6.6 million jobless claims.
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@Mik said in 6.6 million jobless claims.:
The thing I hated was lazy-ass programmers who would force an abend when something went wrong but DIDN'T TELL YOU WHAT WENT WRONG, WHAT RECORD or anything else that might help you figure it out without reading a dump. If I did it I gave as much info as I could right there in the SYSOUT including restart instructions either in the code or the JCL. You would have liked working with me.
Sounds like I would have.
Wrote cobol on a IBM 370 for years. Then an IBM 8100 system. Some of that code ran for over 15 years before they retired the system.
wrote on 23 Apr 2020, 13:52 last edited by@Improviso said in 6.6 million jobless claims.> Wrote cobol on a IBM 370 for years. Then an IBM 8100 system. Some of that code ran for over 15 years before they retired the system.
I have a system that is still running at a dental lab that I wrote in 1985. He finally stopped upgrading the underlying runtime system about 5 years ago. He said he was retiring. He is still working and I did some enhancements for him to start a new process just last December.
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wrote on 23 Apr 2020, 14:28 last edited by
Sometimes, if it works, leave it alone. We were running the old roll and scroll Sunquest as late as 2014 and it did everything we needed.
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wrote on 23 Apr 2020, 14:31 last edited by
IT systems are tools. Nothing more. If the tool does what you need done and is on a maintainable platform it's good.
I have seen a lot of businesses that worked for technology rather than technology working for them. You see a LOT of that in healthcare. That's the wrong way to go.
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@Improviso said in 6.6 million jobless claims.> Wrote cobol on a IBM 370 for years. Then an IBM 8100 system. Some of that code ran for over 15 years before they retired the system.
I have a system that is still running at a dental lab that I wrote in 1985. He finally stopped upgrading the underlying runtime system about 5 years ago. He said he was retiring. He is still working and I did some enhancements for him to start a new process just last December.
wrote on 23 Apr 2020, 15:12 last edited by@mark said in 6.6 million jobless claims.:
@Improviso said in 6.6 million jobless claims.> Wrote cobol on a IBM 370 for years. Then an IBM 8100 system. Some of that code ran for over 15 years before they retired the system.
I have a system that is still running at a dental lab that I wrote in 1985. He finally stopped upgrading the underlying runtime system about 5 years ago. He said he was retiring. He is still working and I did some enhancements for him to start a new process just last December.
Nice... good code just runs and runs.
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wrote on 30 Apr 2020, 12:48 last edited by
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wrote on 30 Apr 2020, 12:58 last edited by
This is not meant to be a political statement at all, but I wonder how much credit Trump will claim in the coming months when folks "get off unemployment".
It'll be something like "No president has ever helped so many people find employment again in the history of this country, some say in the history of the world."
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wrote on 30 Apr 2020, 14:36 last edited by
It sounds like you are tired of winning.
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 12:57 last edited by
Unemployment rolls continued to swell in the U.S. last week, though jobless claims hit their lowest level since the economy went into lockdown made to battle the coronavirus pandemic.
First-time filings for unemployment insurance hit 3.17 million last week, bringing the total to 33.5 million over the past seven weeks, the Labor Department reported Thursday. The total was slightly higher than the 3.05 million expected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones and below the previous week’s 3.846 million, which was revised up by 7,000.
The latest jobless claims numbers come a day before the Labor Department releases its nonfarm payrolls report for April. Economists surveyed by Dow Jones expect a plunge of 21.5 million, easily the worst month in U.S. history, with the unemployment rate surging to 16%.
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 15:45 last edited by
It's the economy
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 16:50 last edited by
I wonder if we'll hit 50 million on unemployment.
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 16:59 last edited by
The effective reproductive rate of unemployment claims is less than one.
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 17:04 last edited by
It's herd immunity. Once you've lost your job you can't lose it again.
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wrote on 7 May 2020, 17:37 last edited by
That has yet to be proven, I read somewhere that some employees in South Korea got furloughed twice.
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wrote on 10 May 2020, 13:46 last edited by
This is making the rounds on pilot sites
I wonder if it is real, maybe it is
https://ukaviation.news/qatar-airways-you-are-no-longer-required-heres-a-130000-bill/
@ukaviation said: >
Qatar Airways: You are no longer required, here’s a £130,000 bill
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wrote on 10 May 2020, 16:36 last edited by
That cannot be real. If it is, then, fuck them!
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wrote on 10 May 2020, 18:57 last edited by
Reading about current jobless claims makes me think about the bad economy overall.
And I hate to read about people losing their livelihood.
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wrote on 28 May 2020, 13:23 last edited by
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wrote on 28 May 2020, 13:26 last edited by
And in Q3 when tens of millions of people are "hired", Trump will claim it as the best economy EVAH
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wrote on 28 May 2020, 13:28 last edited by
The white collar job layoffs are coming and furloughs are turning into layoffs.
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wrote on 28 May 2020, 14:15 last edited by
https://www.bea.gov/sites/default/files/2020-05/gdp1q20_2nd.pdf
Real gross domestic product (GDP) decreased at an annual rate of 5.0 percent in the first quarter of 2020 (table 1), according to the "second" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In the fourth quarter, real GDP increased 2.1 percent.
The GDP estimate released today is based on more complete source data than were available for the "advance" estimate issued last month. In the advance estimate, the decrease in real GDP was 4.8 percent. With the second estimate, a downward revision to private inventory investment was partly offset by upward revisions to personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and nonresidential fixed investment (see "Updates to GDP" on page 2).