I had the most bizarre dream last night. I dreamed that the Cubs had gotten to the World Series... and that I had been selected to pitch the first game for the Cubs.
Talk about absurd premises for a dream....
So I spent hours (in my dream) practicing my pitching, as the game was the next day. Which initially sucked mightily, but by the end of the dream at least I could get it through the strike zone on most pitches. Of course, I wasn't practicing against actual batters, so who knows how many hits the opposing team could have gotten off me.
The dream ended before the game began, although I did go talk to my parents in the stands before the game began.
I had bunches of bizarre dreams last night. Kept waking up every two hours, but managed to get back to sleep each time - each time another bizarre dream. It felt like I'd been working out in my sleep when I finally got up, though. Lots of aching and popping joints when I got up. What's up with that? Glad I took today as a vacation day (hate going into Boston on Marathon Monday) - I would have been moving very slowly at my usual time.
You would probably do better than Yankees pitcher Chien-Ming Wang, tommyrot. His ERA is 34.50 this season.
I got a call last night to screen for an internship-with-stipend for an entry-level Java developer job. They'll probably be calling me in for an interview this week.
Which is hurrah-city, except that the stipend is $525/mo, the commitment is 6 months (and they hire you at that point if they like you) and it's in Raynham, which is a 45 minute commute if the traffic is willing.
The phone screener said they've received 350 applications so far.
While I can totally understand getting confused about it, this is frustrating.
I work on product A and get a bug about it. Turns out the problem is in product B that product A uses. So I transfer the bug and say that the problem is in product B. Now I'm getting back an e-mail saying, hey I can't reproduce this in product C therefore the problem must be in A. Dude probably just doesn't know about the relationship between A and B, but it's still frustrating.
The phone screener said they've received 350 applications so far.
That reminds me of getting my first job out of college. It was '91 and pretty much everyplace was like that. At the job I got, they said they had 300 applicants. I ended up being the third choice, but one guy got a different job and the other only lasted a week or so. I got a rejection letter before getting an offer.
I seriously feel bad for kids graduating right now and trying to go out and get jobs. The job market was total shit in '91, but it's probably worse now.
I seriously feel bad for kids graduating right now and trying to go out and get jobs. The job market was total shit in '91, but it's probably worse now.
The difference I see now is that many companies are choosing to replace older, experienced (read: expensive) employees with new hires fresh out of college (read: cheap), whereas in the early 90s that was not so much the case. So in some cases it may be easier for a recent college grad to get a job, but they're probably going to be paid in Amazon gift cards.