July, 2017 archive
Geeking Out 0
Testing SolusOS in a VirtualBox virtual machine on Slackware –Current.
Solus is a nice, clean bit of work designed with the home user in mind.
Testing SolusOS in a VirtualBox virtual machine on Slackware –Current.
Solus is a nice, clean bit of work designed with the home user in mind.
At Psychology Today Blogs, Charles Johnson considers the culture of Uber (and many other Silicon Valley outfits). A snippet:
Bro culture fosters an environment where companies are run much like a fraternity house. It’s perfectly laid out in its infamous 14 core cultural values, which includes super-pumpedness, meritocracy/toe-stepping, and always be hustlin’.
A web search tells me that there is a lack of clarity as to what Uber’s “14 core values” may actually be. The clearest list(s) I was able to find are–er–somewhat less than coherent, as could be expected from a bunch of dude-bros with a morning-after hangover.
Afterthought:
On a radio show I heard recently, the host asked a caller, “What do you do for a living?” The caller responded, “I”m a Lyft driver.”
For Pete’s shake, if you do it for a living, it’s not sharing, it’s employment, and should be regulated accordingly.
The whole “sharing economy” thing is a con and a scam to avoid both obeying labor laws and treating employees like employees.
Dick Polman takes a look at a recent New Yorker article about the National Inquirer, because inquiring minds want to know. Here’s a nugget from Polman’s comments:
My own opinion about tabloids is this: I can understand why persons sometimes read them, just as I understand why some persons like schlocky horror films. Schlock sells.
What I don’t understand is why persons believe them.
James F. Burns points out the there is one “trickle-down” that actually t-r-i-c-k-l-e-s down, very very slowly.
Practice random acts of politeness.
He was with two family members at the time. Investigators believe the person who fired the gun may not even know that they hit someone.
Detectives want to find out who fired the fatal shot.
Tony Norman looks the notorious Wrestlemania Tweet and finds it an appropriate analogy for the Trump presidency:
The doctored video probably wasn’t intended as such, but there hasn’t been a more astute metaphor for the emptiness and triviality of the Trump presidency than using an old snippet from a fake wrestling match as a commentary on the media. A fake sport promoting fake news from a president widely considered to be fake.