masseyrider
Veteran Member
I have nothing to do with his estate and I've been asking the same question.Estate Executor Going Through Fuddy's Stuff: What was WRONG with this guy?
I have nothing to do with his estate and I've been asking the same question.Estate Executor Going Through Fuddy's Stuff: What was WRONG with this guy?
Hah! I remember when the doctor, Ol' Doc Young, came to the house with his little black bag to treat you.Remember being able to see your doctor TODAY? What happened to that?
"Doc, I may have a melanoma on my arm. I need it looked at fast."
"Good day sir and I hope you are having a nice day there in America. We are having wonderful weather here in Mumbai. The doctor will be able to see you in three months if you will be so kind as to repeat the information our system already has."
Programmers, or maybe they're called coders today, should be required to use their improved software 10 times every day for a month before it goes live, and then if it does, they have to man the customer support lines for another six months to take calls from pissed off users.Software companies who think they need to change up the GUI on their software every 6 months. Then they have an AI generated questionnaire that asks how you like the new look. Like a human will ever read your 12 paragraph response. If you have had the same GUI layout for 3 decades, don't change the whole damn thing because you as a programmer are a Millennial or a Zoomer and you get bored with yourself constantly. Many of us like everything being in the same place and looking like it has for the past 2 or 3 decades. It makes us "efficient". Tell me I am wrong.....
"they have to man the customer support lines for another six months to take calls from pissed off users."Programmers, or maybe they're called coders today, should be required to use their improved software 10 times every day for a month before it goes live, and then if it does, they have to man the customer support lines for another six months to take calls from pissed off users.
My brother Tom was sick back around 1963 and the doctor was there frequently before finally sending him to the hospital. One time he "lanced a boil" and I remember being told that Thomas had a bug. I must have seen the blood or something because for years I envisioned a big red bug that the Dr speared.Hah! I remember when the doctor, Ol' Doc Young, came to the house with his little black bag to treat you.
I hope my or anyone else's foundation or garage slabs weren't poured with "cement" lol. To me anyway it's like calling a water heater a "hot water heater".People who are talking about concrete yet use the word cement.
Not to mention, the trend over the last 10 years to make everything "softer", to where I can no longer distinguish the active window among my dozen open programs, from the several inactive.Software companies who think they need to change up the GUI on their software every 6 months. Then they have an AI generated questionnaire that asks how you like the new look. Like a human will ever read your 12 paragraph response. If you have had the same GUI layout for 3 decades, don't change the whole damn thing because you as a programmer are a Millennial or a Zoomer and you get bored with yourself constantly. Many of us like everything being in the same place and looking like it has for the past 2 or 3 decades. It makes us "efficient". Tell me I am wrong.....
Of course they existed. But the practice of making them the primary front-line of patient interaction was increased orders of magnitude by the financial constraints ushered in by the ACA. Talking with several physicians about this, it's not that your doctor doesn't want to see you personally (in fact, they do!), it's that they no longer can afford to see every patient themselves.Nurse Practitioners (NP) and Physicians Assistant (PA) started a long time ago.
My little town had a PA in the late 60's and a NP about a decade later.