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5 votes
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Why do some job adverts put women off applying?
12 votes -
Tesla is laying off about 9% of its workforce as it restructures the company
6 votes -
Calling all people who have lived and/or worked in Yellowstone or other national parks
Next month I’m dropping everything and moving from Kentucky to work in Yellowstone with my girlfriend. I have been to other parks but never stayed more than one night and never taken on multi-day...
Next month I’m dropping everything and moving from Kentucky to work in Yellowstone with my girlfriend. I have been to other parks but never stayed more than one night and never taken on multi-day trails/hikes. To other users who have done something similar or stayed in national parks for extended periods of time, what advice do you have? Where are the “must see” parts of Yellowstone? What was the adjustment period like, and what are some safety precautions we should definitely take note of?
5 votes -
LGBT teachers in the countryside are nine times more likely to have mental health problems, says study
8 votes -
What’s the craziest team building / off-site that you’ve ever had the misfortune to be part of?
I’ll go first. Back in the late 1990s I worked at a startup out of Seattle. The founders had a previous exit and had a winery in Sonoma. They flew us all down there and things started out fun. We...
I’ll go first. Back in the late 1990s I worked at a startup out of Seattle. The founders had a previous exit and had a winery in Sonoma. They flew us all down there and things started out fun. We had a scavenger hunt in San Francisco, we all picked grapes at their winery, and saw how the wine was made. The third day got weird. We were all supposed slaughter a goat and eat it. No one wanted to kill the poor thing, so a farm hand did it, and we all ate the terrible meat.
On the final evening we were all sat down in a barn with lots of candles. We did some semi-normal stuff like write down everything we have been avoiding in our lives, then we burned the lists.
Next, the person running the thing thought it would be a good idea to reenact the biblical thing where Jesus washes poor peoples’ feet. But she got it backwards, and some of the VPs were supposed to wash the CEO’s feet.
A couple of us vocally freaked out, then the whole thing fell apart and we all went home early.
I know my story may be extreme, but does anyone else have any misguided or just strange team building events like this in their work history?
15 votes -
America may soon face its biggest labor strike in decades
18 votes -
What are you trying to accomplish this week?
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14 votes -
Post-work: the radical idea of a world without jobs
6 votes -
The cost of developers (or, why Microsoft wants Github)
4 votes -
Hell on wheels: Fatal accidents, off-the-books workers, a union once run by a mobster - The rogue world of one of New York’s major trash haulers
3 votes -
Are there any people in the industry here?
New group, new topics, this is all so exciting. I'm a chef myself and enjoy discussing the business and philosophies of what I do. I'm wondering if other people in the industry have found their...
New group, new topics, this is all so exciting. I'm a chef myself and enjoy discussing the business and philosophies of what I do. I'm wondering if other people in the industry have found their way unto Tildes at this point.
8 votes -
Shift work and sleeping
Hey folks, so I've worked nights for the last two years and it sucked. flat out sucked. I would average 4-5 hours of sleep before and after a shift and now I've moved to afternoons (3pm-10pm) I...
Hey folks, so I've worked nights for the last two years and it sucked. flat out sucked. I would average 4-5 hours of sleep before and after a shift and now I've moved to afternoons (3pm-10pm) I find my body still thinks 5ish hours is great.
Often I wake in the middle of the night and then that's it. I'm up. it truly sucks. anyone got advice on how I can change this? I've been on afternoons for a little over a month now, so could it be more I'm still adjusting? appreciate any help and advice.edit ** thank you all for the advice. I will have to work out a routine and make sure to sick to it, then just not get too down when only making small steps.
13 votes -
Trying to change my career to freelancing, how plausible is this path?
Didn't know if i should post this in talk or tech, but my focus is on advice, so i guess this is the place. I am currently in the process of changing my career to be a web developer. Studied IT a...
Didn't know if i should post this in talk or tech, but my focus is on advice, so i guess this is the place.
I am currently in the process of changing my career to be a web developer. Studied IT a few years ago, dropped out due to finances, and spent the last few years working crappy jobs.
I designated all my spare time towards learning the basics. I'm confident enough in my knowledge of HTML and CSS, know how to use Bootstrap and i'm currently learning the basics of JS. The Udemy course i'm taking will cover NodeJS, jQuery and some more backend next. After that i plan on learning Wordpress and a framework i guess (React/Vue/Angular). Have i missed something here?
My final goal is doing freelance web development. My question is, how plausible is this and what else do you suggest learning to have an easier time finding clients?
Also, how soon do you figure i could start doing some basic work with simple websites (even if it means using Bootstrap / altering Wordpress themes)? My country is rather cheap, so even 500$/month on simple projects will be enough of a reason for me to quit my 9-5.
Guess i'll need a portfolio too though.
Anyways, thanks for reading. Any web devs out there care to offer advice? I'm dedicated to achieving this goal, but i'm somewhat lost still.
3 votes -
Starbucks’ bias training finally happened. Here’s what it looked like.
20 votes -
MI6 airs TV ads to recruit more women and ethnic minorities
6 votes -
Talk to Deliveroo couriers. See a dystopia that could be your future – the realities facing the ‘contractors’ are grim. No wonder their union is appealing to the high court
9 votes -
A woman has been named as NYSE president. It only took 226 years.
5 votes -
US Supreme Court decides arbitration agreements overrule class-action rights
8 votes -
Steve Jobs' secret for eliciting questions, overheard at a San Francisco cafe
12 votes -
The weird, dangerous, isolated life of the saturation diver
6 votes -
The burnout crisis in American medicine
7 votes -
The American Dream
4 votes -
A fast-food problem: Where have all the teenagers gone?
7 votes