Oh, man, I thought I was over my iPhone envy but I just saw an ad and it's all rekindled. Damn you Jobs!
Natter 52: Playing with a full deck?
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
So it turns out that the coworker who rec'd the dentist will get $25 off her next visit! And so will I!
OK, I'm trying to be enthusiastic about this... I'm calling tomorrow, I swear. Feeling a little less intimidated.
That's pretty cool, sarameg.
It's good for business, that's for sure.
Awww... this is sad:
Pamela Low, Cap'n Crunch creator, RIP
Pamela Low, who created the flavored coating of Cap'n Crunch cereal, died on Friday at age 79. After graduating in 1951 from the University of New Hampshire with a microbiology degree, she took a job as a flavorist at Arthur D. Little. The Cap'n Crunch flavor was inspired by a treat made by her grandmother.
"Grandma would make this concoction with rice and the sauce that she had; it was a combination of brown sugar and butter," Ms. Low's brother William of Westerville, Ohio, said with a chuckle. "It tasted good, obviously. They'd put it over the rice and eat it as a kind of a treat on Sundays..."
Taking a job at Arthur D. Little (in the early 1950s), she became a flavorist, a scientific connoisseur of the artificial tastes that tempt consumers to return for more. She tinkered with flavors of products such as Almond Joy and Mounds, but her biggest achievement came when Quaker Oats developed a new cereal.
"I developed the flavoring, the coating," she told UNH Magazine in 2002.
That is sad, tommy. I've lost count how many times the Cap'n shredded my soft palate with that sweet & crunchy combination.
Who decided to fill Captain Crunch with flakes of glass, though?
Hail to thee, O Mighty Hivemind! I humbly pray for your assistance and hand-holding.
I'm working on my resume. I've been at the same company for 10 years, which means it's my whole resume. So I've broken out the major projects I worked on over the years, since that does actually show growth in responsibilities and knowledge and all those groovy things. Also, the place I'm going to apply to works in a similar field and they may well recognize some of the project names.
How much detail should I give about the projects and what I did on each? I don't mean confidential stuff, but I've started drafting it like this to see how it looks:
My Company -- 1997 to present
One or two sentences as an overview of how I'm awesome and these people should totally hire me.
The Current Project -- 2004 to 2007
- managed whatever task
- supported whatever other task
- co-wrote whatever
- more whatever
The Previous Project -- 2002 to 2004
- managed whatever task
...and so on.
Again, the place I'll be sending this to works in pretty much the same field. And based on the job posting, I want to show them that I've got experience multi-tasking and working on different aspects of long-term projects. My specific questions: Should I include a one-sentence desription of the project, like, "a survey of whatever among 5000 respondents nationwide"? Should I mention who the client was? Does arranging it this way make sense, or does anyone have a better idea?
Strega, I have seen resumes that are entirely skill focused and then mention jobs tangentially, which is how mine is.
So I talk about what I do in terms of curriculum, student support, parent involvement, staff development, then I talk about school.
Could you do something similar? What X skills do you have. Then do project with blurb about the project and specifics as they relate to that project.