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Something you'll never see on Cops |
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Written by Steven Sust
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Friday, 23 April 2010 18:21 |
Hiding in a pile of liquid feces is pretty hardcore. Just imagine the sheer amount of dedication it would take to put yourself into that kind of situation. Well, the guy might have been so messed up on meth that he didnt realize just how deep the $#!t was around him. Still this is the kind of thing you expect to see on Fear Factor.
The cops who had to haul him out of that junk had to have been unhappy about it all. It's unfortunate that they had to taser him a few times because he got agitated, but I'd probably be in a pretty bad place too if I had been chin deep in poo for the last hour.
Oh the humanity. |
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Last Updated on Friday, 23 April 2010 18:33 |
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Swinging thru the jungles of wall st. |
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Written by Steven Sust
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Thursday, 15 April 2010 11:20 |
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"I couldn't finish watching the movie because it reminded me too much of work..." - Friend commenting on Office Space
I wonder if finance people feel the same way about a book another friend recommended called Monkey Business: Swinging through the Wall Street Jungle by John Rolfe and Peter Troobe (who are both recovering investment bankers). This was a really interesting read as it gives you a candid look at the American financial system with all of its lofty dreams and dashed hopes. As with all of the great professions, finance has its own rites of initiation/hazing that each newbie has to go through and they have all sorts of this crap coming at them from literally all directions. From this point on, I'll just itemize what i've learned about the industry from this book:
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Finance capitalizes on innate human greed from not just its employees, but its customers as well
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Bankers are ruthless bullshitters at least and blatant liars at most
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Brown-nosing and ass-kissing are their next greatest talents
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Crap always rains downwards in the following direction: Managing Director>Senior VP>JuniorVPs>Associates>Analysts
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Tempers are short and patience is thin as everyone is irritated from the crap raining down on them
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There is very little independent thought in finance
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When talking to a superior, any word coming out of an analyst's or associate's mouth better be "yes".
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Learn to nod inanely 
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Foul language with every iteration and combination of expletives and curse words are used to address all colleagues and subordinates, but not superiors(at least not to their faces).
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From the beginning, everyone is sold the dream of fortune and lavish excess in exchange for their hard work and loyalty when in reality only a very select few will ever get a piece of that pie, but everyone thinks they are the chosen one
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Being diligent and finishing things before deadlines only entitles your superiors to heap more work upon you
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Mixing bribery with harmonious connections to the media team and the printing team are essential to survival with furious arrogance dooming anyone who dares to cross their paths.
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Travelling to foreign countries on business trips not as glamorous as advertised when you have to cross several time zones while sleep-deprived and carrying tons of documents without checking any bags because there's no time to wait at the baggage carousel.
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There is no vacation because there is always work waiting for you on voicemail or your inbox when you get back or wake up
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Work typically consists of writing/plagiarizing/editing over and over again with each iteration changing less and less as it ascends the seniority ladder
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For all of the verbal abuse and hours toiled over what was written, absolutely no one else is going to read the whole thing.
This is obviously only one book that is told from a very biased perspective, but if true it actually explains a lot of the behaviors i've noticed in my finance friends. I thought some were just sick and twisted, but they're just a product of their environment. Well, maybe they are sick for staying in there all these years, but they made the initial honest mistake of getting hooked by the dream. I wonder what these guys will be like later on with prolonged exposure...
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Last Updated on Thursday, 15 April 2010 13:52 |
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Written by Steven Sust
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Saturday, 10 April 2010 21:26 |
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While walking through barnes and noble, I noticed that this week's time magazine had a cover reading "should kids be bribed to do well in school?" then I noticed the same article reprinted on yahoo news so I figured it was at least something worth reading a little bit at the very least. It was at least interesting/provocative in the topic, but it made me a little sad at the same time because it almost gave me the impression that all kids nowadays only wanted money to do better in school and would otherwise become the dullards depicted in such humorous movies like Idiocracy. After reading it a little more carefully though, the author does mention that the scheme's originator found that the results were varied with some places not responding at all to monetary incentives for scholastic achievements and others having great results in previously delinquent students. So I guess like all things, there's no absolute effect on school grades with monetary rewards, but there are some who perform much better when given the right incentive regimen. For you curmudgeons who think money for grades is a bad thing, I think the end quote in the article was very telling and in tradition with keepin it real:
"For the most part, I'm still Chyna," she says. "But once in a while I just snatch it back, 'cause I know that paycheck is coming." Then I ask her about the psychologists' argument that she should work hard for the love of learning, not for short-term rewards. "Honestly?" she asks. "Yes, honestly," I say. She looks me dead in the eye. "We're kids. Let's be realistic."
Back in my day, my parents would have busted out the bamboo stick for some caning if I talked like that so it was the angst associated with hurtin secondary to laziness that drove me to try and do better. Arguably, it was better than nothing, but I can't help but wonder if maybe some monetary rewards were all I needed rather than corporal punishment because that's kinda how things are done in the adult world. In the real world, higher achievement is typically rewarded, and lack of performance can lead to negative consequences. However, it would be hard to simulate the real-life despair of getting canned from your job when the kid is only in school so I guess there are some parts that just don't translate properly. Still interesting nonetheless...
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Last Updated on Saturday, 10 April 2010 21:39 |
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Written by Steven Sust
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Tuesday, 06 April 2010 15:49 |
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Written by Steven Sust
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Tuesday, 06 April 2010 15:31 |

In following with our gradual move towards cybernetic implants, I found this article on dailytech about optical implants that I thought was cool in theory. Ophthalamologist surgically implants chip into eyeball that can stimulate neurons in the optic nerve when it receives a wireless signal from remote camera mounted onto eyeglass frame. It's a nifty idea which is reminiscent of Geordi Laforge's Visor, but i'd be curious to see what kind of image they produce for each patient. Vision is one of the most impressively studied senses, but I dont know whether we can really map individual fiber tracts of the optic nerve all the way back to the occiptal visual cortices. Furthermore, will vision be black and white or will there be some kind of color. Also, what might something like this do for blind people who use their occipital lobe when reading braille?
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 06 April 2010 15:48 |
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