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Post by account_disabled on Jan 4, 2018 2:34:13 GMT -8
Hi, At the root of this happiness myth is the misconception that, although we’re not happy now, we’ll surely be happy when land that dream job. We encounter a problem, however, when acquiring that seemingly perfect job doesn’t make us as happy as we expected and when that happiness is ever so brief. What explains this unwelcome experience is the inexorable process of hedonic adaptation—namely, the fact that human beings have the remarkable capacity to grow habituated or inured to most life changes. Unfortunately, if we are convinced that a certain kind of job would make us happy (and it doesn’t), then misunderstanding the power of hedonic adaptation may compel us to jettison perfectly good careers. Hence, a critical first step is to understand that everyone becomes habituated to the novelty, excitement, and challenges of a new job or venture. This new awareness will suggest to us an alternative explanation for our occupational malaise. To wit, there may be nothing wrong with the job or with our motivation or with our work ethic. The fact may be that we are simply experiencing a naturally occurring, all-too-human process. For More Details 3D Medical animated video
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Post by Gopal on Jan 5, 2018 6:17:20 GMT -8
Hi, At the root of this happiness myth is the misconception that, although we’re not happy now, we’ll surely be happy when land that dream job. We encounter a problem, however, when acquiring that seemingly perfect job doesn’t make us as happy as we expected and when that happiness is ever so brief. What explains this unwelcome experience is the inexorable process of hedonic adaptation—namely, the fact that human beings have the remarkable capacity to grow habituated or inured to most life changes. Unfortunately, if we are convinced that a certain kind of job would make us happy (and it doesn’t), then misunderstanding the power of hedonic adaptation may compel us to jettison perfectly good careers. Hence, a critical first step is to understand that everyone becomes habituated to the novelty, excitement, and challenges of a new job or venture. This new awareness will suggest to us an alternative explanation for our occupational malaise. To wit, there may be nothing wrong with the job or with our motivation or with our work ethic. The fact may be that we are simply experiencing a naturally occurring, all-too-human process. For More Details 3D Medical animated video HI, People here discuss either in spiritualgab.freeforums.net/Or spiritualteachers.proboards.com/So welcome you there.
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burt
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Posts: 198
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Post by burt on Jan 18, 2018 14:44:29 GMT -8
Hi, At the root of this happiness myth is the misconception that, although we’re not happy now, we’ll surely be happy when land that dream job. We encounter a problem, however, when acquiring that seemingly perfect job doesn’t make us as happy as we expected and when that happiness is ever so brief. What explains this unwelcome experience is the inexorable process of hedonic adaptation—namely, the fact that human beings have the remarkable capacity to grow habituated or inured to most life changes. Unfortunately, if we are convinced that a certain kind of job would make us happy (and it doesn’t), then misunderstanding the power of hedonic adaptation may compel us to jettison perfectly good careers. Hence, a critical first step is to understand that everyone becomes habituated to the novelty, excitement, and challenges of a new job or venture. This new awareness will suggest to us an alternative explanation for our occupational malaise. To wit, there may be nothing wrong with the job or with our motivation or with our work ethic. The fact may be that we are simply experiencing a naturally occurring, all-too-human process. For More Details 3D Medical animated video HI, People here discuss either in spiritualgab.freeforums.net/Or spiritualteachers.proboards.com/So welcome you there. dude, you try python yet?
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Post by Gopal on Jan 22, 2018 5:12:08 GMT -8
dude, you try python yet?
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burt
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Posts: 198
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Post by burt on Jan 22, 2018 16:59:31 GMT -8
dude, you try python yet? is that a "no"??
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Post by Gopal on Jan 22, 2018 21:59:48 GMT -8
is that a "no"?? Thank you.
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burt
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Post by burt on Jan 23, 2018 19:49:51 GMT -8
is that a "no"?? Thank you. Well, whatever that's for. Ur welcome!
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Post by Gopal on Jan 24, 2018 1:40:51 GMT -8
Well, whatever that's for. Ur welcome! Next time please ask some question which I can understand. By the way how are you? Hope you are doing good in ST.
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burt
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Posts: 198
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Post by burt on Jan 25, 2018 14:41:10 GMT -8
Well, whatever that's for. Ur welcome! Next time please ask some question which I can understand. uhm. o.k. .. .. do you mean to say that you really didn't understand what I asked you here?? .. or are you just kiddin'? By the way how are you? Hope you are doing good in ST. Great, thanks! ST is quieter nowadays, but still fun to share jokes, poems and music and to stay internet-connected with internet-peeps. And an interesting dialog still erupts from time-to-time. How's married life treating you?
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Post by Gopal on Jan 28, 2018 23:59:00 GMT -8
Next time please ask some question which I can understand. uhm. o.k. .. .. do you mean to say that you really didn't understand what I asked you here?? .. or are you just kiddin'? By the way how are you? Hope you are doing good in ST. Great, thanks! ST is quieter nowadays, but still fun to share jokes, poems and music and to stay internet-connected with internet-peeps. And an interesting dialog still erupts from time-to-time. How's married life treating you? Are you talking about my computer language when you say python? Oh that's great! I visit ST when Figgles pick up some paragraph from there to gap for an argument purpose. I feel like this bifurcation is good and at the same time I am missing some very interesting people like you. I replied you to your personal message.
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burt
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Post by burt on Jan 29, 2018 16:50:47 GMT -8
uhm. o.k. .. .. do you mean to say that you really didn't understand what I asked you here?? .. or are you just kiddin'? Great, thanks! ST is quieter nowadays, but still fun to share jokes, poems and music and to stay internet-connected with internet-peeps. And an interesting dialog still erupts from time-to-time. How's married life treating you? Are you talking about my computer language when you say python? Yes. What I was asking was, have you tried writing anything in python yet? Oh that's great! I visit ST when Figgles pick up some paragraph from there to gap for an argument purpose. I feel like this bifurcation is good and at the same time I am missing some very interesting people like you. Aw, shucks, that's kind of you to say. I must admit that sometimes I miss arguing just a little, but dude, these days, ain't nobody got time fer 'dat!
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Post by Gopal on Jan 29, 2018 21:54:45 GMT -8
Are you talking about my computer language when you say python? Yes. What I was asking was, have you tried writing anything in python yet? Oh that's great! I visit ST when Figgles pick up some paragraph from there to gap for an argument purpose. I feel like this bifurcation is good and at the same time I am missing some very interesting people like you. Ah! Now it's clear. I haven't tried Python yet and I don't try as well because Ruby is greater than Python. Ruby came after Python. Infact there is always a greater argument between Ruby people and Python people like which one is greater! I love Ruby! Okay
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burt
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Posts: 198
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Post by burt on Feb 2, 2018 0:00:06 GMT -8
Yes. What I was asking was, have you tried writing anything in python yet? Ah! Now it's clear. I haven't tried Python yet and I don't try as well because Ruby is greater than Python. Ruby came after Python. Infact there is always a greater argument between Ruby people and Python people like which one is greater! I love Ruby! Okay Ah, I see, ok, I spent the 10 minutes to read through this. I've been using python on and off for small side tasks the past few weeks just to learn it for kicks and I definitely see the power in this type of approach. What I'd say though is that I'll probably still use perl for quick command-line regex filters ... things are funny that way. Once I learned perl I used sed and awk less frequently .. but I still use them occasionally because it can be quicker than a perl command line. I don't think I'll ever use python for an adhoc command-line filter (like this: cat file.txt | perl -e '{while(<>) { /.. some expression/; print "$ ... some filter output"}') .. because of the indentation issue. I can see the similarity between python and ruby. Some funny guys I used to work with would say "Skin Tax" instead of "Syntax" (they sound similar in English, it's like a joke). What I'd say from reading the ruby quick-start is that you pay a higher Skin Tax!
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Post by Gopal on Feb 2, 2018 5:46:41 GMT -8
Ah! Now it's clear. I haven't tried Python yet and I don't try as well because Ruby is greater than Python. Ruby came after Python. Infact there is always a greater argument between Ruby people and Python people like which one is greater! I love Ruby! Okay Ah, I see, ok, I spent the 10 minutes to read through this. I've been using python on and off for small side tasks the past few weeks just to learn it for kicks and I definitely see the power in this type of approach. What I'd say though is that I'll probably still use perl for quick command-line regex filters ... things are funny that way. Once I learned perl I used sed and awk less frequently .. but I still use them occasionally because it can be quicker than a perl command line. I don't think I'll ever use python for an adhoc command-line filter (like this: cat file.txt | perl -e '{while(<>) { /.. some expression/; print "$ ... some filter output"}') .. because of the indentation issue. I can see the similarity between python and ruby. Some funny guys I used to work with would say "Skin Tax" instead of "Syntax" (they sound similar in English, it's like a joke). What I'd say from reading the ruby quick-start is that you pay a higher Skin Tax! Thank you Laughter ! Please prefer Ruby in your work if possible. I would promise that you would like it for sure. Actually I want to tell something about Ruby which you may like it. You can cascade function very efficiently, for an example, Look at the below hash I need the following output R01L01, R02ZZZ, D22DAR so i will have unique codes by last three letters. What do you do in Java? you need to write a bigger program to achieve that, but in Ruby, you can efficiently combine few functions and can bring the good results, The below code produce the required result. Ruby CodeOutput⇒ ["R01L01", "R02ZZZ", "D22DAR"] Did you see how easy it is? All we need to know is how to cascade the functions properly, that's all.
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