Yeah, what you described is how it should be.
Each person:
- What I did yesterday.
- What I'm working on today.
- Briefly describe obstacles or assistance I need.
That could be as little as 45 seconds per person if done properly.
Yeah, what you described is how it should be.
Each person:
That could be as little as 45 seconds per person if done properly.
Someone tell remote managers that daily status meetings for teams of 5-10 people should never be more than an hour long.
In person, they are "stand up" meetings to encourage them to be as uncomfortable and short as possible. Over web meeting, that convention tends to fly out the window.
Microsoft, Oracle, Nvidia, AMD, etc. all inking new partnerships to generate a headline and valuation increase. Meanwhile AI companies PE ratios creep upward.
The top few companies can only helicopter cash at eachother for so long before the bubble eventually busts. That's not new income being generated, it's more akin to check-kiting in a public trading context.
I have some aging hardware (approaching 10 year old desktop PC) and I switched to Linux. I have to still use Windows at work but none of my personal computers are Windows anymore.
Microsoft can go kick rocks.
I mean, the bug and the feature of an Apple Airtag is the ubiquity of their devices and their ability to backchannel BLE over cellular networks using millions of end user devices with their pseudoconsent.
Just by the nature of how that expansive network functions, there is no similar alternative that you can control the privacy of.
The alternative would be a GPS transponder intended for vehicles, such as LoJack, or something similar. They are going to have power and subscription requirements, usually cost $1000 for the hardware etc. And in that scenario you still have to "trust" the vendor to a degree.
In the early 2000s there was seemingly infinite television studio budget to pick a random subculture or even individual sociopaths, and just give them a reality show. I just assumed as broadcast and cable viewership declined, these types of grifters also went away or were forced to get real jobs.
Sure, but in my view a bunch of dudes standing around with rifles is enough of a visual deterrent that it should never escalate to the point of "active robbery".
What's really odd is that France already pays Gendarmerie to stand around in public places, protect cultural assets etc.
If even one dude was standing in the corner of the gallery with a rifle slung up that day, that would likely have deterred the entire theft.
Finally it will be easier to search my vast catalog of memes.
I would say this and also if you live in almost any medium sized place in the US, also try the local community college. You may have to bid on bulk lots but they sometimes sell individual PC hardware too. You may have to show up on a certain day that is usually advertised months in advance, online or on physical signage on campus. You might as well participate, since your county and local taxes likely subsidize the institution to begin with.
I didn't "have to" but, a few reasons...
Swapping the drive created a pretty easy rollback path that was just "put original drive back"
The drive was ~10 years old, and was in the range of recommended replacement for an SSD with the amount of TBW and age it had.
Original drive was kinda small and a new larger drive was available for not very much money.
Their demographic problem is even worse thanks to years of the one child policy.