@Raze Yeah. Welcome to the chat. Now you're doomed. You'll lose endless working hours and and large amounts of sleep, spending them here chatting away. (You have been warned, though.)
:708288, I have to log into a Windows machine from another one, and install stuff remotely. Thankfully, this time, the computers are not located halfway across the world like sometimes.
@Raze Well, you can always type the number yourself, so you do not need the mouse to refer to some other message. However, I can't think of a way to find out a message's ID without the mouse. :-x
@Raze It doesn't work this way. A message can only refer to one other message. To do so, it must start with a colon, followed by the message's ID, followed by a space.
@Raze @tina recently was banned from SO for half a year fro spamming us with stupid questions. Without asking us if we wanted that, mind you. We were all up and in arms about it for a day. Then Miss appeared and took her place. :)
@Als When I was young (TM), I once worked 100hrs in one week. As a programmer, using my head. And I even had a day off. Left the company soon after that, though.
@Raze As I said, I quit that job. I worked their for 13 months and had so much overtime, they had to pay me for another 5.5 months. So I had the summer off. I've been watching out for such companies when interviewing ever since, though you often only learn about that later, after you work there for a while.
@Als That was one of the reasons I quit the job before this one: They expected everybody to do overtime most of the time, and nobody (but me) clocked their working hours. Officially, they were doing XP, and overtime was Boo!, but actually, the schedules were so tight, that people had to do overtime to meet the deadlines.
I have spend weekends at work in the last decade. Sometimes that just happens, when a customer is important and a deadline is whooshing past. But that's once or twice a year. If it's more often, something's wrong, and I'm not willing to compensate for that.
Don't get me wrong. I do make overtime. But I take the same amount of free time for that. I have twice taken money instead, in ten years, but that was an agreement the boss made with me. Otherwise it's time for time.
Also, when I get interviewed for a job, it helps tremendously when I say that I haven't done unpaid overtime in 20 years. Interviewers realize whether that's true, and they do value you much higher when they realize you have been getting well-paid jobs with that attitude.
: IMO, in those situations something's wrong. Either the company is understaffed, lacks organization, the industry is not actually feasible, or the workers are not skilled. In any case, it's poor management.
Honestly, in many cases where there's required OT, I find that employees are simply idle during regular hours. They are required to work 40 hours a week, because business can't handle fluid workweeks, and then when a situation arises and they "need" their employees... it's OT.
Kinda like a lot of times, they could reduce staff for most of the year, and hire contract workers during the quarter end....
The 40 hour workweek is really.... inefficient....
@Raze Yeah, I can see that it's a problem when you have a culture where everybody always does overtime. But someone has to start to challenge it. Why not you? :)
@Raze Have you looked at that article I posted? Overtime seems to have been mandatory in the US game industry. Yet that woman put a notable dent into this "tradition".
@TonyTheTiger : Didn't one European country find this out in the manufacturing industry like 100 years ago.
Overexertion reduces productivity, even detrimental effects (like reduction in quality).
I think it's become obvious when games are released with so many bugs these days. Time crunch for games is seriously a problem.
Especially with movie related games.
Movie gets years to produce, then someone figures out they want a game for it, and the game gets a year or so.... and people wonder why the game sucks and no one wants to play it.
@Xaade again, there are laws against it. Neither my company, nor my manager has compelled me to do OT, that too without componsation, but I know too many people who do it.
and people here are kinda used to working that way.
@Raze : WAH..... then why are we having this discussion.
If there are companies that don't ask for OT... then work there.... problem solved.
@AProgrammer : You think I'm overreaching..... I suppose one could ask what I'm doing right now.... However, since I found this chat, I've developed an uncanny ability to multitask thoughts.
@jalf Seems to be the same account as was ('til recently) known as unapersson. He does seem to have the "chops", as well as (at least a bit of the same) attitude...
Eh.... tweeting.... most of them retweets anyway.... It's actually self-prophecy the whole bird icon. About as annoying too. No.... actually birds are less annoying; their sound is pleasant.
> I recommend to use STL containers for the business logic, and Qt containers only when it's needed for binding data to your GUI. I am being downvoted because of above statement. Is it so wrong?