. 3 times in the past 3 weeks the work packages were flat out wrong and I wouldn't sign off (much to the chagrin of the managers). I can be as hard nosed as they can.

The best part is, they cannot "force" me to sign. It's illegal to interfere or coerce a QA rep in the performance of their duty (mandatory jail and fine). And in this environment, just about any bad press would cause some managers to be unemployed.

Considering your job... Thank you much for doing that.:cheers:
 

PhantomCruiser

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I dig it. I know I am by no mean irreplacable. There's multitudes of way that I could lose my job. The problem is that I'm one of the few that can actually do what they say they can do. There's plenty (and I mean plenty) about nuclear power that I don't understand, the way some of this stuff works is a mystery to me. Designed in they 60's with equipment that should be listed as antique, it's a testament to the design that this stuff works at all. The problem is that all this analog equipment "works" in a nuclear environment, solid-state stuff, not so much. Zoomies make things act weird.

"Modern" instument mechanics can be trained in a matter of 12-18 months. That training would be totally lost in the nuclear industry. A transmitter is a transmitter is a transmitter, signal in-signal out, but some of this stuff I'd only seen in textbooks. When I moved from fossil power to nuclear, I was amazed that this stuff worked at all.

Think Orion MPCV (fossil) vs Gemini or Apollo (nuclear)

But it works, It's just a bit manpower intensive. Some of our managers can't seem to understand that you can't run a nuclear plant like a production factory.

Remember the scene in Apollo 13 where Ed Harris wanted to find the drawings, the torque value of some bolts and the name of the guy who torqued them? We have that level of accountability.
 
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Fabri91

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cBNXBXG.jpg


Freedom's big, yo.

Woah.

But yes, in most fictional settings (BSG for example, but also Star Wars and Star Trek) "fighters" tend to be strangely small to real examples, such as that P-47 (not sure though, was it that big?) or this Su-33:
Su-33_fighter_1.jpg
 

MaverickSawyer

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I dig it. I know I am by no mean irreplacable. There's multitudes of way that I could lose my job. The problem is that I'm one of the few that can actually do what they say they can do. There's plenty (and I mean plenty) about nuclear power that I don't understand, the way some of this stuff works is a mystery to me. Designed in they 60's with equipment that should be listed as antique, it's a testament to the design that this stuff works at all. The problem is that all this analog equipment "works" in a nuclear environment, solid-state stuff, not so much. Zoomies make things act weird.

"Modern" instument mechanics can be trained in a matter of 12-18 months. That training would be totally lost in the nuclear industry. A transmitter is a transmitter is a transmitter, signal in-signal out, but some of this stuff I'd only seen in textbooks. When I moved from fossil power to nuclear, I was amazed that this stuff worked at all.

Think Orion MPCV (fossil) vs Gemini or Apollo (nuclear)

But it works, It's just a bit manpower intensive. Some of our managers can't seem to understand that you can't run a nuclear plant like a production factory.

Remember the scene in Apollo 13 where Ed Harris wanted to find the drawings, the torque value of some bolts and the name of the guy who torqued them? We have that level of accountability.

So does aviation. God help you if you anger the FAA, because no one else can! :lol:
 

PhantomCruiser

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Agreed, I think that's why the QA manager likes that I'm on his team. I spent 10 years working on Naval Aircaft. The mindset carried over to the power industry nicely.

Unless you happen to be a bean counting manager who's annoyed that I'm in between him and a job completion.
 

jedidia

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For once, English seems inconsistent.

FOR ONCE? Ha... [ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghoti"]Hahahahahaaaaa![/ame]

Seriously, consistent pronounciation rules are almost nonexistant in english when compared to other languages.
 

kamaz

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Czech is a weird word. Czech is actually Tchèque in French, and it is pronounced the same way as in English. However, in English, the z is suddenly transformed into an h in order to form the ʃ (ch) sound. In French, the ch is there, and the t prevents from pronouncing like chèque, with a soft ch. The z is meaningless and should be replaced by h, no?

As Linguofreak noted, it makes perfect sense if you are Polish :thumbup:

You want to write /tʃɛx/. In Polish, we use cz for /tʃ/ and ch for /x/, which gives you Czech.

It's the French spelling which actually makes sense, not English one. Again, you want to write /tʃɛx/. One problem is that French has no /x/ sound, so it becomes /k/, thus /tʃɛk/. But after this point, it is just a simple transliteration:
/t/ = T
/ʃ/ = ch
/ɛ/ = e
/k/ = que.

In English, if you were writing phonetically, you should be writing Check.

(Now, why the French still use baroque spellings like que instead of simply k is beyond me, but on the other hand I must admit that it gives the language some charm. I mean, Qu'est-ce que, definitely looks better than keske, n'est-ce pas?)

Seriously, consistent pronounciation rules are almost nonexistant in english when compared to other languages.

Indeed. Polish spelling is considered very difficult, but it's only because certain sounds can be written in two ways, i.e.

/x/ = ch or h (well, technically, h is for /:/ but modern Poles tend to say /x/ everywhere)
/ʐ/ = rz or ż
/ɲ/ = ni or ń
etc.

This makes writing difficult unless you know more detailed rules, or you have just learned which word is spelled which way.

But reading is very straightforward.
 
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