Bad jobs? #
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 13:42 GMT
I wonder where body recovery diver and crime scene cleanup finished.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 13:42 GMT
I wonder where body recovery diver and crime scene cleanup finished.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 13:50 GMT
I knew someone who did circumcisions on elephants.
He said the money was poor but the tips were huge.....
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 14:11 GMT
It can't be much fun working in animal testing, either.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 14:37 GMT
Had a friend that did that for a living. Of all the IT folks I've ever known, he definately had the best stories to tell.
Ever try to dig denture-paste out of a keyboard?
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 15:09 GMT
The Death Star had fairly good security, actually. Hacking windows is more like shooting a rifle at a soda can. Easy to hit, bit explosion, and the bystanders are all sticky when it's over.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 15:09 GMT
Popular Science is about half a step above the super-market tabloids. If I wanted to know the latest about bigfoot or alien abductions, I'd check there first, but I'd like to see REAL news about the computer industry on The Register.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 15:09 GMT
How is programming, or testing any more of a scientific activity than 90% of other jobs?
Personaly, I'd put those poor people involved in observing early nuclear tests near the top of my list of jobs to avoid
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 16:07 GMT
Erm. How can I put this?
Do I really need to point out that it can't have, because it didn't exist?
Star Wars isn't real. Sorry to break it to you.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 17:52 GMT
"Hazmat divers, while highly qualified, don't normally think of themselves as being involved in scientific endeavour"
Of course not. They only go through the motions.
igmc
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 17:55 GMT
@Andy:
Do I really need to point out that it can't have, because it didn't exist?
Perhaps the poster meant the _other_ Death Star, AT&T before the fall.
That is, back before SBC proved that deferred maintenance, crap customer support, and legal manuvering to prevent customers leaving were _definitely_ the wave of the future, by trouncing (and then absorbing) the other baby Bells and eventually Ma herself.
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 21:04 GMT
Since when is Microsoft security a "science"???
Posted Wednesday 27th June 2007 21:50 GMT
I once heard a way to differentiate between the major branches of science. If it's slimy or wiggles it's biology; if it blows up or stinks it's chemistry; if it complicated and doesn't work it's physics. I'd say Microsoft 'security' fits all three.
Posted Thursday 28th June 2007 06:52 GMT
Did you hear about the wallet made from elephant foreskin?
Stroke it, and it morphs into a suitcase.
Q: How do you circumcise a whale?
A: With four skin divers.
Posted Thursday 28th June 2007 10:01 GMT
I'd say MS security was more of a 'faith-based initiative'.
Posted Sunday 1st July 2007 16:30 GMT
I'd just like to pointout another dangerous part of this job:
One slip, and you get the sack