Things my roommate says part 14

- I suppose developing a crush on someone is normal if you really like spending time with them. So why don’t you have a crush on me?

- Cause I’m not sexually attracted to you.

- So, like a platonic crush. Do you just, like, you know, have a massive platonic boner for me?

Things my roommate says part 903

My boyfriend is now a real person!

Oh god, I have to refresh.

Are we having separate parties on opposite sides of the couch? - me, while my roommate sings “It’s My Party”

We are about to make some dubstep right here. BWAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHH. WAUBITY WAUBITY.

moneyisnotimportant:

Fill in Online Job Application Salary Requests with $1 to Improve Your Chances of a Response

Many forms won’t let you complete them if you leave spaces blank. Hellmann advises putting in $1, $10 or $100, “anything to show you’re not listing your real salary.” Hellmann insists it’s not fair to discuss compensation before you’ve had a real job interview.

Great advice.  You should never reveal your current salary when negotiating your new one.  It makes no difference what you were paid previously, unless they are trying to pay you less.

This has always been one of my biggest pet peeves when filling out job applications, especially just out of college. Unless they’re willing to disclose their salary offer range, I don’t wanna launch into a requirement until I have a job offer. 

moneyisnotimportant:

Fill in Online Job Application Salary Requests with $1 to Improve Your Chances of a Response

Many forms won’t let you complete them if you leave spaces blank. Hellmann advises putting in $1, $10 or $100, “anything to show you’re not listing your real salary.” Hellmann insists it’s not fair to discuss compensation before you’ve had a real job interview.

Great advice.  You should never reveal your current salary when negotiating your new one.  It makes no difference what you were paid previously, unless they are trying to pay you less.

This has always been one of my biggest pet peeves when filling out job applications, especially just out of college. Unless they’re willing to disclose their salary offer range, I don’t wanna launch into a requirement until I have a job offer. 

Goal for the year 3: Experience Runner’s High
I’m in the process of breaking in my running shoes, which are in turn breaking in my feet. But for a girl who doesn’t run, this is HUGE.

Goal for the year 3: Experience Runner’s High

I’m in the process of breaking in my running shoes, which are in turn breaking in my feet. But for a girl who doesn’t run, this is HUGE.

Tagged: exercise, goals, .
Goal for the year 2: Dance with confidence
Since I already know the basics, the next step is looking like I think I know what I’m doing.

Goal for the year 2: Dance with confidence

Since I already know the basics, the next step is looking like I think I know what I’m doing.

Tagged: goals, dance, .
nevver:

The Geography of Stuck
“Nearly six in ten Americans live in the state where they were born, according to the U.S. Census bureau. But there is considerable variation from state to state, as the map (above) by Zara Matheson of the Martin Prosperity Institute shows. More than three quarters of the people in Louisiana (78.9 percent), Michigan (76.6 percent) and Ohio (75.1 percent) were born there, as opposed to just 24.3 percent of Nevadans, 35.2 percent of Floridians, 37.2 percent of the residents of Washington, D.C., and 37.7 percent of Arizonans. A high level of home-grown residents is also indicative of a lack of inflow of new people.”

nevver:

The Geography of Stuck

“Nearly six in ten Americans live in the state where they were born, according to the U.S. Census bureau. But there is considerable variation from state to state, as the map (above) by Zara Matheson of the Martin Prosperity Institute shows. More than three quarters of the people in Louisiana (78.9 percent), Michigan (76.6 percent) and Ohio (75.1 percent) were born there, as opposed to just 24.3 percent of Nevadans, 35.2 percent of Floridians, 37.2 percent of the residents of Washington, D.C., and 37.7 percent of Arizonans. A high level of home-grown residents is also indicative of a lack of inflow of new people.”

(via npr)

Goal for the year 1: Learn to code. 
Starting with java on http://www.codecademy.com

Goal for the year 1: Learn to code. 

Starting with java on http://www.codecademy.com

Tagged: goals, code, tech, photograph, .
I ran for a bus once… I missed it. 

I ran for a bus once… I missed it. 

Tagged: funny, exercise, pictures, .

This is really it. Hangman theory at its most blunt.

It’s we, the most privileged, because the most outrageous part here is that these corruptions were primed by the most privileged but permitted by the passivity of the most privileged as well.

thoughtyoushouldseethis:

A while ago, I linked to an interview in which Harvard Law professor Larry Lessig outlined some of the thinking that went into his latest book, Republic Lost. Now, here’s a slick talk (with eye-catching slides) Lessig gave at Google. It’s really well worth taking the time to watch the whole thing, for Lessig’s fantastically thoughtful analysis of where we are, how we got here, and how we might potentially extricate ourselves from the mire. I watched this a week or so ago, and I can’t stop thinking about his story of the pilot of the Exxon Valdez supertanker, which crashed in Alaska in 1989 and caused one of the world’s worst environmental disasters (starts 42:25). As Lessig points out, the ship’s captain, Joseph Hazlewood, had a well-documented problem with alcohol. But, shocking as it is that the man in charge of a supertanker was not legally allowed to drive a car (he had a DUI at the time), that’s not actually Lessig’s point. Instead, his is a starker, bleaker, much more searing conclusion, which cuts right to the heart of our collective passivity and acts as a resounding wake-up call. In his words:

Forget Hazlewood. Instead I want you to think about those around Captain Hazlewood, these other officers, people who could have picked up a phone while a drunk was driving a supertanker. I want you think about those people who did nothing. All but one of those officers did nothing. What do we think about them? I ask this question because as I think about the problem this nation faces, increasingly I believe we are they. This nation faces critical problems requiring serious attention but we don’t have institutions capable of giving them this attention. They are distracted, unable to focus, and who is to blame for that? Who is responsible? I think it’s too easy to point to the Blagojeviches and hold them responsible, to point to the evil people and hold them responsible. It’s not the evil people, it’s the good people, it’s the decent people, the people who could have picked up a phone. It’s us. It’s we, the most privileged, because the most outrageous part here is that these corruptions were primed by the most privileged but permitted by the passivity of the most privileged as well.

Gulp. Well, it made me think.

And we morph again, from a manufacturing economy to a service economy to a software economy. Again, not everyone will be writing code. But many more people will be ordering it, writing it, managing it, and interacting with it. It makes sense to understand it and to be able to create at least a little.

Smart piece from Dan Frommer on why code should be the second language you teach your kids. Couldn’t agree more. (via arainert)

(via emergentfutures)

Tagged: language, future, tech, .
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