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on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy.
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On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote:
on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. |
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On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. I had a way to pay for college, the GI bill, I just saw it as a 4 year impediment to my career. Once I was working, IBM offered 100% tuition reimbursement but again, there was no advantage in going. I already had the job I wanted and education was included in that job package. I was learning state of the art computer systems and software at a very rapid pace, not sitting in a boring class listening to some out of touch guy who was never actually in the field telling me how important Boolean Algebra was. I also had no interest in hearing about the archaic system he worked on in college. Students at Montgomery College were coming to me because their instructors had no clue about how the operating system on the 360 in their lab worked in spite of teaching it. I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. |
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On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. You are a liar, Krause. Dodging the draft crossed everyone's mind. A few did it. Most manned up. To proclaim it 'never entered your mind' is bull****. |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 05:10:10 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/12/2017 8:28 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. I had a way to pay for college, the GI bill, I just saw it as a 4 year impediment to my career. Once I was working, IBM offered 100% tuition reimbursement but again, there was no advantage in going. I already had the job I wanted and education was included in that job package. I was learning state of the art computer systems and software at a very rapid pace, not sitting in a boring class listening to some out of touch guy who was never actually in the field telling me how important Boolean Algebra was. I also had no interest in hearing about the archaic system he worked on in college. Students at Montgomery College were coming to me because their instructors had no clue about how the operating system on the 360 in their lab worked in spite of teaching it. I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. Your post caused me to reflect on something that I've come to realize as I get older. Accomplishments in life are important along with the reputation you earn as you pursue them ... at least they were to me. But in the end none of them really matter for the vast majority of us. When your day comes and you kick the bucket, people will have a brief, focused review of who you were, what you did and what kind of a person you were but your legacy of accomplishments will quickly fade and be all but forgotten in a relatively short time. We are all replaceable. That's why you should give each of your grandkids a pocket knife. Then you'll be remembered. Until they lose it. |
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Poco Loco Wrote in message:
On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. You are a liar, Krause. Dodging the draft crossed everyone's mind. A few did it. Most manned up. To proclaim it 'never entered your mind' is bull****. The only reason he comes here is to hone his bullssit skills. Oh, and the fact all of his friends are here and he has nowhere else to go. -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
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Keyser Soze Wrote in message:
On 1/12/17 8:28 PM, wrote: I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. As I have stated any number of times, I was not interested in trade school. I did take a couple of those kinds of courses as electives in college, in typography, if memory serves, but the only actual "job training courses" I took were in welding in the summers and in editing during my 40-hour weeks the first two years I worked at the newspaper as a reporter and then as a reporter and copy editor. I'd do my assignments from the city desk and features desk when I got to work in the afternoon, and when I finished them up, usually by 9 or 10 pm, I'd get an invite to work on editing wire copy under the tutelage of some hard-nosed newspaper copy editors. You should have learned to do something useful. You might have been able to keep yourself out of hawk. -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
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On 1/13/2017 6:06 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 05:10:10 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/12/2017 8:28 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. I had a way to pay for college, the GI bill, I just saw it as a 4 year impediment to my career. Once I was working, IBM offered 100% tuition reimbursement but again, there was no advantage in going. I already had the job I wanted and education was included in that job package. I was learning state of the art computer systems and software at a very rapid pace, not sitting in a boring class listening to some out of touch guy who was never actually in the field telling me how important Boolean Algebra was. I also had no interest in hearing about the archaic system he worked on in college. Students at Montgomery College were coming to me because their instructors had no clue about how the operating system on the 360 in their lab worked in spite of teaching it. I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. Your post caused me to reflect on something that I've come to realize as I get older. Accomplishments in life are important along with the reputation you earn as you pursue them ... at least they were to me. But in the end none of them really matter for the vast majority of us. When your day comes and you kick the bucket, people will have a brief, focused review of who you were, what you did and what kind of a person you were but your legacy of accomplishments will quickly fade and be all but forgotten in a relatively short time. We are all replaceable. That's why you should give each of your grandkids a pocket knife. Then you'll be remembered. Until they lose it. My grandfather immigrated from Sweden. In his final years he sat down and wrote an autobiography. He described being raised on a farm in Sweden, attending school and his later life in the USA which included that of an infantryman in WW1. He was a maritime engineer and the bulk of the autobiography focused on the many ships and projects he worked on. He'd describe in great detail the electrical power distribution on a Navy ship and, in the middle of the detailed technical writing, insert a sentence ... "Helen (his wife) gave birth to my second son on Dec 6th". That's it. Then back to the USS Detroit's electrical issues. It is hilarious in many respects with the miss-spellings of words that causes memories of his Swedish accent to arise and sobering in others. I have the original, handwritten document. I scanned it all (which took a while) and distributed digital copies to the rest of the family who knew him. I have his penknife that he brought with him from Sweden along with an old fashioned pocket watch made in 1912. |
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On 1/13/17 9:55 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/13/2017 6:06 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 05:10:10 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/12/2017 8:28 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. I had a way to pay for college, the GI bill, I just saw it as a 4 year impediment to my career. Once I was working, IBM offered 100% tuition reimbursement but again, there was no advantage in going. I already had the job I wanted and education was included in that job package. I was learning state of the art computer systems and software at a very rapid pace, not sitting in a boring class listening to some out of touch guy who was never actually in the field telling me how important Boolean Algebra was. I also had no interest in hearing about the archaic system he worked on in college. Students at Montgomery College were coming to me because their instructors had no clue about how the operating system on the 360 in their lab worked in spite of teaching it. I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. Your post caused me to reflect on something that I've come to realize as I get older. Accomplishments in life are important along with the reputation you earn as you pursue them ... at least they were to me. But in the end none of them really matter for the vast majority of us. When your day comes and you kick the bucket, people will have a brief, focused review of who you were, what you did and what kind of a person you were but your legacy of accomplishments will quickly fade and be all but forgotten in a relatively short time. We are all replaceable. That's why you should give each of your grandkids a pocket knife. Then you'll be remembered. Until they lose it. My grandfather immigrated from Sweden. In his final years he sat down and wrote an autobiography. He described being raised on a farm in Sweden, attending school and his later life in the USA which included that of an infantryman in WW1. He was a maritime engineer and the bulk of the autobiography focused on the many ships and projects he worked on. He'd describe in great detail the electrical power distribution on a Navy ship and, in the middle of the detailed technical writing, insert a sentence ... "Helen (his wife) gave birth to my second son on Dec 6th". That's it. Then back to the USS Detroit's electrical issues. It is hilarious in many respects with the miss-spellings of words that causes memories of his Swedish accent to arise and sobering in others. I have the original, handwritten document. I scanned it all (which took a while) and distributed digital copies to the rest of the family who knew him. I have his penknife that he brought with him from Sweden along with an old fashioned pocket watch made in 1912. My maternal grandfather was a journeyman saddlemaker in "the old country," traveling from village to village and farm to farm making and repairing saddles and farm gear. When he came to America, he got work at a butcher shop and in a few years opened his own butcher shop. I have some of his tools from Europe and a couple of his knives from his butcher shop. |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 08:29:27 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/12/17 8:28 PM, wrote: I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. As I have stated any number of times, I was not interested in trade school. I did take a couple of those kinds of courses as electives in college, in typography, if memory serves, but the only actual "job training courses" I took were in welding in the summers and in editing during my 40-hour weeks the first two years I worked at the newspaper as a reporter and then as a reporter and copy editor. I'd do my assignments from the city desk and features desk when I got to work in the afternoon, and when I finished them up, usually by 9 or 10 pm, I'd get an invite to work on editing wire copy under the tutelage of some hard-nosed newspaper copy editors. I guess that explains why I am comfortably retired after a rewarding career and you are still riding the bus, trying to hustle up a living. |
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On 1/13/17 11:02 AM, wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 08:29:27 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 8:28 PM, wrote: I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. As I have stated any number of times, I was not interested in trade school. I did take a couple of those kinds of courses as electives in college, in typography, if memory serves, but the only actual "job training courses" I took were in welding in the summers and in editing during my 40-hour weeks the first two years I worked at the newspaper as a reporter and then as a reporter and copy editor. I'd do my assignments from the city desk and features desk when I got to work in the afternoon, and when I finished them up, usually by 9 or 10 pm, I'd get an invite to work on editing wire copy under the tutelage of some hard-nosed newspaper copy editors. I guess that explains why I am comfortably retired after a rewarding career and you are still riding the bus, trying to hustle up a living. This is about the sixth time you've repeated this moronic catechism of yours. I'm still working because I like to work. It gets me into a business suit every couple of weeks, I ride the bus to downtown DC every couple of weeks, I do lunch every couple of weeks with some really bright people, I get to contribute ideas and work product for which I am nicely paid, I get trips to Geneva, Kenya, Rome and other interesting places...Looks like a nice client-paid trip to London is coming up later this year, a trip that will also allow us to attend several performances of The Proms. I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. |
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Keyser Soze Wrote in message:
On 1/13/17 11:02 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 08:29:27 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 8:28 PM, wrote: I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. As I have stated any number of times, I was not interested in trade school. I did take a couple of those kinds of courses as electives in college, in typography, if memory serves, but the only actual "job training courses" I took were in welding in the summers and in editing during my 40-hour weeks the first two years I worked at the newspaper as a reporter and then as a reporter and copy editor. I'd do my assignments from the city desk and features desk when I got to work in the afternoon, and when I finished them up, usually by 9 or 10 pm, I'd get an invite to work on editing wire copy under the tutelage of some hard-nosed newspaper copy editors. I guess that explains why I am comfortably retired after a rewarding career and you are still riding the bus, trying to hustle up a living. This is about the sixth time you've repeated this moronic catechism of yours. I'm still working because I like to work. It gets me into a business suit every couple of weeks, I ride the bus to downtown DC every couple of weeks, I do lunch every couple of weeks with some really bright people, I get to contribute ideas and work product for which I am nicely paid, I get trips to Geneva, Kenya, Rome and other interesting places...Looks like a nice client-paid trip to London is coming up later this year, a trip that will also allow us to attend several performances of The Proms. I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. So you just sit around like a bump on a log? -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. |
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On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? You and Donnee cannot seem to get masturbation, feces, and toilet bowls out of your heads. Was it poor potty training? |
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Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/13/2017 6:06 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 05:10:10 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/12/2017 8:28 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 18:54:57 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/12/17 5:12 PM, wrote: On Thu, 12 Jan 2017 16:19:14 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: on Harry's queer way of spelling Navy. It is just his way to disrespect the people who serve their country. He managed to dodge the draft and he thinks anyone who served is a fool What the **** did he care? He is a borderline communist and he already speaks russian.. Hey, it's not my fault you were too lazy to find a way to pay for college back then, when it was relatively inexpensive. And, as I have told you any number of times, I went to college to further my formal education. "Dodging" the draft never crossed my mind. Oh, and I speak and read Russian because I studied it. I like the language and there is a lot of great literature written in it. I had a way to pay for college, the GI bill, I just saw it as a 4 year impediment to my career. Once I was working, IBM offered 100% tuition reimbursement but again, there was no advantage in going. I already had the job I wanted and education was included in that job package. I was learning state of the art computer systems and software at a very rapid pace, not sitting in a boring class listening to some out of touch guy who was never actually in the field telling me how important Boolean Algebra was. I also had no interest in hearing about the archaic system he worked on in college. Students at Montgomery College were coming to me because their instructors had no clue about how the operating system on the 360 in their lab worked in spite of teaching it. I said this before and the bet still stands, I bet I have far more hours of classroom instruction than you do and the amount of "distance learning" (computer aided classes) and self taught courses will triple that. In the 60s and early 70s I was averaging 700-800 hours of actual class time a year, not hanging around the student union or working at some bull**** part time job. When my daughter was in college, her BA worked out to about 800 hours of actual class over the whole 4 years. I started doing as much as I could remotely but I was still 300 to 500 a year in class after that (over 30 years) I was also an instructor for a while. Your post caused me to reflect on something that I've come to realize as I get older. Accomplishments in life are important along with the reputation you earn as you pursue them ... at least they were to me. But in the end none of them really matter for the vast majority of us. When your day comes and you kick the bucket, people will have a brief, focused review of who you were, what you did and what kind of a person you were but your legacy of accomplishments will quickly fade and be all but forgotten in a relatively short time. We are all replaceable. That's why you should give each of your grandkids a pocket knife. Then you'll be remembered. Until they lose it. My grandfather immigrated from Sweden. In his final years he sat down and wrote an autobiography. He described being raised on a farm in Sweden, attending school and his later life in the USA which included that of an infantryman in WW1. He was a maritime engineer and the bulk of the autobiography focused on the many ships and projects he worked on. He'd describe in great detail the electrical power distribution on a Navy ship and, in the middle of the detailed technical writing, insert a sentence ... "Helen (his wife) gave birth to my second son on Dec 6th". That's it. Then back to the USS Detroit's electrical issues. It is hilarious in many respects with the miss-spellings of words that causes memories of his Swedish accent to arise and sobering in others. I have the original, handwritten document. I scanned it all (which took a while) and distributed digital copies to the rest of the family who knew him. I have his penknife that he brought with him from Sweden along with an old fashioned pocket watch made in 1912. Very nice! --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. |
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On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. |
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On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. |
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On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 10:00:45 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote:
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. He might not have smeared his walls, but he's doing a hell of a job on his keyboard! Hope he's got one of those plastic covered ones. |
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On 1/14/17 1:00 PM, Tim wrote:
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. I'm impressed by people who save or improve the lives of others, by doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, by those who make low-cost housing available, by those who collect and distribute food and clothing to the needy, by those who adopt kids in need, by those who work to improve the working conditions of others, et cetera. While it must be nice to have the skills to build a tiki bar, it's just not something that finds its way onto my list |
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On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 14:35:22 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/14/17 1:00 PM, Tim wrote: On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. I'm impressed by people who save or improve the lives of others, by doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, by those who make low-cost housing available, by those who collect and distribute food and clothing to the needy, by those who adopt kids in need, by those who work to improve the working conditions of others, et cetera. While it must be nice to have the skills to build a tiki bar, it's just not something that finds its way onto my list Whoooooosh! |
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On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 12:36:34 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. As I said, you seem incapable of doing much yourself but you do like to denigrate the skills of people who do. When someone is building a deck or servicing a car for you, do you stand there telling him what a dunce he is because he did not go to the same college as you? |
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On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 14:35:22 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: I'm impressed by people who save or improve the lives of others, by doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, by those who make low-cost housing available, by those who collect and distribute food and clothing to the needy, by those who adopt kids in need, by those who work to improve the working conditions of others, et cetera. While it must be nice to have the skills to build a tiki bar, it's just not something that finds its way onto my list Yeah masonry, electrical, plumbing, tile, aluminum fabrication, stone work, HVAC and carpentry are not nearly as challenging as screwing union members out of their demands to save "your" organization a few bucks (you most recent claim to fame) |
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On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 20:04:03 -0500, Keyser Soze
wrote: On 1/14/17 7:58 PM, wrote: screwing union members out of their demands to save "your" organization a few bucks (you most recent claim to fame) Another figment of your overworked imagination. The strike I described was*not* over the amount of $$$ in the pot for union members. Where did you get that idea, off a cereal boxtop? You said there was a strike. A strike always comes with demands and that is usually money, one way or another. |
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Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/14/17 1:00 PM, Tim wrote: On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. I'm impressed by people who save or improve the lives of others, by doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, by those who make low-cost housing available, by those who collect and distribute food and clothing to the needy, by those who adopt kids in need, by those who work to improve the working conditions of others, et cetera. While it must be nice to have the skills to build a tiki bar, it's just not something that finds its way onto my list And the military? |
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Alex Wrote in message:
Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 1:00 PM, Tim wrote: On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 11:36:37 AM UTC-6, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 11:40 AM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 13:10:36 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 1:04 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:31:19 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/13/17 12:29 PM, wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 12:20:58 -0500, Keyser Soze wrote: I'm not and never have been the kind of guy who needs an endless supply of make-work handyman projects, as you do, to stay busy. The world needs people who actually design and build things and I suppose others find a need to write about it. There's an ever-pressing need for tiki bars and stone-faced stereo cabinets, I suppose. That just scratches the surface of the things I do. Your understanding is only limited by your lack of imagination. It probably comes from being told how to think all your life. Why, you're a regular jackoff of all trades, eh? The whole idea of innovation and imagination seems to escape you so you resort to insults. What a bitter little man you are, sitting there denigrating the accomplishments of everyone else in a desperate hope to elevate yourself. If it wasn't for the innovation of others, guys like you would be smearing **** on the wall of your cave trying to express yourself. u A regular Leonardo, you are, and since you know more than the generals, the politicians and the historians, too, why, you must know more than the Trumpster. You're sure to go down in Tiki Bar history! None of Sir Thomas More's doubts for you, fella: you are the true man for all seasons. Bravo! Harry you just did a great job of proving Greg's point. I'm impressed by people who save or improve the lives of others, by doctors, nurses, teachers, social workers, by those who make low-cost housing available, by those who collect and distribute food and clothing to the needy, by those who adopt kids in need, by those who work to improve the working conditions of others, et cetera. While it must be nice to have the skills to build a tiki bar, it's just not something that finds its way onto my list And the military? He needs to put paying his bills and taxes on his list too. -- x |
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