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In my org, none of the essential systems went down (those used by labor). However all of management's individual PCs went down which got me wondering... Is this the beginning (or continuation) of whittling down what is "essential" human labor versus what could be done remotely (or eliminated completely)?

Or perhaps Microsoft is just garbage and soon will be as irrelevant as commercial real estate office parks and mega-call centers


Quite a career... Almost sounds fake


Asking the BIG questions here... Like wtf would a school playing with so much money couldn't buy forks.

Kids shouldn't go to college


The cafeteria manager likely had no idea they were running out of forks. A simple email or phone call to the cafeteria department would have probably solved the problem, since managers are likely looking for ideas of things to buy, especially if they've been recommended by customers (students).


I disagree. I assume the manager was quite aware, but whenever he had previously asked for resources from his own boss before, they refused and implied that he needed to try to use even fewer resources.

After your manager makes it clear multiple times that they do not want to spend any money, even on things that are important, many sane people will stop caring.

He may have told the boss multiple times that they were running out of forks, and the boss said "well, we have over 200 forks, that should be enough".

But in the end, I blame the higher-level main manager. Stupidity, poor communication, stinginess, these are all very common. The workers, even first line managers, can only fight so much against it.

The first manager may have already bought a ton of spoons on his own.


Yeah, the idea that a college dining hall administrator is just sitting around desperately wishing he could spend more money but not knowing what on earth to spend it on unless he receives an email from a random student to whom he has zero accountability strikes me as far less likely than your theory.


Especially so in something that is certainly a cost centre. Not something marketable. I would expect something like cafeteria to be run on bare essentials, after the initial build phase. Spending money there is not marketable or rise profile of people involved.


> we have over 200 forks

I see someone's ERP system is in need of a manual stocktake!


The admin costs would probably be much much higher than $44


Right away the author admits:

"This paper proposes a model of settlement and expansion designed to integrate current linguistic analysis with other prehistoric research on the earliest episodes in the peopling of the Americas."

Its easy to find evidence that supports the current assumptions.


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