Seemingly trivial things that annoy you
Comments
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Yeah, that seems odd. On the second point I have a similar annoyance where I have a South African colleague and either he will say to other people or they will say to him 'have a lekker day'. He's not even Afrikaans.nickice said:
Both groups annoy me but there is something incredibly ridiculous about pretending you're no longer from the UK. A case in point: my tutor in Spain was as Mancunian as they come but insisted she was no longer British and referred to the Spanish as 'we'.Pross said:
Surely it's better than those who move abroad then try to turn the place they move to into a mini version of the UK?nickice said:British people who live abroad and act like they're no longer from the UK. I find them even more annoying than the lager louts.
I can certainly understand people trying to distance themselves from the Brits abroad crowd!
In fact we can add into this people who use Spanish or French words (not commonly in use in the UK) when commenting on newspaper articles.0 -
People in republic of Ireland speak English which is not much different to that in core Ingerlaand. Irish not different to English as well then?rick_chasey said:
Yeah not many people say people up North speak a different language to English however.orraloon said:
Bzzzt. Cultural appropriation alert. Bring in the Thought Police.rick_chasey said:People who think Flemish is different to Dutch.
Anyway, language pronunciation is different. Innit.
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Irish is not English.orraloon said:
People in republic of Ireland speak English which is not much different to that in core Ingerlaand. Irish not different to English as well then?rick_chasey said:
Yeah not many people say people up North speak a different language to English however.orraloon said:
Bzzzt. Cultural appropriation alert. Bring in the Thought Police.rick_chasey said:People who think Flemish is different to Dutch.
Anyway, language pronunciation is different. Innit.0 -
So if Irish is not English then why is Flemish not not Dutch? I await Prof Chasey's pearls of wisdom.nickice said:
Irish is not English.orraloon said:
People in republic of Ireland speak English which is not much different to that in core Ingerlaand. Irish not different to English as well then?rick_chasey said:
Yeah not many people say people up North speak a different language to English however.orraloon said:
Bzzzt. Cultural appropriation alert. Bring in the Thought Police.rick_chasey said:People who think Flemish is different to Dutch.
Anyway, language pronunciation is different. Innit.
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Is this a wind up? Surely it must be. But in case it's not, Irish is Irish Gaelic.orraloon said:
So if Irish is not English then why is Flemish not not Dutch? I await Prof Chasey's pearls of wisdom.nickice said:
Irish is not English.orraloon said:
People in republic of Ireland speak English which is not much different to that in core Ingerlaand. Irish not different to English as well then?rick_chasey said:
Yeah not many people say people up North speak a different language to English however.orraloon said:
Bzzzt. Cultural appropriation alert. Bring in the Thought Police.rick_chasey said:People who think Flemish is different to Dutch.
Anyway, language pronunciation is different. Innit.0 -
I refer you upthread to an earlier post by RC. Is it a wind up? Do I know? 🤔
However is way aye man Geordie speak English? Given Geordieland is desired neither by Ingerlaand or Scotland...0 -
At least one language study concluded that a lot of Geordie dialect elements come from Norwegian.0
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orraloon said:
I refer you upthread to an earlier post by RC. Is it a wind up? Do I know? 🤔
However is way aye man Geordie speak English? Given Geordieland is desired neither by Ingerlaand or Scotland...
So to be clear - Flemish - a dialect.
Dutch - a language.
Official languages of Belgium: Dutch, French, German
Not, Flemish, Walloonian and Eupenian...0 -
So to the tune of Pink Floyd's 'Careful with that Axe Eugene', careful with those words RC.
Did you mean e.g. a Flemish person Is different to a Dutch person?rick_chasey said:People who think Flemish is different to Dutch.
Or did you mean the Flemish language / dialect Is different to the Dutch language?
It's the way you tell 'em... (DYOR for the original of that phrase)0 -
A family calling for an urgent safety review after their 6 year old daughter was washed over a waterfall in North Wales (she was uninjured). It's a fucking natural feature, there's obvious risks involved if you choose to go there. Apparently the girl was under close supervision, the fact she fell down a waterfall suggests otherwise. What next, calls for railings along the cliffs on our coastline to stop anyone falling off?0
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People posting unpopular opinions that they don't actually believe in the unpopular opinions thread.1
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Wonder who you have in mind?kingstongraham said:People posting unpopular opinions that they don't actually believe in the unpopular opinions thread.
"I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]1 -
But it's Not Their Fault. That their child went too close and fell in. They will be seeking com-pen-say-shun. Have you let your child fall off a natural feature? Call Sue, Grabbit and Runne...Pross said:A family calling for an urgent safety review after their 6 year old daughter was washed over a waterfall in North Wales (she was uninjured). It's a censored natural feature, there's obvious risks involved if you choose to go there. Apparently the girl was under close supervision, the fact she fell down a waterfall suggests otherwise. What next, calls for railings along the cliffs on our coastline to stop anyone falling off?
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Yeah similar here. Dumbest example yet was a change to the requirements (apparently) here that baby prams/strollers now must have a secure wrist strap in use by the parent pushing it. This was in response to not one, but two separate incidents where "young mums" were out with baby, got distracted by their social media update requirements or something, and the untethered pram rolled down a bank into a river; result = baby drowned.Pross said:A family calling for an urgent safety review after their 6 year old daughter was washed over a waterfall in North Wales (she was uninjured). It's a censored natural feature, there's obvious risks involved if you choose to go there. Apparently the girl was under close supervision, the fact she fell down a waterfall suggests otherwise. What next, calls for railings along the cliffs on our coastline to stop anyone falling off?
🙄
Open One+ BMC TE29 Seven 622SL On One Scandal Cervelo RS0 -
Yup. I said that a while ago.kingstongraham said:People posting unpopular opinions that they don't actually believe in the unpopular opinions thread.
It was supposed to be, an opinion you hold that is unpopular with others.
Not, an opinion that you don't agree with and is therefore unpopular with you.
The older I get, the better I was.0 -
...or just something contrary that no one really believes at all. Can't be doing with it.capt_slog said:
Yup. I said that a while ago.kingstongraham said:People posting unpopular opinions that they don't actually believe in the unpopular opinions thread.
It was supposed to be, an opinion you hold that is unpopular with others.
Not, an opinion that you don't agree with and is therefore unpopular with you.0 -
Wrong thread.0
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Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.0 -
Lazy is definitely the word. They use keyword searches and if any are applicable then it gets put through the system. I've lost count of the amount of positions I've been invited to apply for that are most certainly not to my skills or experience but the description happens to include one keyword.The above may be fact, or fiction, I may be serious, I may be jesting.
I am not sure. You have no chance.Veronese68 wrote:PB is the most sensible person on here.0 -
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.0 -
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.0 -
I get all of that but where would you place it on a scale of 1 - 10 of business ethics with 10 being purer than snow and 1 should be in prison?Pross said:
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.0 -
About an 8.0
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I'd do exactly the same as Pross. I mean, who gives a f***? Apart from the lazy sh1te who sent the unsolicited correspondence in the first place?Ben
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Sending someone’s CVs without their permission is about a 4, assuming 3.5 and below are finable offences.surrey_commuter said:
I get all of that but where would you place it on a scale of 1 - 10 of business ethics with 10 being purer than snow and 1 should be in prison?Pross said:
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.
In fact, if there was such thing as a recruitment regulator, it’s the first thing it should stamp out.
It’s not hard to ask and if it is you’re in the wrong job.0 -
This really.Ben6899 said:I'd do exactly the same as Pross. I mean, who gives a f***? Apart from the lazy sh1te who sent the unsolicited correspondence in the first place?
Unsolicited info or gifts are to do with as you will."I spent most of my money on birds, booze and fast cars: the rest of it I just squandered." [George Best]2 -
Isn't it already a breach of data rules, GDR etc.?rick_chasey said:
Sending someone’s CVs without their permission is about a 4, assuming 3.5 and below are finable offences.surrey_commuter said:
I get all of that but where would you place it on a scale of 1 - 10 of business ethics with 10 being purer than snow and 1 should be in prison?Pross said:
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.
In fact, if there was such thing as a recruitment regulator, it’s the first thing it should stamp out.
It’s not hard to ask and if it is you’re in the wrong job.
I was pretty shocked when it happened to me.
Lack of trust in recruitment consultants puts me off changing jobs.0 -
Erm I don’t know re GDPR.TheBigBean said:
Isn't it already a breach of data rules, GDR etc.?rick_chasey said:
Sending someone’s CVs without their permission is about a 4, assuming 3.5 and below are finable offences.surrey_commuter said:
I get all of that but where would you place it on a scale of 1 - 10 of business ethics with 10 being purer than snow and 1 should be in prison?Pross said:
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.
In fact, if there was such thing as a recruitment regulator, it’s the first thing it should stamp out.
It’s not hard to ask and if it is you’re in the wrong job.
I was pretty shocked when it happened to me.
Lack of trust in recruitment consultants puts me off changing jobs.
Problem in the industry is that the barriers to entry are extremely low. You basically need an internet connection, some kind of computer and a phone so you can get all sorts.
There are firms obviously who have decent reps etc.0 -
The difficulty is that it is the employer who chooses and pays the recruitment consultant, so the potential employee doesn't have much choice if they fancy a particular job.rick_chasey said:
Erm I don’t know re GDPR.TheBigBean said:
Isn't it already a breach of data rules, GDR etc.?rick_chasey said:
Sending someone’s CVs without their permission is about a 4, assuming 3.5 and below are finable offences.surrey_commuter said:
I get all of that but where would you place it on a scale of 1 - 10 of business ethics with 10 being purer than snow and 1 should be in prison?Pross said:
I'm not seeking the moral high ground. If someone sends you information when you've had no past dealings with them, haven't asked them to send it through and doesn't even have the common sense to anonymise their Clients name then they're inviting people to take that approach with them. It comes down to their laziness. All respectable recruitment consultants I deal with take details of what we are looking for and try to match the candidates. We'll then get an anonymised CV and, if they look promising, we are then committed to a contract regarding the recruitment fees before we get the full details and have the interview arranged. If we get sent an unsolicited CV it is usually by a company we have worked with in the past and it won't have the candidates name. When we get something unsolicited it is usually along the lines of 'I am working with a technician seeking a new challenge. They have 10 years experience, these qualifications and expertise in this software. If interested please get in touch'.surrey_commuter said:
I think you relinquished the moral high ground with your last sentencePross said:Lazy recruitment consultants. I've just received an unsolicited CV that isn't relevant to my own team but passed it to 4 colleagues only to find they've all been sent it too. The candidate is based in London (our nearest office is 60 miles away), there's no mention of whether they are looking to relocate and their experience is all public sector so doesn't really match with what our company does. To top it off, the email I received was addressed to a different name.
If I was the candidate and discovered my CV was being sent out like that I'd be moving to a different recruitment consultant. The plus point is that the CV sent over has the candidates name on and as it wasn't solicited if they had been of interest I would have simply looked them up on LinkedIn and contacted them directly to offer an interview.
This approach was on a par with an inventor trying to cold sell you his idea by sending you the full design plans whilst not having taken out a patent.
I worked somewhere where a CV got sent in that was for a current staff member looking to move on from the company. Luckily I knew they were already and was trying to get out myself but had it gone to another person in the company it could have caused problems for them.
In fact, if there was such thing as a recruitment regulator, it’s the first thing it should stamp out.
It’s not hard to ask and if it is you’re in the wrong job.
I was pretty shocked when it happened to me.
Lack of trust in recruitment consultants puts me off changing jobs.
Problem in the industry is that the barriers to entry are extremely low. You basically need an internet connection, some kind of computer and a phone so you can get all sorts.
There are firms obviously who have decent reps etc.0