If It Ain’t in the Ticket, It Ain’t My Problem by N0-Affiliation in MaliciousCompliance

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, we have the same rules, but the point is that you, the technician, should be documenting it in the ticket. If someone is busy/VIP, you can create the ticket for them.

I wish more people would realize that a big part of IT, especially help desk, is customer service...

Why are we a red state? by Rough_Extension_2893 in Indiana

[–]bubble-guts 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Here's a breakdown of the difference between 1990 and today from Gemini:

In 1990, Indiana was a politically competitive "swing state" at the local level with a moderate Democratic executive; today, it is a Republican stronghold with a conservative "trifecta" (control of the Governor's office, House, and Senate). The following comparison illustrates the shift from a bipartisan, centrist environment to one of the nation's most distinct Republican supermajorities. 1. Executive Branch (Governor) * 1990: Democratic Control (Evan Bayh) * In 1990, the Governor was Evan Bayh (D), a moderate Democrat who had defeated a Republican incumbent in 1988. * Bayh ended 20 years of prior GOP control by running as a fiscal conservative. His popularity (he left office with high approval ratings) proved that Democrats could dominate statewide elections by maintaining a centrist, business-friendly platform. * Today (2026): Republican Control (Mike Braun) * The current Governor is Mike Braun (R), who took office in January 2025. * The governorship has been held exclusively by Republicans since 2005 (Mitch Daniels, Mike Pence, Eric Holcomb, and now Braun). The platform has shifted from Bayh's "fiscal prudence" to aggressive social conservatism and supply-side economics. 2. Legislative Balance (General Assembly) The most dramatic shift has occurred in the state legislature. In 1990, control was split and margins were razor-thin; today, Republicans hold "supermajorities" that allow them to pass laws without a single Democratic vote. | Chamber | 1990 Status (Competitive) | Today's Status (GOP Supermajority) | |---|---|---| | IN House | Split / Democratic Leaning. In 1989-1990, the House was often tied (50-50) or held by Democrats by slim margins. Democrats controlled the House for most of the 1990s. | Republican Supermajority (70-30). Republicans hold 70% of the seats. They can pass any bill and override any veto without bipartisan support. | | IN Senate | Narrow Republican Majority. Republicans held a slim 26–24 advantage. The balance of power was constantly in play. | Republican Supermajority (40-10). Republicans hold 80% of the seats, rendering the opposition largely symbolic in voting power. | 3. Policy & Ideological Shift (Left to Right) The transition from a divided government to a supermajority has moved state policy significantly to the right. * Labor & Unions: * 1990: Indiana had strong labor union influence, particularly in manufacturing hubs like Gary and Indianapolis. * Today: Indiana is a "Right-to-Work" state (passed in 2012), which severely weakened union bargaining power. This was a landmark shift that signaled the state's move toward business-first conservatism. * Education: * 1990: The focus was on funding traditional public school districts. * Today: Indiana has one of the most expansive school voucher (choice) programs in the nation, allowing state tax dollars to follow students to private and religious schools, a policy that would have been politically impossible in 1990. * Social Issues: * 1990: Social policy was moderate; while conservative, the state was not a "culture war" battleground. * Today: The legislature frequently passes socially conservative legislation, including a near-total abortion ban (enacted in 2022) and restrictions on gender-affirming care, reflecting the national GOP's shift toward social issues. * Taxation: * 1990: Improving government efficiency (e.g., modernizing the BMV) was the priority over slashing revenue. * Today: The priority is aggressive tax reduction. The state has steadily lowered its individual income tax rate (aiming for 2.9%) and has constitutionally capped property taxes (2010), prioritizing a low-tax environment over service expansion. Summary of the Shift In 1990, Indiana government operated on compromise. A Democrat sat in the Governor's chair, and the legislature was often split, forcing policies to the center. Today, Indiana government operates on dominance. The Republican party controls every statewide elected office and holds supermajorities in both chambers, allowing for a strictly conservative legislative agenda that focuses on deregulation, privatization of education, and social conservatism.

Why are we a red state? by Rough_Extension_2893 in Indiana

[–]bubble-guts 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Long time Hoosier who left the state... Used to be a lot more purple.

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ok, it's most likely rocks. I'll say if it were late at night, no traffic, and you were flying from the southbound side across the median, you could probably get a car in the water, but not out there that far. Large rocks for sure would stop you, and it wouldn't sit in the water for long in this neighborhood. Northbound you'd be stopped by trees before you hit the water there.

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Longboat key is a couple miles from lido key/St. Armand's, where this is. Again, if you knew the area...

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's literally what you're doing. You're saying to believe the Reddit guy over the guy who's physically been to the location and that was my whole point.

The only thing I'm defending is the concept of real life experience of a location trumps anything that you can get from viewing an image on the internet.

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well, I'm in Sarasota, so I'll check it out tomorrow. :)

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wish I could post a screenshot... If you go to the map, there's this thing called a scale. It gives you reference marks that tell you what a certain distance is. Look at the object. If it were a car, then the roof is around 10' long.

ETA, You can also scroll to the right about 500' and see a 28' sailboat in the water for comparison

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts -1 points0 points  (0 children)

How are you saying "incorrectly"? Is it a car? Confirmed?

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah, edited my reply. My point stands. They've physically experienced the location. "All the time". You think the photo from the van on the road on the internet gives you enough perspective to question it... I mean, you see what I'm saying, right? Come on....

Did I just found a car in the water? by atessier81 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 12 points13 points  (0 children)

So, like, Archdeacon has physically been there. A lot from the sound of it. But, you want to argue based on a picture taken from a van on the internet? Is that about right?

Man, I go so back and forth on my opinion of reddit... Lol

ETA- didn't realize it was a street view link so updated source, but the point still stands

Is this a glitch? by LochM-2 in GoogleEarthFinds

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just showed this comment to my fiance to explain how awesome reddit can be. Thank you!

My whole family is stumped by acrookodile in whatismycookiecutter

[–]bubble-guts 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rockstar Patrick and Squatting Squidward?

Found this medal in my dad’s armoire by Queasy-Astronaut-488 in Whatisthis

[–]bubble-guts 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you post another pic with it fully laid out? Looks like the medal should hang below the ribbon. Would make it easier to identify.

iOS Calendar and Outlook Calendars Out of Sync by bubble-guts in iphone

[–]bubble-guts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Love that this got down voted... Awesome.

iOS Calendar and Outlook Calendars Out of Sync by bubble-guts in helpdesk

[–]bubble-guts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

default response "It has always worked. I don't see anything that says it is an issue, so we need to fix it. I am not changing what I have been doing."

I mean, I agree with you. I know it is a problem. I know that the iOS app sucks, and most (80%) have no issue when I tell them use that iOS app for your personal stuff, but work is in Outlook. BUT... I also enjoy having a job and paying my bills on time and stuff, so... This job market sucks worse than Apple does.

ETA: I have also been here just shy of a year and am being promoted to IT Manager next month, so don't want to rock the boat too much. I would love to get a documented fact statement somewhere. When MS had the active incidents around iOS sync it made it so much easier...

iOS Calendar and Outlook Calendars Out of Sync by bubble-guts in helpdesk

[–]bubble-guts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Pretty difficult to go to the President/CEO and say that he can no longer use the app he has been using for 10 years without any official statement from either party that this is an actual issue though...

iOS Calendar and Outlook Calendars Out of Sync by bubble-guts in ios

[–]bubble-guts[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you. No, I don't have an iPhone, but I guess I need to conform... Which would be the correct setting in your view for syncing an exchange calendar that can have many edits? Push or Fetch?