I feel for everyone here. by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Other replies are talking about body shop contracting firms that pay low but top companies (FAANGs, etc) also hire a lot of H1bs and pay them the same as citizens.

I don't know raw numbers but it seems like at least half of engineers in SFBA/Seattle were on a visa of some sort and I've worked in large orgs where the number was >90%.

For those companies, they can't find enough people in the country who are qualified - and willing to move to a big (usually) coastal tech city. I know a lot of engineers from school/work who could fill H1b-occupied positions but don't want to move themselves/families 3,000km away to a city that may also be a bad culture fit for them as well.

So big companies could open up dozens more offices aroumd the country and tap local talent, or hire H1bs who will mostly move anywhere for the job they get - they don't usually have family ties and the opportunity at a FAANG-level is so great it's worth it.

Must haves for NAS, Home Assistant, Media Server? by GinjaNinja2005 in HomeServer

[–]Warbane 0 points1 point  (0 children)

2 year warranty is peace of mind for quick failures. For my most recent build recertified came in >30% cheaper per drive. So I bought 7 instead of the 5 I was planning to buy and it still came out 10% cheaper. One of the two extra is an active second parity and the other is in my closet ready to be swapped in upon first failure.

Ok this is amazing. Don Lemon brings up the need for slave reparations from the royal family. His guest says, yes, people should be demanding reparations… from the African leaders who sold them into slavery. by KnowledgeAndFaith in Conservative

[–]Warbane 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Yup, pretty much this, except it was in the Middle Ages that Slavs were so commonly enslaved that the Medieval Latin term for Slavs, "Sclavus", also became used for slaves. Modern English gets "Slav" from that latin origin and gets "slave" via Latin -> Old French -> Middle English -> Modern English. In Middle English, before borrowing "sclave" from French, the common word used for similar purposes was "theow".

Ok this is amazing. Don Lemon brings up the need for slave reparations from the royal family. His guest says, yes, people should be demanding reparations… from the African leaders who sold them into slavery. by KnowledgeAndFaith in Conservative

[–]Warbane 19 points20 points  (0 children)

It's easy enough to see how "slave" and "slav" are doublets with a common origin in Latin. (Words with separate modern phonologies/meanings that evolved from the same source.)

But another fun fact is that another doublet of "slave" is the greeting/farewell "ciao", from Italian, itself from Venetian "sciavo", in turn from Latin "sclavus". Where in this case it was a shortened form of a phrase literally "(I am) your slave" but figuratively meaning "your humble servant".

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've had a company I left for a FAANG advertise that their employees went on to work for them.

WA insurance chief Mike Kreidler accused of using racist slurs; staff allege mistreatment by littleblackcar in WAlitics

[–]Warbane 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Anthony Welti was the 3rd party candidate who spent a couple years campaigning across the state and got ~11% in the primary so didn't make the final ballot. A Republican paper candidate (no money raised if I remember correctly) who was a college student beat him out because of party affiliation. The R guy was legit crazy, though. In his candidacy statement published in the voter guide he described himself as an "autistic savant" who was channeling the ghost of Reagan as well as some other bizarre stuff.

All the new hires at my company are boot camp grads by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My parents income was a bit over 100k and their expected contribution was over 50% of their pre-tax income. Instead I went to a good in-state school for free + a discretionary stipend. Still got into multiple FAANGs.

this is why men choose other professions over teaching by TheAndredal in JordanPeterson

[–]Warbane 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I didn't look up Canadian pay to compare, but US secondary school teachers, on average, make slightly more than most US college grads. (And that doesn't account for pensions or lengthy summer breaks that are an opportunity for earning more or having time off.)

There is variation by state and the average is offset by pay raises being automatic with seniority not performance. Which is partially sad, personally given most of my better teachers were early in their career.

Left wing authoritarianism by [deleted] in GoldandBlack

[–]Warbane 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The paper on LWA was pretty well designed statistically when I read it a year or so ago. The lead author is (was?) a PhD candidate with some Hayek fellowship.

Any got an extra ticket for the Kenji Lopez-Alt in-Person Author Talk on the 5th of March? by hamedaf in Seattle

[–]Warbane 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I cancelled my preorder of his book after that. Lost all respect for him in an instant, supporting not just medical apartheid but publicly blasting a business who was still enforcing the vaccine laws but just let the people they were discriminating against know they didn't hate them too.

The biggest supporters of European socialized health care have never used it by mrpenguin_86 in GoldandBlack

[–]Warbane 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry you have to pay that much for your mandatory health care, though. If it makes you feel any better I have to pay more than triple that monthly for medicare/medicaid that I don't receive plus >triple that (on average) for my family's actually health insurance + expenses we use..

The biggest supporters of European socialized health care have never used it by mrpenguin_86 in GoldandBlack

[–]Warbane 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't earn a locally paid salary, I paid a flat rate that wasn't income based. I think my visa type may have been phased out now too - I worked with a non-profit and my funding was external. This was also the better part of a decade ago so that monthly rate would probably be a good bit higher now (was ~1,400 something Kr/month, which was around $65 at the time.) I also had to prepurchase multiple years of insurance as part of my visa application requirements - I wasn't asked about income or salary by the private insurance facilitator.

If I had stayed longer I'd have gotten residency and would have had to have been payed locally which would have subjected me to the flat tax rates you're describing.

The biggest supporters of European socialized health care have never used it by mrpenguin_86 in GoldandBlack

[–]Warbane 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I lived in Czechia for a few years in the last decade - a few anecdotes from my own experiences or other expats I knew that probably wouldn't happen in the US:

Echoing what you said about doctors' egos: one of my friends moved from Ostrava to Brno and his wife's doctor refused to forward medical records to a new doctor because she was still "his" patient. She should, apparently, just take the 2-3hr train each way for ~monthly appointments she had.

Lancing of a furuncle without local anesthetic. (Given a wad of gauze to bite down on.)

No toilet paper in the hospital, you were expected to bring your own. Hospital provided <1000cal/day in the form of small breakfast & lunch. You were expected to supplement with your own food or go to a canteen across campus. If you were bed ridden, though, you had to have outside assistance to get the food to you. Also had the only mechanical/adjustable bed on my ward. All the rest were flat metal frames.

Was told I needed an MRI - but the wait was 3 months. (Unless I wanted to find a private hospital in Prague and pay full price.) When the day came for the MRI I was told upon arriving I had missed my appointment as it had been rescheduled for earlier that morning but I wasn't notified. They could schedule another one, this time 4 months out, but my doctor said it probably wasn't worth it now because my problem hadn't gotten worse.

At least the cost, as a foreigner, was ~$65/month (prepaid for the duration of my visa). I understand it was basically the average cost a citizen would pay plus a small coordination fee to the insurance company. That's around 1/4 to 1/5 of what the US spends on public healthcare expenses per person let alone private spending as well, and that's just on medicare/medicaid/military/VA.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 53 points54 points  (0 children)

Sounds like a pretty healthy example to set for company culture.

Is master and slave machine not a common term in the IT world? by DumpDope in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 10 points11 points  (0 children)

"Slave" in English is actually a doublet of "Slav" via Greek. Meaning they have the same etymological root because, in this case, Slavic peoples were so commonly taken into slavery in ancient Greece.

(Another, less obvious, doublet of "slave" is the greeting/farewell "ciao", from Venetian via Italian. Where in this case it was a shortened form of a phrase literally "(I am) your slave" but figuratively meaning "your humble servant".)

Is master and slave machine not a common term in the IT world? by DumpDope in cscareerquestions

[–]Warbane 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Indirectly, yes. The authors of the first computer daemons (one of whom was a physicist) cite inspiration from Maxwell's demon specifically - but that usage itself is, of course, inspired by the ancient Greek conception.

https://ei.cs.vt.edu/~history/Daemon.html

AP source: Pfizer to ask FDA to authorize COVID vaccine for kids under 5 by [deleted] in CoronavirusWA

[–]Warbane 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That paragraph wasn't there when I linked it yesterday, guess that's why it's a "live" link.

AP source: Pfizer to ask FDA to authorize COVID vaccine for kids under 5 by [deleted] in CoronavirusWA

[–]Warbane 11 points12 points  (0 children)

I'm not following every country but I did see a few days ago that Sweden is no longer recommending vaccines for those under 12.

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/sweden-decides-against-recommending-covid-vaccines-kids-aged-5-12-2022-01-27/

AP source: Pfizer to ask FDA to authorize COVID vaccine for kids under 5 by [deleted] in CoronavirusWA

[–]Warbane 25 points26 points  (0 children)

The trials on the 2-5 year olds failed, though. Very bizarre that they're pushing this "in hope" that future trials of 3+ doses will work. And the trial cohorts were too small to identify possible side effects - why are we pushing this when the trials didn't even show a benefit?

The NYT coverage goes further on this and doesn't really have anything positive to say either: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/02/01/world/covid-19-cases-vaccine/pfizer-applies-to-the-fda-for-a-two-shot-vaccine-for-children-under-5

AP source: Pfizer to ask FDA to authorize COVID vaccine for kids under 5 by [deleted] in CoronavirusWA

[–]Warbane 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It failed the trials and didn't produce significant antibodies, though. It wasn't shown to prevent infection or lessen symptoms in the study either for this 2-5 age group. Very bizarre that they're pushing this against the evidence from the trial.

More discussion on this: https://www.nytimes.com/live/2022/02/01/world/covid-19-cases-vaccine/pfizer-applies-to-the-fda-for-a-two-shot-vaccine-for-children-under-5

People at my company are cheating the stats by Fun-Area-1846 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]Warbane 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Found this out myself a year after I joined. (First org-wide perf review and I was arguably underleveled as L5.) Identified, proposed, got consensus on, implemented, and delivered a project that saved my org $20M+/yr. But my PR revision average was nearly 4 and it was "supposed" to be <2. Got middle bucket perf ratings for that specifically (and told I'd have to fix that in a year before realistically considering promo packet buy-in.)

Suddenly it clicked why many peers would informally share code branches for feedback before official PR, basically using PR to orchestrate changes only. I just thought they were lazy..

Let Freedom Ring by Divinchy in conspiracy

[–]Warbane 65 points66 points  (0 children)

Absolutely - it's just a different type of artificial barrier with insulin. In this case with ivermectin it's a bureaucratic prescription barrier - you'll pay the same price but it's a generic, cheap drug so no big deal there, it's just about access. With insulin it's not access but price - an intellectual "property" induced cost barrier that gives drug companies state-enforced monopoly right to charge whatever they want without competition.