• Re: macOS 26

    From jimmylogan@21:1/137 to apam on Friday, October 31, 2025 19:24:16
    apam wrote to jimmylogan <=-

    I think Linux is GREAT for getting use out of old hardware
    that might otherwise be unusable...

    I would say linux used to be good, but in my opinion it's become a bit
    of a mess in recent years.

    Interesting - there are different distros - unless you just don't
    want to, try MINT or DEBIAN or something else.



    ... This tagline is property of Oaks Correctional Facility
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  • From apam@21:3/197 to jimmylogan on Saturday, November 01, 2025 05:43:48
    Interesting - there are different distros - unless you just don't
    want to, try MINT or DEBIAN or something else.

    I have tried MINT and DEBIAN, i last used debian trixie on my desktops
    and firefox would continually crash. I don't know why. I do keep trying different distros though to see if things change, and I'm currently using fedora 43 kde spin - it seems to be working ok even using wayland.

    In my experience though, different distros just have their own set of
    problems. And with fedora taking AI contributions... i don't have much
    faith that it wont run into issues soon.

    FreeBSD doesn't do as much, and I suppose that could be seen as some
    deficiency (ie, I can't use optimus on my laptop) but what it does do it
    does well.

    I guess I'm just disappointed, after 25+ years of using Linux I thought
    things would have gotten a lot better, and yes, in many ways they have -
    but i think all the improvements have brought so much extra complexity
    that theres so much that can and does go wrong.

    And so much of this complexity and newness just seems to me to be new for
    the sake of being new. Ubuntu using rust coreutils for example ... why?
    The existing core utils have been worked on for many years and work well,
    but rust is the new shiny and we have to port to that to be safe - so
    there's now a bunch of issues with compatibility with new core utils,
    which will be worked out eventually, but for what?

    Now I am all for people working on what interests them, and I suppose
    that's what is happening. If ubuntu developers feel that making rust core
    utils is a good thing, then it's their distro and they can do what they
    like.

    I want a computer that works well, it just seems to be such a moving
    target and frustrates me.

    Andrew


    --- envy/0.1-8c9ebf2
    * Origin: Quinn - Random Things - bbs.quinnos.com:2323 (21:3/197)
  • From Dumas Walker@21:1/175 to APAM on Saturday, November 01, 2025 11:07:06
    I have tried MINT and DEBIAN, i last used debian trixie on my desktops
    and firefox would continually crash. I don't know why. I do keep trying different distros though to see if things change, and I'm currently using fedora 43 kde spin - it seems to be working ok even using wayland.

    Currently using trixie. I keep firefox updated and it does not crash.
    That said, there are some websites that refuse to work with it, but I
    suspect that is more site specific and not necessarily the browser. Those usually work fine with chromium.

    Despite what some claim, I have found that the WM you use makes a
    difference. I had one program, audacity, that was not working well under
    LXQT but works just fine with IceWM.

    FreeBSD doesn't do as much, and I suppose that could be seen as some deficiency (ie, I can't use optimus on my laptop) but what it does do it
    does well.

    I tried Free or OpenBSD a time or two. That was probably back 10+ years
    ago and, at the time, it seemed to have more hardware (and browser) issues
    than debian did.

    I guess I'm just disappointed, after 25+ years of using Linux I thought things would have gotten a lot better, and yes, in many ways they have -
    but i think all the improvements have brought so much extra complexity
    that theres so much that can and does go wrong.

    IMHO, the more "desktop user" compatable you make an OS, the more likely it
    is to wind up bloated like Windows. IMHO, a large part of that is related
    to how most web pages don't follow a standard, which means the browsers are seriously bloated and memory hungry. I have few problems so long as I
    don't have a browser open.

    And so much of this complexity and newness just seems to me to be new for
    the sake of being new. Ubuntu using rust coreutils for example ... why?
    The existing core utils have been worked on for many years and work well,
    but rust is the new shiny and we have to port to that to be safe - so
    there's now a bunch of issues with compatibility with new core utils,
    which will be worked out eventually, but for what?

    Ubuntu is something I avoid. I used to use it but had it twice completely break the system after following the directions for an apt full-upgrade. Ditched it and installed its predecessor, debian, and have had no issues
    with apt since.

    Unfortunately, some of the duhcisions they make do find their way back into debian. Hopefully, this coreutils change won't.

    I want a computer that works well, it just seems to be such a moving
    target and frustrates me.

    Indeed.


    * SLMR 2.1a * So easy, a child could do it. Child sold separately.
    --- SBBSecho 3.28-Linux
    * Origin: capitolcityonline.net * Telnet/SSH:2022/HTTP (21:1/175)
  • From jimmylogan@21:1/137 to apam on Saturday, November 01, 2025 18:56:48
    apam wrote to jimmylogan <=-


    I want a computer that works well, it just seems to be such a moving target and frustrates me.

    I get it... That's why I'm fine with MacOS overall... I only use
    Linux on 'older' equipment.


    ... If this were an actual tagline, it would be funny.
    --- MultiMail/Mac v0.52
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to apam on Monday, November 24, 2025 02:54:38
    On 01 Nov 2025 at 05:43a, apam pondered and said...

    And so much of this complexity and newness just seems to me to be new for the sake of being new. Ubuntu using rust coreutils for example ... why? The existing core utils have been worked on for many years and work well, but rust is the new shiny and we have to port to that to be safe - so there's now a bunch of issues with compatibility with new core utils, which will be worked out eventually, but for what?

    I can speak to this a little bit. Two reasons that I see
    initially include a) code quality and maintainability issues
    with GNU coreutils, and b) the GNU license. uutils is much
    better code generally (unit tests!!), and certainly easier to
    maintain, the project uses modern development practices with
    respect to review, CI, and so on. And the MIT license makes
    it much easier to integrate with other projects.

    The issue with compatibility is real, but I would argue that
    in some ways this is good: there are already alternative user
    space implementations of the POSIX and Unix utilities (the
    BSDs, System V, various commercial Unixes that still exist,
    and so on). Having diversity in this area forces downstream
    projects to be a bit cleaner and more disciplined.

    As for ubuntu switching to uutils? Meh, I'm ambivalent, but
    that's largely because I think that Canonical is run by a loon.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From boraxman@21:1/101 to tenser on Sunday, November 30, 2025 00:51:31
    On 24 Nov 2025 at 02:54a, tenser pondered and said...

    On 01 Nov 2025 at 05:43a, apam pondered and said...

    And so much of this complexity and newness just seems to me to be new the sake of being new. Ubuntu using rust coreutils for example ... wh The existing core utils have been worked on for many years and work w but rust is the new shiny and we have to port to that to be safe - so there's now a bunch of issues with compatibility with new core utils, which will be worked out eventually, but for what?

    I can speak to this a little bit. Two reasons that I see
    initially include a) code quality and maintainability issues
    with GNU coreutils, and b) the GNU license. uutils is much
    better code generally (unit tests!!), and certainly easier to
    maintain, the project uses modern development practices with
    respect to review, CI, and so on. And the MIT license makes
    it much easier to integrate with other projects.

    The issue with compatibility is real, but I would argue that
    in some ways this is good: there are already alternative user
    space implementations of the POSIX and Unix utilities (the
    BSDs, System V, various commercial Unixes that still exist,
    and so on). Having diversity in this area forces downstream
    projects to be a bit cleaner and more disciplined.

    As for ubuntu switching to uutils? Meh, I'm ambivalent, but
    that's largely because I think that Canonical is run by a loon.


    I think in some part, the move to Rust is due to zealots who want to control software, or at least, have some more social control. I don't trust evangelists, and that is with good reason. Perhaps it is also in part to undermine software freedom?

    ... A book in the hand is worth two on the shelf!

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to boraxman on Saturday, November 29, 2025 09:17:26
    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: boraxman to tenser on Sun Nov 30 2025 12:51 am

    I think in some part, the move to Rust is due to zealots who want to control software, or at least, have some more social control. I don't trust evangelists, and that is with good reason. Perhaps it is also in part to undermine software freedom?

    The only reason I've heard of people moving to Rust is that it has been designed to help prevent some common programming pitfals that lead to bugs in software (such as more protection against memory leaks, etc.). It seems reasonable to me.. Even the best & most careful programmers with C & C++ can make mistakes sometimes that lead to software bugs.

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to boraxman on Thursday, December 04, 2025 07:08:27
    On 30 Nov 2025 at 12:51a, boraxman pondered and said...

    I can speak to this a little bit. Two reasons that I see
    initially include a) code quality and maintainability issues
    with GNU coreutils, and b) the GNU license. uutils is much
    better code generally (unit tests!!), and certainly easier to maintain, the project uses modern development practices with
    respect to review, CI, and so on. And the MIT license makes
    it much easier to integrate with other projects.

    The issue with compatibility is real, but I would argue that
    in some ways this is good: there are already alternative user
    space implementations of the POSIX and Unix utilities (the
    BSDs, System V, various commercial Unixes that still exist,
    and so on). Having diversity in this area forces downstream
    projects to be a bit cleaner and more disciplined.

    As for ubuntu switching to uutils? Meh, I'm ambivalent, but
    that's largely because I think that Canonical is run by a loon.


    I think in some part, the move to Rust is due to zealots who want to control software, or at least, have some more social control. I don't trust evangelists, and that is with good reason. Perhaps it is also in part to undermine software freedom?

    Do you have any evidence to support this view point?

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to Nightfox on Thursday, December 04, 2025 07:20:52
    On 29 Nov 2025 at 09:17a, Nightfox pondered and said...

    The only reason I've heard of people moving to Rust is that it has been designed to help prevent some common programming pitfals that lead to
    bugs in software (such as more protection against memory leaks, etc.).
    It seems reasonable to me.. Even the best & most careful programmers
    with C & C++ can make mistakes sometimes that lead to software bugs.

    Rust is, frankly, a better language than either C or C++, but
    with good reason: it had 35 years of C and 30 years of C++
    history to learn from when it was designed. Plus it could also
    draw on lessons learned from research in the wider PL community
    over those decades. But it's easy to do better when you've got
    so much data you can learn from.

    Rust is not perfect, and has made some very bad design decisions,
    in my opinion: the `async` stuff was not fully baked and is full
    of footguns, and the recent chatter about not poisoning mutexes
    by default anymore is misguided and just plain wrong. The learning
    curve is notoriously steep. But at its core, Rust helps programmers
    write correct, performant, programs faster, and to do so across a
    wide variety of domains. That said, it's just another tool in the
    box, and it's not the only language a programmer should know.

    These conspiracy-theories about control, evangelism, attacks on
    software freedom, etc, are just uninformed nonsense.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to tenser on Wednesday, December 03, 2025 11:13:30
    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: tenser to Nightfox on Thu Dec 04 2025 07:20 am

    Rust is, frankly, a better language than either C or C++, but with good reason: it had 35 years of C and 30 years of C++ history to learn from when it was designed. Plus it could also draw on lessons learned from research in the wider PL community over those decades. But it's easy to do better when you've got so much data you can learn from.

    I don't doubt Rust is a good language. I have yet to try it myself; that's mainly because I haven't worked on a project that uses Rust, and I haven't really looked into using it for one of my own projects.

    At the same time, sometimes I'm not sure about a programming language forcing certain rules & paradigms, etc.. C and C++ let you do pretty much anything, and IMO that's not necessarily a bad thing. Just be careful not to do stuff that will cause bugs. :) I know, there's always human error, and everyone will eventually make mistakes, so I suppose it's good if the language can help avoid that. Sometimes I'm torn between that and the adage that "it's a poor craftsman who blames his tools". There's the old joke that a person goes to see a doctor and says, "My arm hurts when I move it like this," and the doctor says, "Then don't move it like that."

    These conspiracy-theories about control, evangelism, attacks on software freedom, etc, are just uninformed nonsense.

    Honestly this thread is the first time I've heard about any conspiracy theories about control on software freedom due to evangelism of a programming langauge..

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to Nightfox on Thursday, December 04, 2025 11:14:59
    On 03 Dec 2025 at 11:13a, Nightfox pondered and said...

    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: tenser to Nightfox on Thu Dec 04 2025 07:20 am

    Rust is, frankly, a better language than either C or C++, but with go reason: it had 35 years of C and 30 years of C++ history to learn fro when it was designed. Plus it could also draw on lessons learned fro research in the wider PL community over those decades. But it's easy do better when you've got so much data you can learn from.

    I don't doubt Rust is a good language. I have yet to try it myself; that's mainly because I haven't worked on a project that uses Rust, and
    I haven't really looked into using it for one of my own projects.

    At the same time, sometimes I'm not sure about a programming language forcing certain rules & paradigms, etc..

    All programming languages force rules, paradigms, idioms, etc, on
    programmers. Even assembly languages do this. C, for example, has
    some very abstruse rules for the promotion of integers of various
    types to other types; these can often surprise people who aren't
    used to them. For example, pop quiz:

    uint16_t mul(uint16_t a, uint16_t b) { return a * b; }

    Is this little function portable and well-defined?

    C and C++ let you do pretty
    much anything, and IMO that's not necessarily a bad thing.

    Well, except that they kinda sorta really don't. I mean,
    on some level they're all Turing-complete; in the limit I
    can write a Rust interpreter in C, but that's not a
    particularly useful thing in the context of workaday
    programming. But on a more practical level I cannot, for
    example, directly manipulate the frame pointer in C code;
    I need to jump to assembly for that (whether inline or
    some other way).

    But what people tend to mean when they say such things is
    that, in C, they're programming at a very low level, and
    can thus manipulate the state of the machine in a much more
    direct way than in, say, Python or Java. But that's ALSO
    not really true, because 9 times out of 10, programs that do
    that kind of thing need to rely on some sort of externally
    defined standard (e.g., an ABI like the SVR4 one to define
    the size and alignment requirements of primitive types, and
    define the details of structure layout and function calling
    conventions). And when doing so, one has to be _really_
    careful to avoid the dreaded, "Undefined Behavior". I've
    seen C programs that have "worked" for decades suddenly
    break when a compiler got a point revision, because it
    turned out the program relied on the compiler behaving a
    certain way for UB, and all of a sudden the compiler started
    treating that differently. A lot of programs that people
    think are "correct" are really only correct on accident
    because older compilers had relatively sensible behavior for
    things like signed integer overflow, aliasing, and so on.

    I've written a couple of kernels in Rust (and of course some
    assembly code) and the bits of C that make it usable to
    manipulate low-level state are _also_ available in Rust.
    *Plus* I get goodies like iterators, sum types, type-safe
    IO, bounds-checked slices, pattern matching, parametric
    polymorphism, closures, sensible scoping rules, explicit
    type conversions (with error checking!), language-level
    support for error checking via the Result monad and `?`
    operator, traits, built-in support for unit testing, and
    so on, that I just don't get in C. The canonical build
    system even supports a robust library ecosystem.

    Some of these I can get in C++, but not all; it's like the
    Rust designers sat down and said, "gee, what would it look
    like if we designed a language that fixed the major problems
    in C++ that we've observed over the last 20 years?" :-D

    Just be
    careful not to do stuff that will cause bugs. :) I know, there's always human error, and everyone will eventually make mistakes, so I suppose
    it's good if the language can help avoid that.

    That's really the thing. 50 years of experience have shown that
    our best and brightest programmers write buggy C and C++ code.
    "Just write correct code" simply doesn't work, even for some really
    brilliant people. The best engineers know that the most robust
    artifacts come from using many approaches to improving quality:
    better languages, better practices, better tools, etc. These are
    not training wheels on a kids' bike, they're chain guards for power
    tools.

    Sometimes I'm torn
    between that and the adage that "it's a poor craftsman who blames his tools". There's the old joke that a person goes to see a doctor and
    says, "My arm hurts when I move it like this," and the doctor says,
    "Then don't move it like that."

    Ah, but the skilled craftsman also carefully curates, maintains,
    and selects the tools for the job at hand. It is the poor craftsman
    who reaches for a hammer when a screwdriver is called for.

    The experienced craftsman is always looking for newer, better tools,
    and understands that often the safer tool yields the better finished
    product: the bespoke jig for moving the large panel across the saw
    allows the craftsman to concentrate on the cut itself, because the
    piece is secured and won't kick-back, as it is not being forced
    through at an angle. Similarly, the plane iron is kept sharpened
    and clean, and the sole waxed and square. Not only is this safer,
    the resulting work is higher quality.

    I don't, generally, remove the guard from my chainsaw, even though
    I try to be very careful when I use it. Why should I treat the tools
    that I program with differently?

    These conspiracy-theories about control, evangelism, attacks on softw freedom, etc, are just uninformed nonsense.

    Honestly this thread is the first time I've heard about any conspiracy theories about control on software freedom due to evangelism of a programming langauge..

    The Rust-in-Linux people have faced a lot of resistance from a
    number of long-time developers who are resistant to moving away
    from C; most of that is FUD. But it gives fuel to a number of
    ankle-biters swirling around the Linux community make these
    sorts of wild claims, but they don't tend to produce a lot of
    software: no one takes those people seriously.

    Similarly, Rust does have a problem with too many fanbois who
    blame _all_ software problems on failure to write everything in
    Rust. Those folks _also_ don't tend to write a lot of software,
    and again, no one takes them seriously. But their behavior
    tends to interact with the Linux peanut gallery types to create
    a pretty toxic mix, and amps them all up. The result is a lot
    of noise and heat, and almost no code, but everyone else has to
    wade through this ridiculous and unnecessary cesspool.

    Torvalds seems pretty bullish about Rust in the Linux kernel,
    though, so we'll see where it lands up; OTOH, the maintainers
    keep burning out and quiting because of the FUD and the
    crazy nonsense.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From rootroot@21:1/215 to tenser on Monday, November 24, 2025 21:52:16
    As for ubuntu switching to uutils? Meh, I'm ambivalent, but
    that's largely because I think that Canonical is run by a loon.

    why is he a loon? not defending, just don't know much about him and intrigued now

    ... Oxymoron: Race walking

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Windows/64)
    * Origin: Retro32 BBS (21:1/215)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to rootroot on Friday, December 19, 2025 15:43:47
    On 24 Nov 2025 at 09:52p, rootroot pondered and said...

    As for ubuntu switching to uutils? Meh, I'm ambivalent, but
    that's largely because I think that Canonical is run by a loon.

    why is he a loon? not defending, just don't know much about him and intrigued now

    He wants to see things like high school transcripts if you
    go to work for Canonical, regardless of what you've done in
    industry or how long you've been out of, you know, high
    school.

    Their hiring process is infamous.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to tenser on Friday, December 19, 2025 07:38:11
    tenser wrote to rootroot <=-

    He wants to see things like high school transcripts if you
    go to work for Canonical, regardless of what you've done in
    industry or how long you've been out of, you know, high
    school.

    I had a government job ask for a copy of my college diploma. From 1985.
    31 years later, with a full resume and references. I thought that was
    kooky, then realized it was government.

    The fact that I had to sign 40 documents, provide fingerprints and have
    a background check should have been my first clue I was going down a
    process hellhole.

    Two weeks after I left, they realized that they underpaid me by a day
    or so of wages. Instead of just cutting a check for the difference,
    they clawed back the paycheck out of my account and issued a new check.
    In a week.



    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to poindexter FORTRAN on Friday, December 19, 2025 08:33:51
    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to tenser on Fri Dec 19 2025 07:38 am

    I had a government job ask for a copy of my college diploma. From 1985. 31 years later, with a full resume and references. I thought that was kooky, then realized it was government.

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the college or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree. I've never been asked to provide a copy of my college diploma. And for a while, I had even forgotten where I had stored mine because I'd never really needed it for anything.

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.33-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From ogg@21:2/147 to Nightfox on Friday, December 19, 2025 11:40:26
    I had a government job ask for a copy of my college diploma. From 1985

    years later, with a full resume and references. I thought that was koo

    then realized it was government.

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the
    college or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree. I've never been asked to provide a copy of my college diploma. And for a while, I had even forgotten where I had stored mine because
    I'd never really needed it for anything.

    Back when ISO9000 certification was in it's infancy, I was on our company's implementation committee. As part of the "is this employee qualified for this position" we had to ask for copies of certifications for everyone. That included proof(diploma) that I was a graduate engineer and any course work certifications I took for the job. I don't know if that's still a
    requirement.

    |11ogg
    |11SysOp, Altair IV BBS
    |11altairiv.ddns.net:2323

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A49 2024/05/29 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Altair IV BBS (altairiv.ddns.net:2323) (21:2/147)
  • From Utopian Galt@21:4/108 to Nightfox on Friday, December 19, 2025 21:03:33
    BY: Nightfox (21:1/137)

    |11N|09> |10I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the|07
    |11N|09> |10college or university you attended and asked for verification of your|07
    |11N|09> |10degree. I've never been asked to provide a copy of my college diploma. |07
    |11N|09> |10And for a while, I had even forgotten where I had stored mine because|07
    |11N|09> |10I'd never really needed it for anything.|07
    for my government job I think I did upload my transcript to my application.


    --- WWIV 5.9.03748[Windows]
    * Origin: inland utopia * california * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (21:4/108)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to Utopian Galt on Saturday, December 20, 2025 09:14:03
    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: Utopian Galt to Nightfox on Fri Dec 19 2025 09:03 pm

    ought organizations hiring for a job could contact
    the
    university you attended and asked for verification of
    your degree

    for my government job I think I did upload my transcript to my application.

    Yeah, I've applied to a copule jobs that asked me to provide my transcripts.

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.33-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to poindexter FORTRAN on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 01:32:44
    On 19 Dec 2025 at 07:38a, poindexter FORTRAN pondered and said...

    tenser wrote to rootroot <=-

    He wants to see things like high school transcripts if you
    go to work for Canonical, regardless of what you've done in
    industry or how long you've been out of, you know, high
    school.

    I had a government job ask for a copy of my college diploma. From 1985.
    31 years later, with a full resume and references. I thought that was
    kooky, then realized it was government.

    Yeah, I've been surprised at the number of places that have
    asked for a college transcript.

    The fact that I had to sign 40 documents, provide fingerprints and have
    a background check should have been my first clue I was going down a
    process hellhole.

    ...let me tell you about when I enlisted in the Marine Corps.
    "Fill this out in triplicate..." doesn't begin to describe it.
    The bureaucracy is so bad that Marines joke that the Corps
    floats on a sea of paperwork.

    Two weeks after I left, they realized that they underpaid me by a day
    or so of wages. Instead of just cutting a check for the difference,
    they clawed back the paycheck out of my account and issued a new check.
    In a week.

    When I became an officer, I had a kid with a pay issue: he hadn't
    been paid something from when he deployed. So I told him to go to
    Admin and talk to Sgt. So-and-so. So instead, he wrote his
    congressman, who then ordered us to do a full audit of his pay from
    the time he enlisted until the present.

    Turned out, he'd been _overpaid_ by a few thousand dollars and
    actually owed the government money, so they started docking his pay.
    Had he just gone and talked to the Marine I told him to, he'd
    probably have gotten whatever the original issue was sorted out
    and no one would have ever realized he'd been overpaid.

    He went UA (Naval service speak for AWOL) a few months later. No
    idea what became of him.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From tenser@21:1/101 to Nightfox on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 01:34:05
    On 19 Dec 2025 at 08:33a, Nightfox pondered and said...

    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: poindexter FORTRAN to tenser on Fri Dec 19 2025 07:38 am

    I had a government job ask for a copy of my college diploma. From 198 years later, with a full resume and references. I thought that was ko then realized it was government.

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the
    college or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree. I've never been asked to provide a copy of my college diploma. And for a while, I had even forgotten where I had stored mine because
    I'd never really needed it for anything.

    Come to think of it...no one's ever asked for my diploma, either.
    If anything, it was a copy of my transcript. The government was
    always into that when I was in the military.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Agency BBS | Dunedin, New Zealand | agency.bbs.nz (21:1/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Nightfox on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 00:11:02
    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: Nightfox to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Dec 19 2025 08:33:51

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the college or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree.

    Negative. The HIPAA privacy act disallows thrid-party access to personal documents without the owner's approval.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to Mortar M. on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 14:19:35
    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the colle university you attended and asked for verification of your degree.

    Negative. The HIPAA privacy act disallows thrid-party access to personal documents without the owner's approval.

    Was that a joke that I'm not understanding?

    HIPAA, as far as US laws go, is about health information privacy, so I'm confused on why it would cover things that are not health information.

    And, that said, most of the time people say, "it's probably a HIPAA violation", it is not, in fact, a HIPAA violation.

    And with verifying diplomas, sometimes universities have automated pages to check credentials.

    Honestly, with anything that's identification, there _should_ be some way to verify that it's a valid document.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to Mortar M. on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 09:52:04
    Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Mortar M. to Nightfox on Wed Dec 24 2025 12:11 am

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the college
    or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree.

    Negative. The HIPAA privacy act disallows thrid-party access to personal documents without the owner's approval.

    Ah, I had the impression HIPAA was mainly for health-related stuff, and that things like the degrees you've earned were basically public record.

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.33-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From Utopian Galt@21:4/108 to Nightfox on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 12:26:51
    NIGHTFOX (21:1/137) wrote to Mortar M. <=-



    Ah, I had the impression HIPAA was mainly for health-related stuff, and that things like the degrees you've earned were basically public
    record.

    There is another law that helps protect academic records.


    ... Gone crazy, be back later, please leave message.
    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52


    --- WWIV 5.9.03748[Windows]
    * Origin: inland utopia * california * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (21:4/108)
  • From Nightfox@21:1/137 to Utopian Galt on Wednesday, December 24, 2025 14:57:59
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Utopian Galt to Nightfox on Wed Dec 24 2025 12:26 pm

    Ah, I had the impression HIPAA was mainly for health-related stuff, and
    that things like the degrees you've earned were basically public record.

    There is another law that helps protect academic records.

    Interesting.. When I've gotten a new job, I've never had to directly provide proof of my degrees, so I thought they were able to contact the colleges and verify with them.

    Nightfox
    --- SBBSecho 3.33-Linux
    * Origin: Digital Distortion: digdist.synchro.net (21:1/137)
  • From Nigel Reed@21:2/101 to All on Thursday, December 25, 2025 03:17:51
    On Wed, 24 Dec 2025 00:11:02 -0600
    "Mortar M." <mortar.m.@endofthelinebbs.com> wrote:

    Re: Re: macOS 26
    By: Nightfox to poindexter FORTRAN on Fri Dec 19 2025 08:33:51

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the
    college or university you attended and asked for verification of
    your degree.

    Negative. The HIPAA privacy act disallows thrid-party access to
    personal documents without the owner's approval.

    HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) is about
    protecting your medical and health records.

    Like if your wife tries to call your doctor to find what medication
    you're taking, they will not tell you until you have signed a HIPPA
    release for people you wish to have that information.
    --
    End Of The Line BBS - Plano, TX
    telnet endofthelinebbs.com 23
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Dr. What@21:1/616 to Nightfox on Thursday, December 25, 2025 08:12:44
    Nightfox wrote to Utopian Galt <=-

    Interesting.. When I've gotten a new job, I've never had to directly provide proof of my degrees, so I thought they were able to contact the colleges and verify with them.

    Same here.

    But prior to that (so we're talking 20+ years ago now), I did have to get a notorized transcript from my alma mater for the company I was applying for. But the job had a specific requirement of a Bachelor's Degree.

    Could it be that universities have fallen so low that the degrees are no longer required?


    ... Always remember you're unique - just like everyone else.
    ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52

    --- Mystic BBS/QWK v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: cold fusion - cfbbs.net - grand rapids, mi (21:1/616)
  • From poindexter FORTRAN@21:4/122 to Mortar M. on Friday, December 26, 2025 08:52:26
    Mortar M. wrote to Nightfox <=-

    I always thought organizations hiring for a job could contact the college or university you attended and asked for verification of your degree.

    Negative. The HIPAA privacy act disallows thrid-party access to
    personal documents without the owner's approval.

    HIPAA, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability act of 1996
    concerns the dissemination of health information.

    From https://www.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/privacysummary.pdf

    The Standards for Privacy of Individually Identifiable Health
    Information ("Privacy Rule") establishes, for the first time, a set of
    national standards for the protection of certain health information. The
    U.S. Department of Health and Human Services ("HHS") issued the Privacy
    Rule to implement the requirement of the Health Insurance Portability
    and Accountability Act of 1996 ("HIPAA"). 1 The Privacy Rule standards
    address the use and disclosure of individuals' health information-called "protected health information" by organizations subject to the Privacy
    Rule - called "covered entities," as well as standards for individuals'
    privacy rights to understand and control how their health information is
    used. Within HHS, the Office for Civil Rights ("OCR") has responsibility
    for implementing and enforcing the Privacy Rule with respect to
    voluntary compliance activities and civil money penalties


    --- MultiMail/Win v0.52
    * Origin: realitycheckBBS.org -- information is power. (21:4/122)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Adept on Saturday, December 27, 2025 21:38:55
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Adept to Mortar M. on Wed Dec 24 2025 14:19:35

    HIPAA, as far as US laws go, is about health information privacy, so I'm confused on why it would cover things that are not health information.

    My bad. That should be FERPA, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Nightfox on Saturday, December 27, 2025 21:41:37
    Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Nightfox to Mortar M. on Wed Dec 24 2025 09:52:04

    Ah, I had the impression HIPAA was mainly for health-related stuff...

    It is, my goof. That should've been FERPA, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Utopian Galt on Saturday, December 27, 2025 21:43:06
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Utopian Galt to Nightfox on Wed Dec 24 2025 12:26:51

    There is another law that helps protect academic records.

    Yep. FERPA, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act. Sorry for the error.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Nigel Reed on Saturday, December 27, 2025 21:45:51
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Nigel Reed to All on Thu Dec 25 2025 03:17:51

    HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) is about protecting your medical and health records.

    Yeah, my bad. That should be FERPA, the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Dr. What on Saturday, December 27, 2025 21:54:25
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Dr. What to Nightfox on Thu Dec 25 2025 08:12:44

    Could it be that universities have fallen so low that the degrees are no longer required?

    Not all jobs require a degree, but these tend to be low-level positions. Educational requirements are up to the employer.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Dr. What@21:1/616 to Mortar M. on Sunday, December 28, 2025 10:18:02
    Mortar M. wrote to Dr. What <=-

    Could it be that universities have fallen so low that the degrees are no longer required?

    Not all jobs require a degree, but these tend to be low-level
    positions.

    That's not true and especially not true today. The higher level jobs may need more education, but the need for a degree has dropped in a major way over the last decade - especially in the last 5 years.

    Educational requirements are up to the employer. ---

    They always have been. But too many graduates are coming out with degrees but obviously don't have the education that's supposed to go with that degree.


    ... I can't be overdrawn, I still have checks left!
    ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52

    --- Mystic BBS/QWK v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: cold fusion - cfbbs.net - grand rapids, mi (21:1/616)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Dr. What on Sunday, December 28, 2025 13:23:13
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Dr. What to Mortar M. on Sun Dec 28 2025 10:18:02

    But too many graduates are coming out with degrees but obviously don't have the education that's supposed to go with that degree.

    That's a very broad, and I suspect, unsubstantiated claim. Unless you have hard facts to back that up.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Dr. What@21:1/616 to Mortar M. on Monday, December 29, 2025 07:17:50
    Mortar M. wrote to Dr. What <=-

    But too many graduates are coming out with degrees but obviously don't have the education that's supposed to go with that degree.

    That's a very broad, and I suspect, unsubstantiated claim. Unless you have hard facts to back that up.

    Ahhh... I see we have another leftoid shill.

    "Broad", most certainly.
    "Unsubstantiated", nope.
    "Hard facts", simply what the corporations are saying publically.

    But telling people not to believe what they see with their own eyes is your job, isn't it?

    *Plonk*


    ... I'm sorry Mrs. Bobbitt, you can't send that in the mail.
    ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52

    --- Mystic BBS/QWK v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: cold fusion - cfbbs.net - grand rapids, mi (21:1/616)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to Dr. What on Monday, December 29, 2025 16:30:28
    Ahhh... I see we have another leftoid shill.

    FSXnet having a no-politics rule, this is the sort of post that I am generally very happy _not_ to see here.

    Please help us keep it that way, so we can have a place that _isn't_ constantly about one stupid leader or another. Or insulting each other.

    We get enough of that elsewhere.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Dr. What on Monday, December 29, 2025 12:34:36
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Dr. What to Mortar M. on Mon Dec 29 2025 07:17:50

    "Unsubstantiated", nope.

    How?

    "Hard facts", simply what the corporations are saying publically.

    Who?

    But telling people not to believe what they see with their own eyes is your job, isn't it?

    Evasive.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Mortar M.@21:2/101 to Adept on Monday, December 29, 2025 13:03:59
    Re: Re: Hiring Practices
    By: Adept to Dr. What on Mon Dec 29 2025 16:30:28

    FSXnet having a no-politics rule, this is the sort of post that I am generally very happy _not_ to see here.

    Oops! Wish I'd seen this before I replied. Sorry.
    --- SBBSecho 3.31-Linux
    * Origin: End Of The Line BBS - endofthelinebbs.com (21:2/101)
  • From Dr. What@21:1/616 to Adept on Tuesday, December 30, 2025 07:22:23
    Adept wrote to Dr. What <=-

    FSXnet having a no-politics rule,

    *Laugh* That's a joke. FSXnet seems to be the place where the delusional Left hides.

    this is the sort of post that I am
    generally very happy _not_ to see here.

    And why do I care about your happiness?

    Please help us keep it that way, so we can have a place that _isn't_ constantly about one stupid leader or another. Or insulting each other.

    So the rules are only enforced against non-Leftists. Got it.

    We get enough of that elsewhere.

    So you hide here. Got it.


    ... Everyone makes mistakes, if not we'd all be single!
    ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52

    --- Mystic BBS/QWK v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: cold fusion - cfbbs.net - grand rapids, mi (21:1/616)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to Mortar M. on Wednesday, December 31, 2025 18:13:07
    FSXnet having a no-politics rule, this is the sort of post that I am generally very happy _not_ to see here.

    Oops! Wish I'd seen this before I replied. Sorry.

    Thanks! I appreciate it, and I do love that pretty much everyone is fine with the rule. It's nice that people can be thoughtful. I think Avon did well with what he was aiming for, with the network.

    That said, I do like that people do still tend to post about things in their lives. If someone is talking about what they did on Saturday or Sunday, it's just people talking about their lives.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to Dr. What on Wednesday, December 31, 2025 18:21:17
    FSXnet having a no-politics rule,

    *Laugh* That's a joke. FSXnet seems to be the place where the
    delusional Left hides.

    So you're intentionally breaking the rules of the network?

    Just checking, as I'm uncertain on how much a person can get banned from the network, as most people are able to have a base level of respect. So it hasn't happened much.

    And it's annoying when Avon (or others) have to do extra work.

    And why do I care about your happiness?

    *shrug*. It's an appeal to empathy, that most non-sociopathic people are able to understand.

    If you don't, it's fine; it's just not fine for you to both violate the rules and continue to post here.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)
  • From Utopian Galt@21:4/108 to Dr. What on Wednesday, December 31, 2025 10:49:40
    BY: Dr. What (21:1/616)

    |11DW|09> |10*Laugh* That's a joke. FSXnet seems to be the place where the|07 |11DW|09> |10delusional Left|07
    |11DW|09> |10hides.|07
    There are plenty of us of all different types of political orientations im a bit to the right. If we want to continue
    the conversations fidonet is one alternative.

    --- WWIV 5.9.03748[Windows]
    * Origin: inland utopia * california * iutopia.duckdns.org:2023 (21:4/108)
  • From Dr. What@21:1/616 to Adept on Thursday, January 01, 2026 08:04:23
    Adept wrote to Dr. What <=-

    So you're intentionally breaking the rules of the network?

    No. I'm simply pointing out that YOU are treating one set of opinions as "political" and another set as "non-political". Unequal application of the rules is never correct.

    Just checking, as I'm uncertain on how much a person can get banned
    from the network, as most people are able to have a base level of
    respect. So it hasn't happened much.

    Ahh... The appeal to "respect" argument. Ya, that doesn't work today.

    Respect is earned, not deserved.
    Leftoids who play word games and unequally apply rules will never earn my respect.

    And it's annoying when Avon (or others) have to do extra work.

    And I'll ask again why I should care.

    *shrug*. It's an appeal to empathy, that most non-sociopathic people
    are able to understand.

    And most people with a level of self-awareness would understand. But I can see that what others told me of fsxnet is true and the people have no self-awareness.

    If you don't, it's fine; it's just not fine for you to both violate the rules and continue to post here.

    I'll tell you what. I'll make this simple for us.

    Since this is obviously not a group that I care about anyway. I'll simply drop this group from my feed.


    ... If you want the last word with a woman, apologize.
    ___ MultiMail/Linux v0.52

    --- Mystic BBS/QWK v1.12 A47 2021/12/25 (Windows/32)
    * Origin: cold fusion - cfbbs.net - grand rapids, mi (21:1/616)
  • From esc@21:3/203 to Dr. What on Thursday, January 01, 2026 18:26:37
    Since this is obviously not a group that I care about anyway. I'll
    simply drop
    this group from my feed.

    Thanks!

    |03--|11[|05esc|13!|05dEMONIC|11]|03--|07

    --- DayDream BBS/UNIX (Linux) 2.15a
    * Origin: [>mONTEREYbBS.COM>] (21:3/203)
  • From Adept@21:2/108 to Dr. What on Friday, January 02, 2026 11:34:57
    Since this is obviously not a group that I care about anyway. I'll
    simply drop this group from my feed.

    Woo! Thanks! Problem solved!

    I appreciate you helping out, and apologize to anyone else in this base who might've been annoyed with my responses, somehow.

    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: Storm BBS (21:2/108)