Had a similar experience. Toxic company that was awarded a contract hired in a bunch of people, gave us starting dates then a week before we were supposed to start they delayed our start data by 4 months. It only got worse and worse from there. I eventually quit when I was doing 4 other jobs, like with different pay scales and supervisors and everything, by myself. Killed any chances I had with IT since every other company around here doesn't want to risk yet another burnout from that place. I had the same place interview me twice 6 months apart and both times as soon as they saw that company on my resume they frowned and kind of cut it short.
They've always been off the rails. Always were 25-40% more expensive for their electronics for no real reason. I've never bought from them because of that.
Dude I'm trying to learn how to program. Some days I can't even get started until midnight when tired brain is kicking in. There's just not enough time in the day.
They're running out of ways to make the number go up without outright cutting wages and not raising wages isn't keeping up anymore. I worried we're rapidly approaching another great depression.
What you're describing is called notching or hiding in the ground return/clutter that the radar sees by flying low to the ground and perpendicular to the aircraft you're trying to hide from so the effective closure rate is the same as the offensive aircraft's speed since modern radars use Doppler shift to locate targets. This strategy will not work on flying objects that are high enough to not be hidden in the ground clutter and especially if the defensive aircraft is higher than the emitter since it will be giving off a pretty strong return.
However other parts on aircraft give a huge return. Compressor blades from a jet engine or blades from a helicopter or drone would also show up like a flashlight in the dark.
Odds are if a fighter is close enough for a pistol then the fighters were committing war crimes by shooting parachuting aviators. The Japanese were known for shooting down parachutes.
I don't believe so. The clicking is from the bimetal strip that flexes due to electrical resistance heating up the strip and repeatedly breaks then connects again as the metal cools and makes contact. A blown fuse would not send electricity to the blinkers to cause the rapid blinking. The reason it blinks faster with a blown bulb is there's more voltage to the strip so it heats up faster and breaks the connection sooner but doesn't allow it to heat up enough to cause a longer off delay.
I bet it's more like peer pressure. If everybody else is doing it then they feel they should too to avoid backlash. They don't care about musky's rants or how right wing xitter has become.
Had a similar experience. Toxic company that was awarded a contract hired in a bunch of people, gave us starting dates then a week before we were supposed to start they delayed our start data by 4 months. It only got worse and worse from there. I eventually quit when I was doing 4 other jobs, like with different pay scales and supervisors and everything, by myself. Killed any chances I had with IT since every other company around here doesn't want to risk yet another burnout from that place. I had the same place interview me twice 6 months apart and both times as soon as they saw that company on my resume they frowned and kind of cut it short.