I've just noticed that my app calls Firestore too many times. As Firestore has a call-limit, I think I should switch to Real Time Database. Am I right?
Sometimes I wonder how many of my teachers disliked me because I NEVER tried and just fucked around - but still managed to pull good marks out of my ass
Like they saw me on a better trajectory than they were in their life and I didn't even try
i had a really great english teacher junior year who really cared about us learning. i did learn a lot in her class, but i also was a big distraction to everyone else. looking back i feel really bad because she was always so nice and i was acting like shit
hahah yeah fair enough, it's because you know me now so you know Im just 99% jokes
I was cleaning my kitchen knife that I sharpened recently and was handling it like I used to when it was dull and long story short it came down on my finger like a butcher knife
slipped in the soap i guess, and yeah its one of the worst cuts ive ever had lmao i felt it hit my bone
and i dont think he knows how to dial 911 in emergencies
I decided that if when i take the tape off later it starts gushing blood again then ill go get stiches since i cant just permanently live with tape on my finger
@Code-Apprentice unfortunately not a job application, it's an application to become "a professional engineer" so you get your official stamp for signing your life and rights away on engineering documents haha, bonus is that you get the P.Eng. title and can officially call yourself an engineer in Canada...and also a siiiiiiiick insurance discount
downside is that I'm not in engineering anymore, so it's really pointless for me but I worked to get the degree, do the engineering ethics/law exam and the insurance discount is just too good
You legally can't be an engineer in Canada without it
it's along the same lines as being a surgeon, lawyer, doctor, in the sense that there's a regulatory body that can revoke your license, and you can become personally liable for mistakes
if they go that far they should go all the way imo
but it seems like personal responsibility for mistakes is not a common thing down in the US
unless im just extrapolating that from what I think is the case haha
probably just BS since I believe it's that way with doctors and lawyers down there right?
I think i just got heavy handed there in thinking thats the case since it seems like corporations make people not face consequences
thats different though
But yeah there's like 15 sections that need to be filled out for each job you've worked during the 5 years of experience that's required.... and I've worked 3, so it's a lot
I think our business laws do a lot to shield individuals from consequences when things go drastically wrong. Especially executives, but rank and file employees, too.
For regulated professions, there are laws and regulations that can be used when someone really messes up...like malpractice law suits and even criminal charges.
but many doctors and lawyers work for themselves. There are those that work for hospitals and firms and such, too, so I don't know how that is handled differently.
I imagine the doctor may not be personally liable (in court) in those circumsances but they still get a revoked license and fines from the regulatory body
@Code-Apprentice I feel like this is such a good thing in theory but in practice gets so wildly abused
@Code-Apprentice yea definitely! that's why for engineering at least and those professions that can directly affect someone's life (cough looking at you police) I think those regulatory bodies are so important
they'll enforce laws/rules that the government won't
@ballBreaker Another interesting part of regulating professions is that members of that profession can demand higher pay. This is both a good and bad thing. In part it makes for some gate keeping. Some professions in the US are really bad for this.
One of the nice things though is that my regulatory body annually posts statistics on salaries and all that across the industry, so you at least always know what you SHOULD be making
I've used it to get salary increases in the past
But yeah I have to assume there are bad aspects to that as well, but I haven't personally seen them yet.... I guess the bad aspect is that you're less likely to get paid higher than your worth
In the US, cosmotology license are pretty controversal. It's exactly what we are talking about. There's a governing body that issues or revokes licenses and you can be fined or worse if you practice without a license. But it can be pretty ridiculous in some states. For example, this one podcast I heard a while back had the story of a lady that got into trouble for doing nails out of her house.
@ballBreaker well, even cutting hair is dangerous, right?
but yah, nails is ridiculous...although, I guess you could probably harm someone if you really did it wrong.
I think the proposed solution is to have different levels or something like that to separate them out. Cutting hair requires like 6 months of school or whatever, but doing nails requires like a test or something with minimal training.