Lol, we had two company emails from "management" today - both were supposed to let the employees know of good things and both read off as discipline it's quite funny.
One email was supposed to convey that we're going to have more food in the kitchen (vs just snacks and candy) so people don't have to order out since people complained about unhealthy foods and stuff.
So what the email was supposed to say is that the company is going to offer healthy alternatives and stuff. However it was mentioned someone ordered a 20$ dish yesterday at the company's expense (allowed after 19:00) to give context.
So it sounds like the employees are being punished for ordering expensive food (since the bottom line is "don't spend so much money on expensive food on the company's expense") but the actual intent was "we're going to offer more healthy actual food in the kitchen, please don't spend so much time on food from the outside"
This email is from the CTO, it was supposed to be a nice thing but it really came out wrong :P Quite funny.
The second email was from the CEO titled "1x1 meeting X" where X is the employee's name with the content "An opened discussion about your progress in TipRanks ...".
The intent was "We're going to have 1x1 meeting with employees so the CEO knows everyone better and is aware if they have any issues so their lives could be better and as the company grows it can place them better inside the company"
@FlorianMargaine yeah, that's the first thing I did :D The problem is I'm friends with the CTO and the brother of the CEO so it's very easy for me to do it - I just hope people don't take it the wrong way
Because it's either not going to appear in specs (and then vendors will still implement it however they see fit because they don't want shit to break), or it would be standardized, even though it's crap, but at least consistent crap..
It's abusing Generators/Iterators a little, but works well. async/await will be even nicer because it will get language support for that (if it goes into the actual standard)
this is interesting: apparently there's no proof that Jesus knew how to write or read... just found this after a quick google search, but I've never read the New Testament... could anyone confirm?
@KendallFrey well, he "wrote on the ground"... in italian they just say that he has pointed to the ground with his finger, whilst being asked what to do, and he told the thing by voice...
Reminding you guys that we have a room meeting in a couple days, I heard no protests but not many people registered either, if you're okay with the time, please register for the event, if it isn't, please tell me.