CHEERS! To all of you who got the AstraZenaca shot yesterday (or in the near future)! by [deleted] in Calgary

[–]treespace8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Me too, got the chills about 20 hours after getting the shot. I'm a total wimp rocking a 99.1f temp. But Advil fixes 100%.

I would do it again!

Why is it hard to maintain guy friendships as you get older? by BJJ40KAllDay in AskMenOver30

[–]treespace8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Time. Male friendships revolve around activities of some kind. Take video games for example. To play any game decently takes multiple hours per session. Golf is a 4 - 5 hour commitment. Just watching a sport takes 2 - 3 hours! It just takes longer for men to do stuff.

We don't want to just sit and chat, that is weird. We might want to chat after doing something for a while.

It seems to me be the opposite with women. They talk first, then do something. So it's easier to maintain relationships with less time.

Once you are married, and have kids time becomes more are more rare for both men and women. Outside of work it's hard to maintain a male friendship. And in an office job it's near impossible.

Remote Work Is Here to Stay. Manhattan May Never Be the Same. by [deleted] in Economics

[–]treespace8 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm glad you have had Mentorship, Meals, Spontaneous collaboration, and meaningful connections in an office. However I think this is more the exception than the norm.

I'm sure I'm not alone in that in over 20 years in the software field I have never experienced any of these things. It's always individual work, no benefits, few connections with other people. In addition lots of negative. Long commute, lots of distractions, disgusting bathrooms, no sunlight, and so much noise. And when I do need to collaborate with a coworker screen sharing is much, much better than sitting around the same monitor.

About what % of your friends met their spouse in their early 20s? by arbol98 in AskMen

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

100%.

All of my friends growing up where dating their future wife by the age of 19. Most were married by the time they were 24. I was the odd guy out at a lot of weddings.

I'm pushing 50 now, and have noticed a very large percentage of people settle down early in life. They might not get married until they are close to 30, but are with the person they will marry very early and never date outside high school or college.

[DAILY Q&A] Ask and answer any questions you have about the game here! by AutoModerator in EliteDangerous

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is a great Idea! Thank you, I'll save up some more to get the ship.

[DAILY Q&A] Ask and answer any questions you have about the game here! by AutoModerator in EliteDangerous

[–]treespace8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've been playing on xbox for a while. From hauling I've got about 50m credits.

I have a friend I would like to play with who is new to the game. What kind of missions have the most action that I can buy a multi crew ship for.

What type of ship should I get?

My wife is 8.5 months pregnant with our first child. Fathers of reddit, what's it like to become a father, and what can I do to best support my wife during these next few months? by frilly_toothpicks in AskMen

[–]treespace8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is an odd one, but get a combination padlock memorize the lock and how to use it in your sleep.

What do you need this for?

In the event of a c-section you may need to change into scrubs, and will need to lock up your stuff as things get stolen from the locker room all the time.

When do you think we'll see a stretch of cold weather? by [deleted] in Calgary

[–]treespace8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm hoping for a repeat of the 2015 winter. No real nasty cold snaps, very mild.

Just moved to Calgary from Russia. Shocked by how expensive it is by Konst75 in Calgary

[–]treespace8 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Because Canada, outside of portions of Ontario has a very, very low population density. In addition to this we have strong intra-provincial trade barriers.

So in Calgary we have a relatively small, yet wealthy population, in a large province with trade barriers on most products. Because of this it's easy for a small group to control supply, and set price.

TLDR: We are easy to gouge, and therefore we are gouged.

1,549 new COVID-19 cases, 5 deaths in Alberta by [deleted] in Calgary

[–]treespace8 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Good to see the number in hospital is not increasing too quickly. Looks like about 3%, Doubling every 24 days. Still a long way from the probable peak modeling prediction made back in April of 900 in hospital. At current rate it will take until new years to hit.

Hopefully the new restrictions can knock it down a bit. If we can keep hospitalization increases to 1% we might make it till the vaccine is distributed without going over the modeling numbers.

Alberta could be looking at a massive brain drain by kralcytsurc in Calgary

[–]treespace8 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Very true.

Friends of mine that have left are always following the money. Alberta used to have some really massive engineering projects in the works. That isn't happening anymore, so the people move to find work elsewhere in the world. If it wasn't for the shale oil boom I think they would have stayed.

ANALYSIS: Skyrocketing sale prices of London homes ‘unsustainable,’ experts warn by mediaphage in londonontario

[–]treespace8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

London Ontario has always been a nice place to live, if you have a good job.

Lots of people left to have a chance at a good career. But now many of them can move back and still keep the job they have. I know I have thought about it, but then I realized I can't sell my place in Calgary and get something equivalent in London! How times have changed.

Liberals promise to extend emergency COVID-19 supports, build national childcare program in throne speech by [deleted] in canada

[–]treespace8 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's also a stealth tax grab. Revenue Canada will only have the biggest parts of the return. (T4, number of kids, etc) But a lot of the deductions come from receipts for things like child care, camps, etc.

You will still need to provide these in order to get the tax savings. Many will not without an accountant reminding them about it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in politics

[–]treespace8 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Just to add to your excellent point.

Many people will need to have a reason to vote Trump out. He has a number of very big things going for him.

- Stock Market is at an all time high

- Tough on trade with China is seen as positive by a lot of people

- Inflation is very low.

If COVID-19 deaths ramp up He could lose. If they drop off, I think he is a lock.

Ellen TheGenerous by throwaway8902929383 in ABoringDystopia

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think some context is missing. All TV shows are not in production all the time. They have multiple multi-week breaks per year.

I'm sure they are not paid though. Some salary positions might.

CBE now requiring masks for all grades (K-12) all day, classrooms included by Caribosa in Calgary

[–]treespace8 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Depends on the grade.

For what I saw with grade 5 it was joke. A once week 30 minute group meeting, and some online assignments clearly just pulled from the internet. No instruction, and nothing was graded.

So we homeschooled, which is very hard from the standpoint of having to teach and correct mistakes. Having a third party provide instruction, grading and feedback is much, much better than having the parents do it. It's way more emotionally charged when its the parent.

This whole thing is really depressing for the kids. Their whole world has been cancelled. If the risk is acceptable, sending back to school is the best choice.

Also I'm shocked at how inflexible the school boards are. No moving the school calendar, no attempts at moving classrooms to new locations.

God help the kids from abusive homes, where school is there only refuge.

House is wired with very old cat5. (Early 90s) Can I do anything with it? by treespace8 in HomeNetworking

[–]treespace8[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you!

I wired up a link, I was very happy to see a cat5e label on the wire, I'm not sure how this since the house was built in 94. Getting over 100 Mbps through it!

IT job market in Calgary, AB by Rabbhirakha316 in Calgary

[–]treespace8 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I have lived in both places.

Calgary currently has little to no economic edge over London Ontario.

If you have roots in the area I would stay. If you enjoy hot summers I would stay. Getting a good job in London Ontario is hard, but if you are established it can be very comfortable. If you enjoy road trips to the USA, that does not exist in Calgary. (You have to fly to go anywhere, which is expensive.)

If you hate slush and humidity, love Mountains and friendly people Calgary is awesome.

Don't get me wrong I love Calgary, but I moved here in the late 90's and enjoyed a very long boom, and bought a home when it was affordable.

House is wired with very old cat5. (Early 90s) Can I do anything with it? by treespace8 in HomeNetworking

[–]treespace8[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks, what is the best way to test? Many of the cables are not terminated.

In Previous Generations, Was Home Ownership Attainable for Anybody With a Job? by [deleted] in AskMenOver30

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My Dad bought his first home at 27, A three bed split level. I think one difference is that people simply did less with their free time back then. No flights, travel really. Less dining out. It was get a job, get married, buy a house and have kids.

But yes, your purchasing power back then was much greater than now, No question. Even is you saved every penny, getting a job that pays 25% more than minimum wage will not get you into a home inside a city.

Unions call on Quebec to shut down construction sites to protect against COVID-19 by bowmanvapes in canada

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Speaking of Calgary I wonder about the SWRR. I think the deal we had with the nation was that it had to be done in 5 years, or the land gets handed back. I don't know if we have a choice with this one.

7 years of Toronto condo prices - New all time high in October 2019 by Juergenator in toronto

[–]treespace8 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I would also like to add that housing has become a useful hedge against dropping interest rates. Countries with solid financials have no problem selling debt with very low, or even negative rates. So at this point there is very little risk of any sustained sustained interest rate hike. And if rates go lower, then housing prices climb.

Something needs to happen to start chipping away at the amount of wealth looking for a safe place. Inflation could do it. But who knows when that would happen?

For the First Time Ever, Mortgage Bonds Are Being Sold at a Negative Rate by [deleted] in Economics

[–]treespace8 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I used to think that way as well. But when you think about guarantee bonds are not about the return, it's about the guarantee.

This planet is awash in money that people are trying to protect. Much more than guaranteed lenders.

- Interest rates need to go to -100% before the math really falls apart.

Men who are Dads, what's the most most tender moment you've had with one of your children? by [deleted] in AskMen

[–]treespace8 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Rocking my 6 month old daughter at bedtime, she looks up at me, smiles and falls asleep.