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Randor wrote: July 20, 1969 to watch Neil Armstrong step on the moon. Day early, mate. He didn't step out until the 21st (UTC, anyway). You've got a time machine, and you're wasting time??
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Well,
DerekT-P wrote: You've got a time machine, and you're wasting time?? Yes, about eight hours early I believe. Front row seats at the rim of the crater are expensive and it takes a while to coordinate the 700nm viewing ports so all 65,535 viewers get an unobstructed view. Besides, everyone wants to see them land too.
Best Wishes,
-David Delaune
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- Future to the year 802,701 to see Eloi and Morlocks, as told in The Time Machine.
- Back 5000 years, to see Lord Krishna tell the Bhagavad Geetha.
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The past is already known (albeit often massively misrepresented). The future is best left unknown.
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. - Mark Twain
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Assuming nothing happens to me, 10 minutes before big bang.
"It is easy to decipher extraterrestrial signals after deciphering Javascript and VB6 themselves.", ISanti[ ^]
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That one special moment in time where everyone in the universe plugged in their hair dryers at the same time....
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Someone said: The past is dead, the present stinks, and even the future is not what it used to be
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Send me back to last Thursday night so I can pay my phone bill on time.
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What kind of time travel? The one from back to the future or the one from hot tub time machine? Meaning are we talking branching time lines here or one self-coherent spacetime?
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If you know the novel/movie "Time Machine", then you know why it's not a good idea to travel into the future: You will not feel at home in your original time frame any more, and the future will become your present. I know, quoting R. Kelly has become politically incorrect recently, but he puts like this, and I totally agree:
"I wanna have to find my way, and I don't wanna have a clue. Just let the universe surprise me"
So my only option would be to travel into the past. What I'd definitely like to see the most are dinosaurs. My favorite time would be the Jurassic period, as the Cretaceous period with its T-Rex and Velociraptor is too mainstream for me. I'd prefer to see the Brontosaurus, the Allosaurus, the Stegosaurus, the Diplodocus and the Archaeopteryx.
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Being big into genealogy. I often times wish I could go be an invisible observer to many events in my ancestors lives.
Brent
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Pity about the invisible observer bit. I'd like to go back to the library at Alexandria and save the lot.
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Hi All,
Got to work late, sat down and am thinking about how to account for this. Being a dozy so & so I tend to fill in my timesheet early and put 8 hours for today, so do I do 8 hours today or 6 today and then 2 extra next week? or do I wait for the time when I have mucho work to do and just put in the time then and not claim over time? Trying to be honest about this! Opinions please, waste the time I owe or save it for the rush I can see coming (when I could accrue overtime)...
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did you get the work done that you were to have done by now (or a matching proportion thereof)?
If so put in 8 hours.
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I got what I was supposed to do, done by Tuesday afternoon. Spent yesterday doing some exploratory testing...
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oh well, if they are picky about the time on the clock just say you spent half your lunchtime(s) doing that - already done an extra 2.5 hours just last week...
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Our company policy is that if you earn comp time, or need to make up missed time, you have to do it (take the comp time or make up the missed time) before the end of the pay period.
If it were me, I'd simply work an extra hour for a couple of days, and record the time accurately (6 for today, and 9 for the next two days).
".45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly" - JSOP, 2010 ----- You can never have too much ammo - unless you're swimming, or on fire. - JSOP, 2010 ----- When you pry the gun from my cold dead hands, be careful - the barrel will be very hot. - JSOP, 2013
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I agree, make it back as soon as reasonably possible. Looks better on you that way, just in case it's ever raised as an issue...
The big bad boss men: "We noticed you were down some time the other day"
You: "Yeah sorry, but I made it back up as soon as I could"
Not really much more can be said after that.
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Yup that is what I am gonna do, if I get in trouble I'm pointing them to you guys!
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musefan wrote: Not really much more can be said after that.
If you say so...
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I think that's what I'm going to do. The awkward thing is I can see it being all hands on deck in a few weeks (certain people who should have signed something didn't )
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I'd go with JSOP and record what you actually do. That way if someone higher up takes a close look the paperwork matches the actual hours and there is less chance of a problem.
Sent from my Amstrad PC 1640
Never throw anything away, Griff
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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OK, Knowing the PM on this I will get it for doing that and then charging over time when it's applicable, I will also get it for doing the hours at a time when there is little to do. Damned if I do, Damned if I don't.
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Bucking the trend here, timesheets are one of the many psychological tools to own you. One of the only potential use is for billing on gov't projects if you're working on more than one. Otherwise, s*** the man - you're salaried, right? (Though if you can accrue overtime in the classic sense, maybe not?) If salaried, put down 8 hours, no matter what you do.
The irony to that is, that's exactly what I've been told by management -- the system (and managers) can't handle less than or more than 8.
If you're hourly, who the frack cares? You're getting paid for the work you do when you do it.
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