Six Sigma is not an Americanism, it's a Japaneseism....mainly Toyota. I remember IBM trying to adopt that crap and ramming it down our throats. Dilbert Ethics? Absolutely dumb American.

I think the Japanese used it to destroy American competition
Oh no, anyway... RIP Ozzy.
She did good, indeed
Ditto.
It depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her
Yes.bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 7:50 amIt depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her![]()
I suspect you've worked for a company who took all credit for your work tootggzzz wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 8:27 amYes.bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 7:50 amIt depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her![]()
It is the "achievement by proxy" that unsettles me. Absolutely no idea why that is (too?) prominent in my mind.
Boasting about what she has achieved isn't pride![]()
"The teacher's true pride lies in his pupil."bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 7:50 am It depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her![]()
Could have done it in an ASK13, but both of us would have hated it... "Watch your speed, you're too slow. Where is the string, Etc"
Surprisingly, pleasingly, I managed to avoid that. It has never been an issue in my personal or professional life.bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 10:13 amI suspect you've worked for a company who took all credit for your work tootggzzz wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 8:27 amYes.bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 7:50 am
It depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her![]()
It is the "achievement by proxy" that unsettles me. Absolutely no idea why that is (too?) prominent in my mind.
Boasting about what she has achieved isn't pride![]()
![]()
Smells familiartggzzz wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 11:09 amSurprisingly, pleasingly, I managed to avoid that. It has never been an issue in my personal or professional life.
Was that pure luck, or did I make my luck? Un-decidable.
Nearest was working for one fintech company, where the acceptable/required standard of coding was ... worrying to the point of being unpleasant.
It is nice, isn't it
Reminds me of fintech's "factorial leverage" meaning "blackmail".tggzzz wrote: ↑Sat Jul 26, 2025 12:39 pmIt is nice, isn't itMost occupations seem to have such slang in-jokes that aren't used in other circumstances.
Given the minuscule amount of force necessary to move the stick, the concept of bending it is unthinkable.
This is the correct measure of parental pride; a parent's goal should always be to see their child go further and do better than they did. The measure of success in parenting is in the success of their offspring; we can do our best to teach them well, but you never know how that is going to turn out until... you see how things turn out.BU508A wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 10:22 am"The teacher's true pride lies in his pupil."bd139 wrote: ↑Fri Jul 25, 2025 7:50 am It depends on the person using the word I find. Pleasure from a closely related person's achievements is the textbook definition of pride. It's when it crosses into glory and making it about yourself i.e. achievement by proxy, there's a problem. She did the work and got the degree. I am happy for her![]()
I think, this is somewhere from Karate Kid.
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I always assumed it meant the same as it does in model aircraft - you've slammed the stick all the way to the stops and still pulling.tggzzz wrote: ↑Sat Jul 26, 2025 12:39 pmIt is nice, isn't itMost occupations seem to have such slang in-jokes that aren't used in other circumstances.
Given the minuscule amount of force necessary to move the stick, the concept of bending it is unthinkable.
Basically, yes, that's what it means. For beginners, however, it refers to their tendency to rotate too early/hard to get away from the dangerous hard stuff.mnementh wrote: ↑Mon Aug 04, 2025 12:30 pmI always assumed it meant the same as it does in model aircraft - you've slammed the stick all the way to the stops and still pulling.![]()
That's why I grudgingly forced myself to learn to be a "pinch flyer".![]()