Lydia: But you are a vampire. Spike: If I'm not, I'm gonna be pissed about drinking all that blood.

'Potential'


Natter 74: Ready or Not  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


meara - Aug 03, 2016 8:13:04 am PDT #25565 of 30003

That sounds potentially exciting, Jesse!

I hardly ever listen to podcasts. I think because I can't concentrate on them while working, and I'm rarely in the car long enough to listen to a full one?


Jesse - Aug 03, 2016 8:23:31 am PDT #25566 of 30003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I don't even know if I would want to work for a consulting firm like that, but it is an option that had kind of fallen off my radar. I have GOT to figure out my next move!


Connie Neil - Aug 03, 2016 8:37:32 am PDT #25567 of 30003
brillig

Also I can read faster than anyone can talk and I feel like it slows my brain down. Plus the sheer annoyance of someone "umm"ing and stumbling, and laughing and chatter in the background making it hard to hear

This! I realized I read by some sort of gestalt method, recognizing the entire word rather than interpreting the collection of letters. Waiting for someone to sound out a word and matching it to my verbal database in order to follow a story is endlessly frustrating. When I'm talking to someone in a conversation, I can generally predict the pattern of their thoughts and am tracking the words to provide confirmation.

It would be catastrophic to try to listen to a podcast or audio book while I drive, it would take far too much concentration.


Sue - Aug 03, 2016 9:01:37 am PDT #25568 of 30003
hip deep in pie

I only listen to podcasts when I'm walking and/or on public transit. I almost never watch online video.

Same.

I think of podcasts a lot like radio. I like the intimacy of the voice in my ear. It's not a great way for me to retain information, so they wouldn't be my first way of getting information, but I like them to tell me a story.

And rapid topic change...

Work related email composition question: I am writing to Ministries in other provinces asking them how they handle a particular issue. When I have only a general inquiries email address, is "Dear Sir or Madam" the best way to begin the email?


Pix - Aug 03, 2016 9:06:57 am PDT #25569 of 30003
The status is NOT quo.

For me, podcasts are perfect for commuting, cooking and cleaning. I like being able to listen to them when I can't read. Most of my favorites have already been listed above, so this is just a token "me too!"


juliana - Aug 03, 2016 9:14:06 am PDT #25570 of 30003
I’d be lying if I didn’t say that I miss them all tonight…

Also I can read faster than anyone can talk and I feel like it slows my brain down. Plus the sheer annoyance of someone "umm"ing and stumbling, and laughing and chatter in the background making it hard to hear

This is also me. Adding in auditory processing issues, and podcasts are very much Not For Me. Although I managed to listen to a NFL-centered one on my commute last year, but it was only 15 minutes, and the podcaster was very slick, so he used very few filler words.


Jesse - Aug 03, 2016 9:44:05 am PDT #25571 of 30003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

When I have only a general inquiries email address, is "Dear Sir or Madam" the best way to begin the email?

It sort of feels overly formal for our modern world, but if you don't know who you're talking to, and a ministry feels fairly conservative, it seems like maybe the best bet. I might go with "Dear colleagues"?


Tom Scola - Aug 03, 2016 9:45:06 am PDT #25572 of 30003
Remember that the frontier of the Rebellion is everywhere. And even the smallest act of insurrection pushes our lines forward.

The only podcasts I listen to are Night Vale, which is more of a performance than a talk show, and Jon's radio show, which not really a podcast either, but the podcast app is a convenient way to consume it.


askye - Aug 03, 2016 9:45:27 am PDT #25573 of 30003
Thrive to spite them

I've tried podcasts a few times but it's about the same as TED talks or things like that. I'd rather read the iformation than have to listen to it.

Occasionally it's interesting but I don't retain stuff well enough. And a lot of times I find the voices irritating (I can't realy listen to NPR either). I'd rather just be able to read what ever it is I'm trying to learn so I'm not distracted because someone's voice is too quiet or nasally or if I were reading I could skim past to the next part and then go back and read later.

I wihs I could get into podcasts.


Jesse - Aug 03, 2016 9:45:50 am PDT #25574 of 30003
Sometimes I trip on how happy we could be.

I have now totally set myself up to work late tonight, by frittering away my one free hour in the day, but I really feel like what I need to do won't take more than an hour or so. And I just got myself a coffee treat (just decaf, but still) so I think I am fortified for it! Still, though -- why can't I just work straight through the day? Why do I need so many breaks in my life???