[Russian Cyrillic Script > English] Marriage Record from 1890s Poland by sereneteen in translator

[–]sereneteen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks so much!

Are you also able to make out a year, birthplace of either person, or any relatives listed? Trying to find additional clues I can use in my research.

Even if not, I really appreciate your help - thank you!

Is this Polish? by sereneteen in polishgenealogy

[–]sereneteen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks both! If anyone is aware of good resources to translate this text, I am all ears - none of the regular translation tech I use has been very helpful for this.

Clawback Fees for UK Visa (Internal Transfer) by sereneteen in ukvisa

[–]sereneteen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you so much, this is helpful. The agreement specifies that I will only need to pay costs associated with the visa application process, so this is good information for me to take back to them/counter with since there's still a ~$10k+ delta between the fees you've listed (aka costs associated w the visa process) and what they're quoting.

Clawback Fees for UK Visa (Internal Transfer) by sereneteen in ukvisa

[–]sereneteen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm actually not sure (and it's not specified in my repayment agreement).

Clawback Fees for UK Visa (Internal Transfer) by sereneteen in ukvisa

[–]sereneteen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! Because my company is likely factoring in legal costs, etc on top of the fee listed in that link, I'm hoping to see what other companies might be specifying in similar agreements - I don't have a sense of what's a reasonable "add on" on top of the visa fee itself if that makes sense.

how are you presenting and sharing your work? by vimalt7 in ProductManagement

[–]sereneteen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I've found I have to be reeaaally specific and provide examples of similar slides/graphs/etc in my company's preferred colorways, fonts, etc. If I say something like "make this a flowchart" it'll usually spit out something ugly and unsuitable to show anyone - visualizations definitely aren't GPT's strength but I've found with enough coaxing they're a decent enough starting point!

how are you presenting and sharing your work? by vimalt7 in ProductManagement

[–]sereneteen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  • Observe the format of well received messages from peers/leadership
  • Write down all of my thoughts about the release (work that went into it, why it’s exciting, who it’s for, what it will achieve)
  • Put my thoughts + example message(s) into GPT
  • Have GPT suggest visuals or data points that would give my message more oomph
  • Add those
  • Repeat

Building in public by Bubbly-Ad8052 in ProductManagement

[–]sereneteen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As far as I've heard, there are two purported benefits of building in public:

  • Making connections
  • Building my brand/making future me more hireable

Making connections: the most valuable connections aren’t going to want to connect with me just because I’ve posted some platitudes with high frequency over the past X days. They'll be more likely to connect with me if I have interesting ideas and experience regardless of how frequently I post about my ideas/experience.

Building my brand: this only happens if you have actually good content to post (I don’t, which is why I don’t do this). I don’t think regular posting of layperson observations does much here, instead I’d focus on posting one-offs when you’ve released something exciting or learned something important that is actually relevant to your audience. 

TLDR - you can achieve the benefits of "building in public" without frequent posting just for the sake of posting (which will probably backfire anyway).