Friday, June 15, 2012

Linking wonder, Part 5

Another helpful hint from a LinkedIn user, this time on qualifications for being a proposal manager:


Yes, it's kind of a basic requirement of sales proposals that you submit them on time.

Not much in the way of actual, you know, details, though.

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Puppies for panhandlers

I don’t really know what to make of this: starting 1 August, the City of San Francisco is going to try to stop people from panhandling by paying them to adopt shelter dogs.

Here's what concerns me about this story: “The applicants must…show they’re not severely mentally ill, aren’t hoarders, don’t have a history of violence & are seeking treatment if they have addictions.” Who decides the severity of mental illness? Shelter animals can be pretty stressed & have all sorts of behavior & socialization problems. I’m not sure I could handle one right now; are the barely out-of-homelessness going to be mellow enough for it?

Plus—the last few times I’ve adopted shelter cats, I practically had to prove membership in the DAR with respect to my moral rectitude & ability to pay for the animal’s veterinary care. How do the panhandler set pass such requirements? What does "seeking treatment" mean? & what kind of addictions? 

I'm pretty sure that the Montgomery County shelter came close to wanting to know how many glasses of wine I had per week; now addictions are okay? Are they weighting the scales toward this category of unemployed over the employed?

Finally, frankly, even though they say they’ll remove any dog found being a party to panhandling, I don’t know how they’ll ever enforce that. They don’t police the begging to begin with, & a sizable number of panhandlers use their dogs as a prop or sympathy ploy. (There’s a woman at the Sunnyvale Safeway who has her shopping cart, her sign & her dog out there a lot. She seems to specialize in rainy weather.) I just don’t see how the cops are going to distinguish between a non-shelter panhandling pup & a shelter one.

Plus, I'm betting these guys make heaps more than the $50-$75 per week this program is going to pay. I can't imagine they'd forgo the enhanced revenue-driving capability that having a dog would bring, especially if they know they're going to get the base salary (so to speak) that pays for the puppy chow.

But I guess we’ll see.

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

What's cooking at Walmart


Well—it turns out that Walmart is good for something American-made.

Seems that various stores have been used by their customers for manufacturing methamphetamine.

Back in December, a woman was arrested in Tulsa for shoplifting the various ingredients & then, you know, making it.

(Well, I suppose that it’s not technically “shoplifting” until she transports the loot out of the store without paying for it, & she was nicked before she actually got outside. But still.)

Then, in April, a janitor at a Walmart in Boaz, Ala., discovered a meth lab in the women’s room.

Okay—so, twice could just be a coincidence. But wait—there’s more.

Last week employees at a Walmart in a suburb of St. Louis detained a woman for shoplifting. While she was in the store holding area, she started cooking up a batch of meth.

Turns out she was carrying the lab works in her purse, but she still chose that particular retailer to as her supply chain resource & manufacturing site.

I don’t know what to make of this. But these women are just living the Walmart motto: Save money. Live better.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Sign of the times 4



You’ll recall that in California you can vote in seven languages.
  

So it should come as no surprise that the “wash your hands” signs in public restrooms are also multilingual:


So people can ignore the instructions in whatever language suits them.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Matters of drink


I came across something rather interesting the other day. Well, interesting to me, and you know how easily amused I am.

I always ask for water when I go to a self-service coffee shop. And usually that means they give you a cup and you get it yourself from the soda machine. Typically, that would look like this one, at the Panera Bread in Sunnyvale:


I’d consider this a mechanical version—the dispensing of the various types of beverages is managed by pushing a mechanism.

But a couple of weeks ago I went to Le Boulanger in Mountain View—which they’d obviously revamped since the last time I was there months and months ago. And I found a state-of-the-art electronic self-serve machine:


The only mechanical element is pushing your container against the lever to get ice. For the beverage you use the touch-screen to make your choice and hold until you’ve got enough. Here’s a close-up of the panel:


Twenty-two options, compared to the eight of the old-style machine.

I’m kind of curious how it works behind the shiny screen—I suppose no differently, really, from the mechanical version. The ability to have nearly three times the choices is probably a function not of how it’s mixed on the back end, but of how many spigots you can put on the user side.

Certainly looks cooler, too.