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Mine are doing good.
I can't believe it is coming up for a year since I landed in Qatar (2weeks time), since the family arrived in August, things have settled down well. They enjoy the schools, the place is great. The wife is starting to find more things to do and people to socialise with while I am offshore. The eldest daughter (11) is probably the the one who is struggling the most, she goes through big highs and lows and is really looking forward to going back to the UK for summer holidays and see some of her pals she is missing.
Still costing me a small fortune to furnish the villa, every time I come back from offshore it is a case of what we buying this month. Last month was 9 seater round garden table and chairs, 4 sun loungers, 2 small longer tables, and a small 2 seater table and chairs/footstools for the main balcony.
I keep thinking I'm ready to buy a new big telly for the place and then along comes some more furniture! (looking at a Samsung 78" 7500series....every time I hit the malls I see it shouting at me)
Both sets of parents were over for Christmas so that was good, and mine are coming back at the end of April for the kids birthdays.
All in all I'm more than happy and not wanting to leave Qatar.....yet, see if I feel the same after a few more years.
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DaveAuld wrote: I can't believe it is coming up for a year since I landed in Qatar
Yet you still haven't set your CP name to Sheik Auld.
DaveAuld wrote: They enjoy the schools, the place is great. The wife is starting to find more things to do and people to socialise with while I am offshore.
That's good.
DaveAuld wrote: The eldest daughter (11) is probably the the one who is struggling the most,
Understandable really, it must be hard for her, most of your life-long friendships are made at this age. She must feel she missing out without realising how good she's actually got it.
DaveAuld wrote: Still costing me a small fortune to furnish the villa, every time I come back from offshore it is a case of what we buying this month. Last month was 9 seater round garden table and chairs, 4 sun loungers, 2 small longer tables, and a small 2 seater table and chairs/footstools for the main balcony.
My heart bleeds for your 1st world problems. must be really difficult.
modified 13-Feb-16 13:56pm.
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PompeyThree wrote: She must feel she missing out without realising how good she's actually got it. Yep, that's spot on. The youngest daughter she doesn't give two hoots really and has more friends to play with here on the compound than she did back in Aberdeen around the neighbourhood. The eldest one is swapping schools again to the same one as her sister in September and she is wanting to do this as she see it as 'better', so hopefully that will also help.
PompeyThree wrote: 1st world problems. must be really difficult. Tell me about it!
PompeyThree wrote: I'll add you on Ok.
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Kazakhstan welcomes you back !
«In art as in science there is no delight without the detail ... Let me repeat that unless these are thoroughly understood and remembered, all “general ideas” (so easily acquired, so profitably resold) must necessarily remain but worn passports allowing their bearers short cuts from one area of ignorance to another.» Vladimir Nabokov, commentary on translation of “Eugene Onegin.”
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I lived in southern California for 22 years. Enough said. I am not surprised at all that you did not enjoy your stay. I could say more, but the sensitive and PC ones here at the site would be offended.
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Do not, I repeat, do not come to India.
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Lots of men in white denim hot pants?
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You missed out on a great opportunity. What a shame.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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What great opportunity please explain?
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PompeyThree wrote: What great opportunity please explain? Too late. You missed it.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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That's a silly answer
And anyway who said I wasn't going back again.
I've always thought they gave you a hard time in soapbox1, please don't prove them right just answer the question.
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Mexico is a great place but you had a terrible attitude. You missed out.
There are only 10 types of people in the world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
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Mexico maybe, Guadalajara not so much. Plus I wasn't there for a Holiday, I was there for work. I arrived late on the Sunday night and flew back early on the Saturday Morning - there was no time to see or do anything else.
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PompeyThree wrote: I couldn't be bothered to learn what 'no' was.
PompeyThree wrote: ... then do it anyway even though I said no.
I'm starting to see a pattern here!
"These people looked deep within my soul and assigned me a number based on the order in which I joined."
- Homer
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I was discussing performance with a member of the team Who Will Remain Unnamed. We were going over the various parts of a page load that are slowing things down and we were focussing on Redis calls. We log perf only to the millisecond, so anything under half a millisecond will be reported as 0 seconds
Me: There's a lot of cache calls, but they're all completed in 0ms
Him: Yeah, but all those zeros add up
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Reminds me of the time one of my friends at Purdue wrote a complicated equation on a board (5.5' high and 45' long, the equation filled the whole thing) and challenged people to solve it.
The answer to it? Zero. I was the only person that solved it. Even the maths professors there couldn't get it!
I was kind of a celebrity for a few days afterwards, and the professors were rather embarrassed.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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Chicks dig it.
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Hilarious. Can't vote though. I'm in Sumsung S6.
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I solved it so quickly as I noticed that the second half was the negative of the first half, simply allowing me to cancel it all out and get zero. When I explained that, one professor turned bright red with embarrassment, as he had worked on it for three hours before giving up. It took me less than a minute to see how to solve it.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
The metaphorical solid rear-end expulsions have impacted the metaphorical motorized bladed rotating air movement mechanism.
Do questions with multiple question marks annoy you???
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Sounds like something Kent might say
Last week I had an issue in a bit of code that checked if the URL was equal to "http://something.etc.com/controller".
Unfortunately it wasn't as the URL was "suddenly" https...
So I changed the code to check if the URL ends with "://something.etc.com/controller" and the issue was fixed.
A coworker looks up to me and in all seriousness tells me "this won't work if we are going protocol-less"
The sad part about it is that he was really serious and really doesn't have a clue about how protocols or the internet works
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I often go protocol-less. It causes no end of trouble...
cheers
Chris Maunder
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Chris Maunder wrote: Me: There's a lot of cache calls, but they're all completed in 0ms
Him: Yeah, but all those zeros add up
You're both right. Hence the expression "a big, fat zero".
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The I wasn't expecting to like it but might have to change my mind new album of the week is Synthia by the Jezabels. Hints of Kate Bush, Shakespear's Sister and a slightly less gloomy than usual Lana Del Rey?
The Jezabels - Come Alive [Official Video] - YouTube[^]
I am not a number. I am a ... no, wait!
modified 12-Feb-16 18:07pm.
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