Just because it is in your contract doesn't make it legal!
Realistically it could be worth checking your local laws regarding it and potentially speaking to a lawyer as some will do a free consult to see if you have a case
Just because it is in your contract doesn't make it legal!
Realistically it could be worth checking your local laws regarding it and potentially speaking to a lawyer as some will do a free consult to see if you have a case
To start with I'll answer your specific questions
Would working in helpdesk allow a better or worse WLB? This is very company dependent. In general though developers are usually able to clock out more often at the end of the day. If you go SysAdmin/DevOps/SRE when things break in the night it is you who gets the call. Again this varies wildly between companies, I'm in a DevOps/SRE role and have had that at 3 different places, one there was zero after hours calls, one was multiple times a week, and one was once or twice every quarter. So keep that in mind.
Would it be more likely to be unionized and thus a better place from which to participate in tech labour struggle?
Tech really isn't unionized much. Helpdesk while often the seemingly most likely to unionize has the issue of people move up and out quickly and tech workers in general can move to new companies if they don't like something and that is often easier than unionizing. To also echo @Kamaradski9000@lemmygrad.ml the leftists on the more infra side are few and far between. It draws a lot of loners and reactionary people, the musk fanboy types.
Is it easier to break into than software, like, so much easier that it would be worth changing course, or just doing IT as a stepping stone for my first co-op (internship program in Canada) or two? It is easier in the sense that helpdesk is a grind(they call it helldesk for a reason) and places are always hiring. Pay will be terrible and you'll be grinding some boring work unless you put in extra hours to move up and show you know stuff, or at least that is the general path. Lucking out into a SysAdmin role or a role doing interesting work is about the same difficulty as breaking into a software development role. There are usually less positions on the infra side, but also less people doing it.
As for my advice, you are still in school so keep learning. Use this time to try some new things to figure out what you'd enjoy more. Both roles are in demand and can have comfortable salaries. If you are thinking about linux and sysadmin work try standing up a small web server on one of the cheap cloud providers and see what it is like, then automate it. Once you've done that maybe play with some docker containers. As for an internship I'd suggest sticking with software development as it is more in line with your degree for the time being, if you are doing multiple internships(like one each year) then maybe consider looking for a more infra focused one if you don't enjoy the development side
Yes, the brand Tupperware is an mlm and sold directly by sales people. Back in the 50s and 60s Tupperware parties were a thing.
The confusion is likely the whole q-tip/Kleenex thing. We call it all Tupperware but really it is not Tupperware brand most of the time
I don't see anything wrong with this list. I've read the majority of works listed here and would say if you read all of these you'll be quite well read, but don't stop once you are done here.
Personally I've never liked classifying things as beginner, intermediate, or advanced and just read what I feel like at the time.
Sometimes it is also easier to read a few works in a row by the same author. For example you have Lenin spread in different levels but it might be easier to read those one after another since these authors do all have a bit of stylistic differences and when they are mentioning other people you won't have to look up the person repeatedly if they are fresh in your mind from their other works
Sounds like a great way to spend the day despite your original plans not working out.
Keeping it in mind and posting here is doing something even if not a traditional celebration!
Some professions need someone working every day and if you aren't in one of those hopefully soon your employer will see the error of their ways
Well, keep the spirit in mind and I suppose celebrate on labor day in the US assuming you get off.
I do always find it interesting that the US is so against lining up the date with the rest of the world.
Nothing wrong with school, learning is always a good endeavor!
My suggestions would be:
Can just use beans and no meat. Intensity of flavor is up to your taste I usually go with rather spicy but it can be mild too. Can take a bit of time but if you make one large pot it can last days and just needs to be reheated
Relatively easy to make and is rather flavorful. Again here spice level is up to you
Both of these go well with bread, rice, or potatoes
These are meal replacement shakes, since you are in Germany the brand JimmyJoy would be the local(Dutch) equivalent.
They are quick and nutritious when you need something but a bit pricy per calorieanyd would likely fail your taste and consistency requirements
I don't know the entirety of your stack and constraints but I run my own matrix instance with this https://github.com/spantaleev/matrix-docker-ansible-deploy
I run it on a separate VM from anything else so that might be easier than what you are currently doing.
I'm more of on nginx user but happy to take a look at your Apache config if need be
K-9 is a great app but doesn't provide email service itself
Well both have free options as well, but they have a bit lower limits in that case and a few less features. So I guess maybe sign up on both for a free account and see which you like more?
What feature set are you looking for and are you wanting something free or open to paid?
I use both Mailfence and Protonmail different experiences with each but no real complaints. For Mailfence I pay them since I have a domain and I am still degoogling so forward my gmail to an alias there
For translation I would recommend Pleco as you can have the person you are communicating with draw the characters and then translate that. It isn't perfect but I used it heavily when I lived there
People's Daily is my go to for Chinese news but there are others as well like CGTN and Xinhua
I'll reply to both of you here. Luxembourg isn't quite a microstate by most definitions but is indeed small.
On the public transit, the free is very nice, the mediocre service is less nice. Other less nice things is that they are focusing on building more roads and less on better public transit networks(tram extension is nice though), so I rank it as moderately good in that sense when compared to other countries and their public transit networks and mobility plans.
As for why it isn't going full renewable there are a few reasons and could probably go into much more depth but only 1/4 of workers in Luxembourg have nationality there, the others are a mix of cross border workers(France, Belgium, and Germany), EU citizens who moved there, and 3rd country nationals. Only citizens of Luxembourg can vote for the government(EU citizens can vote for EU parliament and all can vote for municipal elections) and they tend to be a bit more conservative. Additionally land is super expensive so that is a barrier to renewables. What I will say though is there is an increase in it with a goal to hit 35% renewable by 2030 and there are quite a few wind turbines but, I would doubt it will get hit with the CSV being the primary party in government at the moment.