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Posted by Ask a Manager

A reader writes:

I’m a long-time reader. I often see you advise writers to get advice from an attorney. You even once covered how to tell your current employer you are bringing in an attorney.

I’m seeking advice on an ADA matter, but I’ve run into a weird issue. It seems these days, most firms have a policy where they simply won’t talk to you about your current employer. I’ve actually been told by multiple firms to “call back when I get fired.” If there is a possibility I’m in the wrong, I’d very much rather know now, before it gets that far.

I suspect this is a result of firms using a contingency model where they only get paid if you win a lawsuit or settlement. That’s great if you already have a case to file (such as being wrongfully fired) but not great if you are still trying to avoid one and just need some advice.

I tried to find a firm that might let me pay a fee for an hour but have not been able to find any. Is there anything else I can do, or am I out of luck? Do employment lawyers just not do advice anymore?

I asked employment lawyer Jon Hyman of Wickens Herzer Panza, who writes the incredibly useful Ohio Employer Law Blog and is the author of The Employer Bill of Rights: A Manager’s Guide to Workplace Law, to weigh in on this. Here’s his very helpful answer:

Much of the plaintiff-side employment bar has moved to a contingency model. No termination, no clear damages, no case — at least not one they can monetize. So they screen aggressively. Pre-termination counseling? That’s harder to value, harder to win, and harder to scale.

But that doesn’t mean advice has disappeared. It just means your reader is looking in the wrong places.

First, not every employment lawyer works on contingency. Many — especially management-side lawyers — bill hourly and regularly advise on ADA compliance, accommodations, and interactive process issues. Yes, they typically represent employers. But plenty will consult with individuals on a paid basis. Your reader isn’t asking them to sue anyone, but for guidance.

Second, look beyond “employment litigation” firms. Search for “employment counseling,” “HR compliance,” or even “labor and employment boutique.” Those practices are built around advice, not lawsuits.

Third, consider bar association referral services. They often steer you to lawyers willing to do short, paid consults.

Lawyers still give advice. You just have to find the ones who get paid to prevent problems instead of profit from them.

The post employment lawyers won’t talk to me until I’ve already been fired — how do I find a legal consult now? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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Posted by John Gruber

Anthropic’s Frontier Red Team:

Earlier today we announced Claude Mythos Preview, a new general-purpose language model. This model performs strongly across the board, but it is strikingly capable at computer security tasks. In response, we have launched Project Glasswing, an effort to use Mythos Preview to help secure the world’s most critical software, and to prepare the industry for the practices we all will need to adopt to keep ahead of cyberattackers.

This blog post provides technical details for researchers and practitioners who want to understand exactly how we have been testing this model, and what we have found over the past month. We hope this will show why we view this as a watershed moment for security, and why we have chosen to begin a coordinated effort to reinforce the world’s cyber defenses.

Our new model is so good, it’s too dangerous to release to the public” is a message that sounds like it could be marketing hype. But it seems like it’s probably true. Examples cited by Anthropic include finding and exploiting a 27-year-old OpenBSD bug (that can crash any device running OpenBSD) and an 16-year-old bug in the widely used FFmpeg media processing library.

See also: Techmeme’s extensive roundup.

[syndicated profile] howtobeawerewolf_feed

New comic!

Vote over at TWC and you can see thumbnails!

Follow me on Blue Sky if you're so inclined!

I started uploading to Webtoon again! If you're in for a reread, feel free to follow me there! I'm trying to pump up my numbers so I can get ad revenue soon :D


I think the site issues have cleared up, so we're good! Go reread all 1000+ pages while the bandwidth is playing nice lol. Since I've been posting on Webtoon, I've been rereading early chapters while preparing the pages, and even I sometimes forget that Malaya has come really far in being a leader for her pack and getting past her anxiety. I think she thrives in being able to take care of people (within reason! don't be a people pleaser!), and having her pack gradually become more cohesive has given her space to figure out her role as a leader and grow more comfortable with her personal power (that's not just being a giant wolf person). 


If you're up to it, please follow/support me on Patreon if you'd like to see art that I'm working on ahead of time, because that is mostly what I'm doing with my time off anyway. You can also download the Volume 1 ebook and the Kickstarter digital artbook, plus see whatever I'm working on ahead of time.


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Tote bags, hoodies, tshirts, prints and mugs are all available in the Hivemill store! The hoodies are unisex sizing, but the tshirts run rather fitted, so I recommend sizing up! Book 1 is available in paperback and ebook format, as well as the merch from the Kickstarter :).

    

HTBAW Fandom Wiki is up and running! Thanks to Myk Streja and ShitaraRen for tons of help with moderation efforts and everyone else who's done a ton of work on adding information and filling out the Wiki. Thank you everyone for contributing and it's an amazing and super detailed resource!

Feel free to check out my goofy Amazon store if you're so inclined, or even if you don't need anything from my shop, just using this link will earn me a small commission from things you buy on Amazon regardless of what it is (this is an ad, as I get a tiny commission if you do buy something)! Thanks to everyone who's come out to support me through Ko-fi and Patreon!

Stunning Artemis II Phone Wallpapers

Apr. 8th, 2026 04:06 pm
[syndicated profile] kottke_org_feed

Posted by Jason Kottke

NASA has made available more than a dozen mobile wallpapers of photos taken during the Artemis II mission for free download. Basic Apple Guy has made some wallpapers of his own (that are slightly larger than NASA’s and better for iPhones). I have also made a few of my own: Earth Rising Over the Moon With the Orion Capsule in the Foreground, A Sliver of Earth Over the Moon, and Kubrickian Earth.

Here are a few of my favorites:

Interstitial tip: if you’re using an iPhone with iOS 26, tap the Spatial Scene button when you’re editing your wallpaper and the phone will turn any of these images into a 3D-ish scene that moves when you move your phone. Works best with images containing multiple objects (like the Earthrises). Makes you feel a little bit more like you’re there. (This is also an amazing setup.)

These are all real photos, cropped from the originals shared by NASA on Flickr and their website.

I also went back and looked at some of the images from the Artemis I mission, which sent an Orion capsule around the Moon without a human crew. Here are a few wallpapers made from photos from that mission: Earth Moon Capsule, Lens Flare Trio, and Lunar Surface.

Again, these three are from the Artemis I mission in late 2022. The first one works especially well with the Spatial Scene mode on iOS 26.

Tags: artemis · astronomy · Earth · iPhone · Moon · NASA · photography · science

[syndicated profile] smbc_comics_feed

Posted by Zach Weinersmith



Click here to go see the bonus panel!

Hovertext:
The survivors try to escape on a trolley but get derailed when they swerve toward five people.


Today's News:
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

Content warning for upsetting discussion of sexual abuse of children.

A reader writes:

I spent most of my 20s managing a business, eventually becoming more or less second-in-command. The owner was an older guy in his 60s. He was a bit of a grumpy guy and more conservative than me in many ways, but we overall got along very well. I found that he was generally a fair guy, and we bonded over a few shared interests. I wouldn’t call him a “friend,” but we had a good relationship.

He sold his business in 2020 (he was planning to retire that year anyway and the pandemic moved up the timeline a few months). He and I stayed in loose texting contact until I stopped hearing from him.

A few months ago, an old employee of mine reached out to me with some horrifying news: In 2023, our boss was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison for receipt of child pornography.

According to court filings, he had over 84,000 images of child sexual abuse material in his possession, which he amassed after trading images on Russian sites. Many of these images were violent and gruesome in ways that are too horrifying to recount, though he denies looking at the more horrific ones. He started amassing this collection not too long after he retired and moved in 2021. He was arrested later that year and eventually made a plea deal. He’ll be in prison until he’s in his 90s.

His defense team admitted that he has a “criminal interest” in boys between the ages of 11-14ish. This part horrified me, because many of our employees started out as high schoolers. Based on his testimony and my own experiences with him, I’m inclined to believe no human being who ever encountered him was ever in danger and he wasn’t even consciously aware of his attractions until he fell down this awful rabbit hole in his retirement. But I’ll never know, and I don’t know if he will either.

Even though he’s not accused of child abuse himself, the court did acknowledge that his interest in these images keeps the child sex abuse going, something even he agreed with during sentencing.

In the process of this, he got divorced, spent all his capital on a legal defense, lost all of his friends, and will very likely die in federal custody.

Despite the fact that he took part in a horrific trade, and that he had that criminal interest at all, I can’t help but feel sorry for him. It’s easy to see a story like this on the news, think “lock him up and throw away the key,” and move on. It’s harder when it’s someone you know. It’s all his own fault, but it’s sad knowing how he was saving up for retirement and built a business worth selling, only to lose everything. It’s sad knowing that his friends and most of his family have largely abandoned him. It’s sad knowing that if he’s lucky enough to survive prison, he’ll be in his 90s and flat broke.

With that, I come to my ask: should I reach out to him? I’m conflicted on this.

Part of me thinks he’d be embarrassed if I reached out, because only one of our coworkers was reached out to about this so I don’t think he knows I’d know. But part of me thinks about how a guy who did something horrible could probably use a little connection to the outside world, because he’s almost certainly lonely beyond belief. There’s also the fact that sexual interest in children is sometimes the result of abuse, which – and I don’t want to speculate more than this – means he might have been a victim himself.

I’m not asking for judgment on whether he’s a good or a bad person, because he undeniably did a bad thing. But people who do bad things, even horrific things, don’t necessarily deserve to lose all contact with humanity. I have no tolerance for people who produce those images, but I think that a lot of the people who trade and watch them are more sick than dangerous, if that makes any sense.

Should I let him live in ignorance of me knowing that I know, or should I reach out and try to form a human connection and alleviate some of that loneliness – without, obviously, excusing what he did?

This is not really a work question; this is a question about being a human around other humans, some of whom hurt others, and how we deal with people who have committed some of the worst harms against others.

I can’t tell you what you should do.

I am going to point out that there’s a lot of minimizing language in your letter about a man who found sexual gratification by watching children being abused, thousands of them, perhaps violently, and who actively helped to create a market for that abuse.

Is he still a human who could use a connection to the outside world? Yes. Might he have been a victim himself? Maybe. Did he repeatedly choose to do something that causes severe and lasting harm to kids? Yes.

There are people who feel called to work with people who have committed some of the worst crimes possible, to find their humanity and connect with it. Maybe you’re one of them.

But I would get really clear in your head about what’s motivating you and whether you could explain it to someone who’s been a victim of this type of abuse and still come away feeling confident in your stance. If you can, there’s your answer. And if you can’t, I think that’s an answer too.

The post should I contact my old boss, who’s in prison for a terrible crime? appeared first on Ask a Manager.

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Posted by IFTF Grants Administration committee

We are pleased to announce the recipients of the third round of IFTF microgrants, following the continued success of our 2024 and 2025 programs!

A big thank you to everyone who submitted a grant application late last year; we are thrilled to see continuing interest in the program and more interesting projects for the IF community! Our independent committee of Grant Advisors have carefully reviewed all applications, and have selected four projects that represent the expanding technical and cultural horizons of the medium. Without further ado, here are the grant recipients, class of 2026!

Flatgame making tool - Kate Bagenzo This project aims to simplify the creation of “flatgames”, a genre that has a decade of history, most often associated with allowing players to view and explore an author’s own drawings (often hand-drawn and scanned), collages, music, etc. Most of these games are either coded from scratch or using Unity templates, which doesn’t quite succeed in making game making as easy as possible, as originally intended. Kate will receive $650 to develop a streamlined toolset that lowers the barrier for artists and non-programmers to bring their visual stories into the interactive space.

Пригода: A Ukrainian-language text adventure engine - Andrii “Пригода” (Adventure) is a dedicated parser-based engine focused on the specific needs of the Ukrainian-language IF community. Andrii will receive $600 to support his efforts in developing this localized parser-based text adventure framework that provides useful features for authors in Ukrainian, from synonyms and aliases as in other text adventure engines, to more Ukrainian-specific needs such as streamlining recognition of different cases, prepositions, and forms of commands. This seeks to ensure that authors have the linguistic tools and engine support necessary to create text adventures in Ukrainian, which currently don’t exist!

Twine & the IF Community article - Tabitha O’Connell Twine fundamentally reshaped the landscape of interactive fiction over the last decade; however, there was a period around 2014 where the community debated the increased use of the tool and its impact on the IF scene and IFComp. The strong viewpoints and particular context made this a key moment in the IF community, and while participants can recount part of the story and the IntFiction threads are still up, there is little literature taking a closer look at this episode and contextualizing this event. Tabitha will receive $750 to fund her work in collecting appropriate sources and materials, before writing her deep-dive critical and historical article on the topic, an important chapter for the IF community of broad interest for the history of the medium.

New Standalone Engine Built with Godot for Making Splitscreen Co-Op Interactive Fiction - Abhik Hasnain, Adeline K. Piercy Although there have been a few experiments over the decades, IF usually tends to be single-player, and multiplayer experiences are rare and lack specific tooling to explore this further. Abhik and Adeline, two students at Edmonton’s University of Alberta, propose to build a standalone engine using the Godot framework specifically for co-operative storytelling, focusing on giving creators a powerful tool allowing them to explore building splitscreen, multi-player interactive fiction; they will receive $1,000 to fund their work. This could unlock entirely new possibilities of exploration and experimentation around this relatively new genre of co-op (local or remote) narrative play.

We love this year’s class of projects, as they explore 4 very different directions that touch on innovation, new frontiers, fostering creation, and community history. Looking forward to getting updates on them next year! And congratulations to the recipients!

We want to thank all applicants, as well as our Grant Advisors, who volunteered their time to select the projects for IFTF: thank you very much to Grim Baccaris, PB Berge, Rourke Bywater, Liza Daly, Chandler Groover, and Nathanaël Marion!

[syndicated profile] beyondthebundle_feed

Posted by Bundle Operator

Through Monday, April 27 we present the Runecairn Bundle featuring Runecairn, the one-on-one FRPG of Soulslike Viking fantasy from By Odin’s Beard, along with the weird-West gunslinging RPG We Deal in Lead. Based on Yochai Gal’s free Cairn rules, Runecairn and We Deal in Lead let a Warden (gamemaster) and one Adventurer explore fallen and crumbling worlds filled with threats, mysteries, and unspeakable horrors. With bearded axe or devastating magic, you’ll face overwhelming enemies. You’ll die, repeatedly. But death is not the end, and after each setback, you’ll know what to expect for your next try.

Using a streamlined, classless system in the spirit of the Old School Revival, Ruincairn really leans into its inspiration, the Dark Souls video games. Your hero dies and gets reborn at a bonfire! Monsters respawn! Other realms may invade! And where Runecairn takes inspiration from vivid and brutal Norse mythology, We Deal in Lead conjures the vibe of Stephen King’s Dark Tower novels, Sergio Leone spaghetti Westerns, and Joe Lansdale‘s gonzo yarns. Defend villages or caravans against bandits – hunt monstrous machines – broker peace between warring factions – and stumble upon lost slip doors to other worlds. Pick up your scattergun and stride into the wastelands.

Runecairn Wardensaga sets you in the ruins of a world after Ragnarok. In a long forgotten age, a raging war shattered and devastated the worlds of gods and men. The gods are dead, their relics of power missing, and the pathways among the Nine Realms have become perilous and rare. Magic, never wholly reliable, has grown even more dangerous. But as green life blooms amidst the ruins, hungry monsters and strange titans roam the Nine Realms. Fate carves the skein anew – but you are a loose thread, lost long ago in the wars, with no place in the tapestry. Seek the Bonfires, where shades and spirits gather, and carve your own path. Should you fall in battle, you may be reborn at one of these fires, though at the cost of your Vigour.

Runecairn focuses on two-person play (the Warden and the Adventurer), but include rules for solo or multiplayer games. The game brings the brutal Soulslike experience to the tabletop with mechanics for cooperation and summoning allies, invasions from other realms, and rebirth from death. There are no character classes; your abilities are defined by the arms and equipment you carry. Want to switch tactics? Change your weapon and take on a new role. But be ready to fall in single combat against draugr Colossi, bone demons, Hamingja spirits, headless Jotunn, Muspelhounds, Niflmares, white worms, many-mouthed howlers, the Sea Reek, and the occasional moose.

This offer’s second game rides into another wasteland, a dark fantasy Drifted World where Gunslingers, bonded to their weapons, wage a retreating battle against chaos and madness. We Deal in Lead focuses more on group play. You and your fellow Gunslingers belong to an Order, the last remnant of a society that once provided stability, protection, and justice. Your liminal realm connects to many other worlds through slip doors. Foes, friends, strange artifacts, and more pass into The Drifted World. Fragments of lost technology and magic, both wild and unpredictable, still blight this fallen world. But magic, rituals, and even beast companions make Gunslingers more than simply shootists. You protect surviving settlements from the Red Right Hand, the Eater Outside, and other hazards that bubble up from the spaces between.

This all-new Runecairn Bundle presents the complete Runecairn line of one-on-one post-Ragnarok Norse fantasy saga-making in the Nine Realms, along with the We Deal in Lead game of the last Gunslingers in the Drifted World. Pay just US$9.95 to get all five titles in our Runecairn Collection (retail value $52) as DRM-free .PDF ebooks, including the complete Runecairn Wardensaga core rulebook, the monster supplement Runecairn Bestiary, the collection of one-page dungeons Into the Nine Realms, and the weird-West gunslinging RPG We Deal in Lead. Publisher By Odin’s Beard has also included the quickstart primer for their new game of serial killer investigation, Midnight of the Century.

Get this Runecairn offer before the final campfire of the frozen wastes dwindles and fades Monday, April 27.

https://bundleofholding.com/presents/Runecairn

We

Apr. 8th, 2026 07:30 am
[syndicated profile] aworkinglibrary_feed

Posted by Mandy Brown

We by Yevgeny Zamyatin (Ecco, 1920)

In a glass-walled city ruled by the totalitarian One State, citizens have no privacy, no identity, no freedom, and no names: they each bear only a number. As they prepare to launch their first spaceship, The Integral, citizens are implored to write poems, treatises, and manifestos glorifying the One State and honoring this extraordinary time. D-503, the builder of The Integral, is not a writer, but he gamely takes up the challenge and discovers something quite shocking: he has a soul, a spirit, desires which exceed the container that the One State has set out for him, that make him long for something new. In the discovery of his own power of imagination is the greatest threat the One State will ever face—and his one chance for freedom.


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Dale Yu: Review of Venice Conspiracy

Apr. 8th, 2026 08:22 am
[syndicated profile] opinionatedgamers_feed

Posted by Dale Yu

    EXIT: Venice Conspiracy Designers: Inka and Markus Brand Publisher: Kosmos Players: 1-4 Age: 12+ Time: 1-2 hours Amazon affiliate link: https://amzn.to/4809sft The EXIT series was one of the original puzzle-game franchises to hit the market when the escape … Continue reading
[syndicated profile] askamanager_feed

Posted by Ask a Manager

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. My boss blames my employee for getting stuck in the Middle East during the war

My employee used six weeks of vacation to go back to his home country with his pregnant wife and toddler. It was the first time he’d be with his parents and siblings all together in over a decade. He was due to fly back three days after the war with Iran started, and as his flight went through that region, his flight was cancelled. He was rebooked two weeks later but tried daily to get a different flight and showed up to the airport, he and his family fully packed, because flights going out that day weren’t officially cancelled until around noon each day. After a hellish 55-hour journey, he and his family are safely back and he’s back to work. That period between his normally scheduled flight and when he got back exhausted the small remaining amount of vacation hours he had.

But hark! HR told me we have a policy to allow for up to 10 days of admin leave in the event of a disaster, and said this qualifies. Wonderful! I asked if the policy is that the 10 days can be used first or if it can be used only after vacation time has been exhausted, which is a frequent stipulation in some of our other leave policies.

My boss responded that she thinks because “we all knew” war was imminent and he didn’t try to leave earlier, he should get to use only five days and not the full 10. If the employee was in Iran when the war broke out, she’d give him the full 10. But she wants to hear what efforts he made ahead to get out quicker.

She consistently lets her feelings about people’s work cloud her judgment to be a good human when it’s not only the most righteous, but also easiest, choice to make. But hey, at least she put this BS in an email so I can share it back with HR. How should I respond?

“We all knew” war was imminent? Some of Congress didn’t even know war was imminent. Your boss is an ass.

Your employee and his family went through a scary and exhausting ordeal. Your company has a policy set up specifically for disasters. This was a disaster. He should be given the full amount of time HR said was available.

Share your boss’s response with HR and say that you’d like your employee to receive the full 10 days, and that you’re dismayed by the suggestion to penalize him on the grounds that he “should have known.” You might also point out that your boss’s suggestion could be taken as national origin discrimination, which is illegal.

2. I’m about to get promoted but I want to quit

I am mid-20s working at a small office with less than a dozen people while I finish my degree. My boss has told me I will be promoted once funding is approved, and because of that I have been asked to take on more leadership tasks. I have three coworkers who were both hired less than six months ago who both think that, if promotions were to come, they should get them (this is their first job). I have another coworker who is technically an external contractor who works closely with the three new people. Because of her role/contract, she is essentially unfireable for the next two years. She often acts as if she is in charge, something management has told me she has been asked not to do.

A week ago, I had a startling conversation with her and my three other coworkers. She has a habit of staying in conference rooms during meetings she is not a part of, and during this meeting she said that she was the de facto manager of the office, told the other coworkers to disregard what I was asking them to do as it was “not their work” (it is), and asked why I am still working here and said I should have left by now. The other three seemed to feel that the work being discussed was beneath them and heavily implied that they saw me as an obstacle to promotion.

It was clear to me I cannot stay at this job. The power struggle being played into long predates my coworkers, and now that they are friends with this new person and feel half of their workload is irrelevant, I feel strongly that there is no way I can continue my work without being resented or undermined.

My problem is this. I have been working closely with my supervisors to prep me for this promotion. They will feel blindsided if I just quit, and I struggle to imagine how I could pretend everything is fine for the next two months. But if I tell my supervisor what happened, I assume they would try to address things, which I just don’t want. I don’t want to hurt my reputation by covering for them (especially as a recommendation from my supervisor will be important in future career/education steps) but I also don’t want to make the last few weeks of the job miserable. What should I say to my boss and how should I approach the next eight weeks?

Wait, wait! Deciding to leave feels premature — why not first talk to your manager about what got said in that meeting and share your concerns about what this means for your ability to be effective in your work there? If they’ve told this contractor in the past to stay in her lane, it’s very likely that they’ll be upset to hear she’s doing this again. If your manager is even a little bit decent at her job, there’s a strong chance she’ll want to intervene with both the contractor and the other three coworkers.

If you’re just done with this job and ready to get out regardless, that’s of course your prerogative! But otherwise there’s value in talking to your manager about this conversation before you decide anything.

If you do decide you’re going to leave … well, job searching usually takes some time and there’s a decent chance you could still be there two months from now. But at whatever point you do leave, if they’re blindsided by that when they told you to expect a promotion, that’s not necessarily reasonable on their side. It doesn’t sound like they’ve given you a specific timeline and “you’ll be promoted once funding is approved” can mean anything from “you’ll be promoted in three weeks” to “we hope you’ll be promoted sometime next year” to “there are no solid plans at all and I can’t give you any sort of timeline, but it’s something we’d like to do.” It’s not reasonable to assume someone will pass up other opportunities on that sort of thin promise.

But even if they have a solid timeline in place that you find credible, you’re still allowed to leave! You’d frame it as, “I really appreciate you going to bat to get me a promotion, but another opportunity fell in my lap and was too good to pass up.” Or, “I really appreciate you going to bat to get me a promotion, but I’ve realized staying doesn’t make sense for me because of X / a different role is more aligned with what I want to do / etc.”

3. New employee doesn’t want to work the hours we hired them for

We hired an employee for a specific time slot — evenings and Saturdays. Because of clients’ needs, we were able to move the original schedule earlier (11am-7pm instead of 5pm to midnight). The employee appreciated this. The employee then negotiated for Thursdays off because of regularly being scheduled for Saturdays. Then they asked that the Saturday work be remote, so we offered a trial of on-call that would require them to come in only if necessary. Now the employee is asking that Saturdays be rotational.

I would be sad to lose this employee, but I’m guessing we need to start searching again? The evening and weekend hours of this role were communicated up-front, and I find it frustrating that the employee is regularly coming back to try to renegotiate.

Yes, you’re probably going to need to start searching again, but first just be straightforward with the employee and ask for them to be straightforward in return: “We hired for this role specifically because we need someone to work Saturdays, and that’s not something we can change. Knowing that the job does require working Saturdays and it can’t be rotational, does the position still make sense for you?”

4. Explaining why I’m quitting the federal government

I thought I could stick out this administration, but my job has become a nightmare. After losing roughly half our group, the demands have only grown, particularly with quick deadlines. This, apparently, is in exchange for forcing us to commute every day, imposing a cap on the number of employees exceeding expectations, and changing the primary criteria to remove or demote employees due to performance evaluations.

Is there any exception to not disclosing reasons for quitting and the prohibition on speaking ill of a former employer when that employer explicitly is trying to put its employees in trauma and dread going to work every day? Is it too much to say it’s no longer a good fit, or the costs now are too great?

You can just say, “With everything going on in government work right now, I’m interested in moving to something more stable, and I’m particularly interested in this job because ____.”

You’re falling into the very common trap of thinking you need to give an accurate or comprehensive answer to this question; you don’t, and it’s often not in your best interests to, even when you’re 100% in the right (and even when the employer would know you were likely in the right; you want their focus on why you’d be great for the job they’re hiring for, not whatever bananas drama is happening at your old job).

More here:

how should I explain why I’m leaving my job when the answer is horrible/messy/shocking?

5. My manager is changing my timesheets

I am a non-exempt employee who works in healthcare for a large company that provides a specific contracted service. My hours are unpredictable and vary day by day, week by week. Sometimes I work overtime, although usually I average about 30 hours/week. I punch in/out using an electronic payroll app on a company-provided device. We’ve recently gone through a period with an unusually high patient census and are also understaffed, so more hours and overtime for me.

During this time, I noticed that my paychecks did not seem to accurately reflect the hours that I worked, so I started keeping my own record and then compared it to my punch times on the payroll system. I found that my manager has been editing my timesheets. I believe she is trying to meet (in my opinion, unreasonable) company metrics, but it is extremely disheartening to be working these ridiculous hours to find out that I’m not being compensated for them. In the app, you can see that the time was edited and who did the editing (my manager’s name).

My partner is a manager for a well-known company, and he has a good relationship with his HR and asked for their advice. HR informed him that adjusting employee timesheets is illegal and a firing offense, and it puts the company at risk.

My partner wants me to report this. One of the reasons I never went into management is because of the politics and pressure involved, but I do love my job and my patients, and at this stage in my career I do not want to face retaliation or the inability to find another position in my field. Then again, I’m feeling anger and frustration at stepping up and working unreasonably long hours when no one else was available, without compensation for all the time that I worked. I’ve always had a good relationship with my manager so there’s the feeling of betrayal as well. My manager has also been in her position for many years, in a role that is notorious for high turnover, so I’m unsure whether the company would even be supportive if I reported. I’ve been thinking about contacting an employment lawyer to help me navigate this situation, especially in the event of retaliation. Honestly, I’d just like to be paid for my time and continue doing the job I love. Since I brought the discrepancies to my manager’s attention, my timesheets have not been touched. But I do wonder if this is happening to others on my team and within my company, and that is weighing on my conscience as well.

You absolutely need to report this to your company. It’s illegal, it’s a liability for them, and you are legally owed that money. It doesn’t matter what your manager’s reasons were for doing it; it’s flatly against the law, and you are being stolen from.

If you’re concerned about retaliation, you don’t need to mention that your manager is the one who did this when you report it. Just say that your paychecks aren’t matching up to the hours you’ve logged and ask that it be investigated and fixed. You don’t need a lawyer to do this; it’s worth involving one if you do start seeing retaliation, but most likely you’ll report it and your company will fix it since the law is black and white on this. If they don’t, then bring in the lawyer.

The post boss blames my employee for getting stuck in the Middle East during the war, I’m about to get promoted but I want to quit, and more appeared first on Ask a Manager.

[syndicated profile] jwz_org_feed

Posted by jwz

Andrew Paul:

But -- and just hear me out here -- the American voters did resummon Nyarlathotep because enough of us remain enthralled by his unfettered madness, wanton cruelty, and nonsensical brinkmanship. This is classic Negotiating 101 courtesy of the Faceless God himself! Sure, he may have kicked it up a notch from "sheer madness" to "abject depravity," but that's for the pundits to debate.

That said, yes, it seems like the promise to "fill every womb with salt and every testicle with spiders" is sort of backfiring. People don't respond well to that type of unprompted threat, and his immovable, hulking form appears to have finally met an immovable object. It's a little ironic that the "immovable object" in this metaphor is reality itself, but I'll take the poetic flourishes where I can these days. You can never have too much light in these dark times.

Previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously, previously.

[syndicated profile] daringfireball_feed

Posted by John Gruber

Kottke:

This shot from Artemis II of the Moon eclipsing the Sun is one of the most breathtaking astronomical photos I’ve ever seen. Holy shit.

Follow NASA on Flickr for more.

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"Jazz Fish, a saxophone playing wanderer, finds himself in Mamboland at a critical phase in his life." --Howie Green, on his book Jazz Fish Zen

Yeah. That sounds about right.

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