When I was in my 20’s, I always gave 200% at the jobs I worked at. I was young and naive and believed I would eventually be rewarded for all the hard work I put in, even on weekends and night shifts.
Then I got burnout, because I was working at a pace my body just couldn’t sustain anymore.
It changed my life drastically. I learned to value my health and free time and to prioritize that over the needs of my employer. I learned that hard work doesn’t neccessarily bring you any benefits, it mostly benefits your employer. I also learned that nobody cares when your health is fucked up - for your employer, you’re just a cog in the machine that can be replaced.
Nowadays I only work four days a week and I don’t give a shit about what happens on Fridays anymore. Server is down? Not my problem, get someone else to fix it.
I also learned to stand up for myself. I’m not getting paid like a monkey anymore and if you promise me a raise and then pretend like that never happened afterwards, you’ll have my resignation on your desk, printed out by the company printer right in front of you.
I suppose it depends on what you mean by “this place” as the Fediverse can make that a trickier question.
On feddit.uk, the instance you are registered with and the host of this community (and as an Admin I may be biased), it’s relatively relaxed. I signed up here because I figured I’d get a good mix of UK news and posts with a UK slant (on the English-language Internet things often default to a US perspective), as well as folks with a more… British sense of humour and that’s pretty much worked out.
On Reddit they tend to consider subs to be the Mods personal fiefdom (unless they shut them down in protest) and that concept has carried over to the way some instances run things (it’s often difficult to replace Mods on some communities even if they’ve been MIA for a while). However, I’ve been part of (and often ended up helping run) online communities since Usenet and my take is that it’s everyone’s Instance, the Mods and Admins are just here to make sure everything runs smoothly and the lights stay on. I’m happy to let Mods deal with the reports on their communities (as most are that posts and comments don’t fit the remit of the community) but if a Mod is inactive for a while or there is evidence of power-tripping (the latter hasn’t happened yet) then they will get replaced.
Further afield in the Lemmyverse, you’ll find a range of instances that cover different topics or serve different communities and the way things are run can vary from orderly to pretty freewheeling and chaotic. You’ll pick all that up as you go along but don’t be afraid to block instances. Otherwise the best way to organise your reading is a mix of Local and Subscribed. On feddit.uk, Local is pretty manageable, on larger instances it can be a firehose of content (with a lot of Linux memes and shitposting). Subscribed let’s you pick what content from around the Threadiverse you want to see. However, don’t expect the same breadth and depth of communities as Reddit has and, a lot of the time, you can’t just be a passive consumer of content (or you can but don’t complain about it) as there aren’t enough people here yet to populate niche communities with a steady flow of interesting material. So get stuck in, it’ll be a lot more enjoyable for everyone.
I use backblaze storage with Kopia, which supports using object lock. Every time a backup is made the objects for it are locked for a configurable amount of time. I use 30 days, so an attacker would have to compromise my backup software for a month before being able to erase my backups.
Where I work; the public facing staff, security and customer service roles, are now offered to wear one at the start of their shift. They all want to use one.
These workers face abuse - physical assault, threats, harassment - from members of the public.
What has been found is that when they turn the body worn camera on, the other person tends to stop the abuse or at least de-escalates somewhat. (Prior to having body worn cameras available, some of these staff had tried to use their phone to film when in an incident, but it almost always triggered an immediate violent response - one staff had their phone taken and smashed, another was hit in the face)
There has been a decrease in mental health injury claims since using these. My own talks with these staff are that they feel safer, and had asked their employer to procure more body worn cameras as there wasn’t enough for all the staff.
The staff are not required to have them constantly on, they press a button to switch it on when an aggressive situation is forming or they believe they are in danger.
I played the crap out of the OG Warcraft games, and thought online play would be fun, but I realized that I play at far too chill of a pace to stand a chance, but strictly turn based tactics games are teeth-grindingly slow, and even if I’m enjoying them, I still eventually get bored and quit.
The new Terminator RTS can be pretty difficult but you can just smack space to pause and asses the situation, issue orders, and then in pause. It’s got a little jank to it but it’s a really good RTS with some survival/scavenging aspects and some branching objectives.
kbin.life
Oldest