Friday, January 12, 2018

Too busy with the golfing and Exec Time




Panama will join the dozens of countries that do not currently have Senate-confirmed US ambassadors in place, including key US allies like South Korea, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
While senior acting officials hold the reins in these important jobs, they are not permanent appointees and are limited in how long they can hold the roles.
Federal law allows these temporary officeholders to stay in the open jobs for, at most, 300 days. But 320 days have elapsed since the start of the Trump administration and acting officials in the State Department are starting to hit that limit, making presidential nominations more important than ever.


Mr Robot Season 3

About a month behind on the broadcast finale, finally finished up the 3rd Season of Mr Robot.  I felt it was the best season yet.  I agree with most people that Season 2 was a let down from the first, but I stuck with it and glad I did.  Esmail seems to be stretching his capacities or maybe he's just more confident in his storytelling and what he can do, the episode where Elliot spends the day with Trenton's brother.  That is the work of someone feeling their creative oats and it totally worked. It reminded me of some of the best TV I've seen in years. 

The acting was great, Bobby Cannavale, so good.  Not just good, but great.  Can't wait to find out about him and Whiterose.  Christian Slater, compare his performance when he's at the movies to when he's Mr Robot.  it's the same "guy" but so not the same guy.  Great work.  Loved Grace Gummer too.

It's all good, the cinematography, the story, the acting. 

Wait, Joey Bada$$.  His monologue about Frazier/Nightrider...funniest thing I've seen on TV this season.  Want to see more of Joey, in everything. 

I'm excited for Season 4, what's happening at the damn Plant.  What's Eliot got in mind for the "1% of the 1%".

I gotta go to bed, but I realized I probably should have done this for "Peaky Blinders" too.  Finished that a couple of weeks ago.

Friday, January 05, 2018

Companies that "NEEDED" to get rid of net neutrality and a tax cut to keep investing laying off thousands


Anyone who thought these two companies wouldn't screw their employees and their customers was fooling themselves.  Funny how they were so vocal about giving $1000 bonuses while they were firing people quietly. 

/Comcast

AT&T
We're adding people in many parts of our business that are experiencing higher customer demand. At the same time, technology improvements are driving higher efficiencies and there are some areas where demand for our legacy services continues to decline, and we're adjusting our workforce in some of those areas.
We'll work to find other AT&T jobs for as many affected employees as possible. Regarding premises technicians, we adjust the workforce based on changing market dynamics, which vary from region to region. In some regions, we are hiring these same resources and these employees have the opportunity to transfer to those locations. It's important to note that we still have thousands more premises technicians than we did two years ago.
There are a few notable bits in there. When AT&T says it adds people in parts of its business that have growing customer demand and lowers staff in areas with less demand, it's acknowledging a simple business reality that is at odds with its claim that a tax cut will boost its investment by the specific amount of $1 billion. Hiring is intended to bring in more customers and revenue, and layoffs reduce spending to match a lower revenue opportunity; by AT&T's own admission, it hires employees to meet customer demand and reduces staff in areas with lessening demand even when it gets a tax cut that it claims will boost investment.