No, but having a handful of people who will never see their ads devalues the whole package.
No, but having a handful of people who will never see their ads devalues the whole package.
How? How do they profit off someone who refuses to view ads?
Who would pay for data on a person you can’t advertise to?
I work with fire alarm systems, as others have said, smoke, steam, dust, and even insects inside the detection chamber will trigger a photoelectric smoke det.
I don’t think they’ll care or miss you, to be honest. It’s not like they’re making money off you.
I wonder if there is a job where you test user interfaces by deliberately misunderstanding instructions? I feel I’d be good at it.
I’ve tried, the whole situation is a shitshow right now.
I’d say they did, nobody actively advertises a product they don’t want to sell, unless it’s some type of loss leader.
Of course, you got cheap shoes out of it, so perhaps you both won?
They have an unquestioning bloodlust for every US state department adversary.
Meaning Russia and China, I assume?
Immediately, our team went to the dam to open the gates. Before they could open, the flash flood hit them, and they ran away to save their lives
I’m surprised they had to send a team to open the gates, I’d have thought this could be done remotely.
They’re pulling older and older pieces of equipment out of storage, fixing it up, and sending it out.
They’ve given up trying to bombard Ukraine with naval assets, and surrendered the offshore oil platforms they were using as observation platforms.
They’re flying fewer and fewer sorties, the ones they do fly typically lob missiles from beyond the border, and they’re seeing mechanical failures because the few aircraft they do have are not being properly maintained.
The lack of equipment is definitely hurting them, make no mistake about that.
Unfortunately, they have no shortage of young men to send to their deaths.
The what now? What the hell takes an hour to update on a car?
So I could move to bumfuck nowhere and get paid to chill out in my car, while my coworkers pick up my slack?
No, that’s Alice’s problem.
It sounds like an incentive not to hire people who live too far away from the office to me.
Because the simplest option for the company is not to hire Bob.
Bob chose to live and work where he does, he can live with the consequences of his choices.
I don’t feel sorry for bob.
Who would hire Bob, in that case?
So either move house or move job then.
They have the choice of paying for the convenience of living close to work, or spending time commuting. That’s not something an employer will or should care about.
Given how limited the selection of electric vans and pickups is, I think this will backfire somewhat in terms of getting trades and technicians into the city centre.