Sujet : Re: RE: Re: RE: Re: Job Offer
De : frkrygow (at) *nospam* sbcglobal.net (Frank Krygowski)
Groupes : rec.bicycles.techDate : 15. Mar 2025, 19:30:01
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vr4gva$e4h$5@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 3/15/2025 11:13 AM, cyclintom wrote:
On Fri Mar 14 16:15:25 2025 Zen Cycle wrote:
>
He also tells us that he works but magically is able to answer comments within seconds after they are written.
>
No magic involved. It's part of being a productive engineering
professional. Today I took a 90 minute lunch with my project manager and
firmware engineer at a local restaurant. We all had a beer. We do this
almost every friday. We talked about about technical issues on various
projects, but also chatted about non-work personal experiences. Our boss
has joined us on several occasions for these lunches. We can do these
things because we're good at our jobs, completing tasks within timelines
and budgets.
>
This isn't unusual, I've done the same at every job I've had since 1984.
(In fact, at one job I had in the early 2000's we would go to Hooters
every friday and get a pitcher). If you were competent at your jobs, you
wold have enjoyed the same freedoms and perks. It's obvious you weren't.
Thank you for that additional information. We can simply allow the rest of the group make up their own minds about your comments. Obviously rather than teach, Frank merely sat in front of a class with his laptop open and posting to the newsgroup. Liebermann, when he could find work, did something other than work. John was in the Air Force and he did not even think of posting to the Internet.
As a matter of fact: Many years ago, one dolt in this newsgroup claimed he was going to snitch to the dean of my college that I was posting during working hours.
Said dolt had no idea of when I was working or not (including, frequently, beyond midnight). And he had no idea that the dean was more than perfectly satisfied with my work. He (or she) would never have given his complaint a minute of thought.
-- - Frank Krygowski