Oh Kat, yeah that sucks badly.
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.
Changing a student's grade makes me RAGEY. Horrible lesson for the students and horribly dishonest.
Oh yeah, I was already burning the place down before even getting to the real issue! Grrrr.
I'm on board with Jesse's method.
I'm on board as well.
This project, on which I'm the ops lead and on which I have been very vocal about us not having sufficient computational resources, not to mention every 'enhancement' has lead to more human babysitting required, but everyone is like, oh no, you really do and look AUTOMATION?
Complete flaming radioactive trainwreck.
And people are sending me emails clearly indicating THEY NEVER READ THE EMAIL I SENT YESTERDAY FLAMES FLAMES.
Which religion has the best heaven?
Hmmmm....
Well, the Norse afterlife was basically a continuous party until a giant (presumably drunken) battle takes place. After that I assume is the worst hangover ever. No thanks.
The Greek/Roman afterlife always seemed pretty grim.
The Jewish afterlife is unspecified. That's a contender.
I don't recall the NT being very specific about the afterlife aside from it offering eternal life. Maybe I need to read the Bible again. People talk about it being very static, but I don't think the NT actually states that. I wouldn't like static.
I don't remember what the Quran said. I should re-read that too.
I hear reincarnation when people talk about the Hindu faith. That doesn't sound bad. Something that changes instead of being static sounds a lot better.
I'm not clear on Buddhism.
I don't have any clue about an afterlife. However, I can't see how brain and mind can be separated. So does that mean life is just a short segment on the line of time? That, I'm not sure about. Maybe life is much, much larger, but not in a linear sense. What if the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics is true? Maybe a life isn't a line but an infinite tree of possibilities. Maybe it's something completely different that we've never considered. The Universe is always surprising us.
In more fun news, there's a story from NPR about the Shake Shack in Seoul, and it includes this bit:
Interestingly, one of my Korean university students in Seoul, where I spent part of the year researching the leisure culture of Korea, told me he saw Westerners working in the kitchen at Shake Shack. For him, that gave the whole enterprise a more authentic sense of Americanness.
I am glad that apparently people everywhere use the same rules of thumb!
I love that.
Don't love Kat's situation. Too much badness for me to coherently type a full response on my phone, but I can certainly sympathize.
Also would like to make lengthy response to Gud's musings. Hopefully work will not get too much in the way of my posting today...
That's awful, Kat.
I am a delicate flower and woke up this morning in Chicago and its 73 and I'm all "but it's so HUMID!"
ION, two days until husband moves. I am a giant stress ball.
Changing a student's grade makes me RAGEY. Horrible lesson for the students and horribly dishonest.
Absolutely! Grades should reflect students' mastery of the material. Not where the administration wishes they were, not how well they move a ball into a desired location, just their mastery of the material. Period.