I know there's a lot of hate for pickup trucks, but they are useful. Not useful all the time, unless you use it for work, but that can be said for many things that we own. Obviously, most people don't use trucks for work, so they increasingly want more people-space and less (but not necessarily zero) cargo-space.
Cars and trucks in general are a problem, and the trend of increasing size of certain trucks is a problem, but imo if someone wants an SUV with a spot in the back to carry a Christmas tree or whatever, I don't see anything particularly wrong with that.
Hahaha I wish. There isn't any real "management" to speak of where I'm at, and it's a flat structure, meaning literally anyone can send me work and I'm just expected to do it. Right now I'm working the weekend to finish a task that someone else couldn't do and it fell to me. There's a ticketing system, but it's only really half-used (of course, I myself turn these tasks into tickets, but that's about it).
Trying to slowly change all this over time, because I love my job outside of this lack of management, but I also don't hold any delusions about that.
I'm lucky to not have many meetings in my current dev job, but I get the same effect from having a dozen people a day asking for "quick" fixes for various bugs that are conveniently always more urgent than whatever big task I'm in the middle of.
I feel like everyone has their preferred builds they kind of gravitate to and feel comfortable with. That, and for me, a lot of luck to make up for my lack of skill lol.
Love how they make this sound like some incredible feat. When you aren't bound to license agreements, turns out it's actually very easy to have a "massive" content library. Literally the only hurdle is storage space.
Sounds like something I would do, ngl. You see "Vet" on your calendar, having a busy day, and end up swinging by on your way home from work or something.
Seems like it would take a confluence of stuff going on, but it seems plausible.
That used to be the case, back when Steam Sales were a chaotic feeding frenzy of discounts. These days it's pretty much the same throughout.