Please consider not referencing Cesar Millan or linking to his advice.
Please consider not referencing Cesar Millan or linking to his advice.
That’s what I was afraid of. On this last trip, I actually left my MX2 at home and took my full-size Surface mouse, because I knew I was going to be working 8 hours/day in studio apartment(s), so it was going to get obnoxious really quickly.
They’re ugly as sin (what’s with the pill shape?) but I, too, have trouble finding buds that fit my ears. In my case, the buds seem to always fall out, no matter what type or size of tips I use (I’ve tried three different types of buds, using rubber, silicone, and foam tips, each of 3 different sizes).
It looks a little bulky compared to some flossers. I have all of my wisdom teeth and not a huge mouth, so I struggle to floss my back teeth. I hate the disposable flossers, but this seems like it might be a bit large. The one I had before looked basically like a toothbrush with a small flossing head on it.
Yup, that’s the issue I get.
Honestly, it’s just not that specific or sophisticated.
How’s the click noise?
This is my big problem with these in-car computers.
So the big advantage to consumers is that you don’t have to pay for microchip registration, which you currently don’t have to pay for?
Agreed. It’s nice to hear that this is happening, but is Barbados set up with the infrastructure necessary to keep remote workers connected? Let’s hear a little more about it.
I was hoping there would be a little more meat in here, especially after reading the first one, which is a real, meaningful point that people in wealthy countries will probably not know about.
In fairness, your post says if a role calls for a CV.
Heavily disagree, especially for technical roles. There’s absolutely no way you can effectively convey a decade or more of technical experience into a page. Frankly, many of the candidates I interview would be doing themselves a disservice to try. 2 pages is fine, but I rarely see resumes under 3 pages now, it’s…
Two big ones that I find on technical applicants all the time:
BUT, it’s usually triggered on quantity. If you trickle the data out, they may not notice. So plan ahead.
Exactly. This article is actually almost universally bad advice; in most cases, all of the data on your work computer should not leave the work computer. That usually includes all correspondence, code or articles you’ve written, everything.
I was informed once, but have not had the opportunity to verify (since all of my cars have had arrows), that cars without the arrow have the fuel pump handle on the side that the tank is on.
Like a lot of tech, though, this is going to get developed somehow, by someone. I mean, 30 years ago you could have made the case that Photoshop’s AI-driven image-altering tech has the same level of harm. We’ve already seen the “biblical-level deluge of realistic/undetectable” photo fakes.
I’ve traveled extensively, so I’m very comfortable with most of the logistical aspects of traveling - eating, housing, maintaining US finances, etc.
I have the same problem.
I have the same problem.