Beyond Tiki, Bilge, and Test / Beyond Tiki
Lifestyle bust yields crumbs
Pages: 1 13 replies
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Trader Woody
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Fri, Jan 17, 2003 12:46 PM
For the first time at work yesterday I had the British equivalent of a urine test (don't tend to have those here). I had a visit from an 'auditor', there to check out my work PC for porn, unlicensed games, MP3's and evil screensavers. I stood there like an Iraqi at a baby food plant while he skimmed my hard drive for mpg's, sound files, and then, gulp, .jpg's. He scanned the vast number of picture files on my disk, and started to open them up, one by one. I could see the way his mind worked - (I was busted for using the internet too much, though. Cest la vie) Trader Woody |
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PolynesianPop
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Fri, Jan 17, 2003 2:55 PM
TW, |
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Trader Woody
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Fri, Jan 17, 2003 3:13 PM
Ha! Busted too, eh Pop? The checking out of sites such as Tiki Central, Tiki Farm, Munktiki et al must throw up a dilemma for the PC Nazi Patrol. They hate it because it's (in their eyes) horribly 'wrong', yet at the same time they can't bust you for anything. I must admit, though, to being a little worried about possibly downloading one or more of those classic 'Hot babe next to Tiki carving' pics posted a while back.... Trader Woody |
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PolynesianPop
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Sat, Jan 18, 2003 9:41 AM
TW, |
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DaneTiki
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Sun, Jan 19, 2003 5:01 PM
[ Edited by: DaneTiki 2009-08-30 19:27 ] |
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Swanky
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Sun, Jan 19, 2003 5:07 PM
My company blocks all types of sound files. WAV, MP3, whatever. And they monitor online time. I get in trouble monthly. They say they consider a click within 3 minutes as online. I just seem to always be online. I can't help it. Now I do things like go to TC and right click everything I want to read and open in a new window. That way I do all my clicking at once. Then I read at leisure. By the time I read it all, it's been 3 minutes. I even watch the clock for that 3 minutes so I can click again. It sucks. And I generally just come here, check my online mail and the stats for the pages. Stinks. I'm always getting a talking to... |
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Shipwreckjoey
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Sun, Jan 19, 2003 7:54 PM
I here ya, things are getting very uptight at work. I try to limit my on-line time for recreational purposes to my lunch hour (which my company allows as long as I'm not trading child prostitutes on E-Bay or something). I have to deal with vendors, sub-contractors, ect. so I can write off any additional time to that, but I sometimes get bored and stray to the "TC Zone". At the end of every week I clean my files...delete E-mail (or transfere it my personal file), empty my recycle bin & check my "C" drive cookies and blow everything away not work related. I don't indulge in porn at work or at home but you never know what these people who monitor your on-line activities are going to think! A systems engineer in my company was called on the carpet for E-Mails he had sent & received for a navy ship we were working on called the USS ESSEX...the SEX in the ship's name sent up a red flag. |
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hanford_lemoore
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Sun, Jan 19, 2003 8:03 PM
Swanky (and others): It sounds like getting messages delivered to email may help you. Most email programs allow you you to filter based on a keyword so you can have all your Tiki Central messages delivered into one folder. This could very well keep those clicks down to a minimum and you'd only be on the web for replying and viewing pictures. Email message delivery can be set up here: https://tikicentral.com/mail_register.php ~Hanford |
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thebaxdog
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Mon, Jan 20, 2003 7:35 AM
Just imagine all those assholes wanting I need my tums and my nitro pills |
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floratina
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Tue, Jan 21, 2003 8:34 AM
If I am being paid to do something and instead screw around on the internet, I am stealing from my employer :( But I wanna see what's on Tiki Central!! It drives me nuts. P.S. Lock and load, Bax! |
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Tiki Chris
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Tue, Jan 21, 2003 8:47 AM
rather than making yourself a nervous wreck by surfing the net @ work, perhaps you should start taking hard drugs while on the clock! |
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TheMuggler
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Tue, Jan 21, 2003 9:04 AM
A good boss can eliminate such problems in two very easy steps:
I've had great employees and I never once questioned how they spent their time, and I've had employees who always miss deadlines and never seem to get anything done no matter what you do, but generally speaking a good working environment fosters good work. Likewise, bad bosses create bad work environments and usually end up with the litany of complaints you write of, Baxdog. The fact is, a boss/manager is responsible for how his/her employees behave, and if you have lousy employees then ya need to look at how you are running things instead of blaming employees. If an employee is performing well, I give them the freedom to determine how they work. Scary concept for many companies, but in my experience, it works. -Mike (surfing TC in the middle of the work day)! |
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Rain
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Tue, Jan 21, 2003 9:14 AM
as a former employee of the esteemed Muggler, i can vouch for his methods and honestly say that that was the only job i've ever had where i a) didn't want to shoot myself all day and b) actually cared about the work. unfortunately, now i'm back to those other types of jobs. the last place i was working for had a zero internet usage policy. i had to tweak my network settings to even be able to access the web. bastards. |
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thebaxdog
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Wed, Jan 22, 2003 10:54 PM
It must be nice to have the luxury to have employees long enough to trust them. And just who does set the bar on what is fair pay or paying them what their worth. |
Pages: 1 13 replies