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#661 |
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
I live within my means. I have 1 credit card which I use to run my business and I pay it off monthly. I have a mortgage on some land east of town, I intend to build a house and retire there. I work from home so the amount of gas I consume is minimal by comparison with most people around me. I am currently saving 10% of my income. I keep some chickens to produce eggs, I grow a huge garden that easily makes all the veggies I can eat. I even sell several hundred dollars of seed from my garden each fall. My day job is as an engineer designing telephone offices so I am well paid.
How come I still feel broke? DarJones |
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#662 | |
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Nov 2003
22×5×373 Posts |
Quote:
what "feel broke" really means. |
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#663 |
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"William"
May 2003
New Haven
44768 Posts |
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#664 |
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Sep 2002
17·47 Posts |
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#665 |
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"William"
May 2003
New Haven
44768 Posts |
Wikipedia has it more succinctly than I could:
In the field of telecommunications, a telephone exchange or telephone switch is a system of electronic components that connects telephone calls. A central office is the physical building used to house inside plant equipment including telephone switches, which make telephone calls "work" in the sense of making connections and relaying the speech information. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telephone_exchange There's a lot of "inside plant" that needs power and connections to other inside plant, as well as outside connections to the outside for the individual phone lines and trunks to connect to the rest of the world. Also a big battery plant and a generator for emergency power. |
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#666 | ||
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Aug 2003
Snicker, AL
7×137 Posts |
That you even ask what a telephone office is speaks loudly of how effective they really are. When you want to communicate with someone, you pick up your telephone or cellphone and dial a number. You have no idea of the millions of dollars invested in copper and fiber cables, electronic equipment, batteries, generators, and even the buildings themselves. They have sunk so far into the background and do their job so effectively that you never even realize they are present. Consider that a telephone system must deliver 99.99999% reliability. Downtime is calculated in seconds per year.
Now contrast this with your DSL service. My DSL goes down an average of 4 times a day though it is usually no more than a couple of minutes until it comes back up. If a telephone office operated that poorly, it would be hauled to the junkyard and replaced. Of all the bugaboos that can happen, taking a major switching system down is one of the worst. 30 minutes of downtime gets you a chance to explain in triplicate to the FCC exactly why you did whatever you did. The worst I ever had was a 26 minute outage at 4:00 a.m. in the morning in a major tandem office. It was caused by someone disconnecting one pair of wires.... the wrong ones obviously. If you make a call on your phone or cellphone, it goes to a local switching station, then to a regional system, then to a long distance carrier, then perhaps to an international gateway before reversing course down to a carrier, regional, and then local system to terminate to whomever you called. I've been working in the communications industry for 27 years and have been an engineer for 11 years. I've written software that is deployed around the world, and I'm not even a software designer. I work from home using a DSL line and several telephones for communications. When I get up in the morning, I sit down on my couch or maybe lie back on my bed with a computer on a table, or I might even work at my desk if I feel like it. The good part is that I get paid very well for my ability and expertise. It takes 10 years to train a person to the level of skill required to do my job. DarJones - who knows that wblipp has a similar background Back on topic, the market is showing obvious signs that it does not know which way to go. up 1000 poiints, down 1000 points, go sideways a while, who knows where it goes tomorrow. Quote:
Quote:
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#667 |
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"Mark"
Feb 2003
Sydney
3·191 Posts |
It's interesting they're still called telephone offices. I think of offices as places where people do desk-based jobs. I assume telephone office is from when they had rooms full of people switching the calls. I've only heard their contemporary replacements called telephone exchanges. Obviously, I don't work in the industry. Thanks for the fascinating background, DarJones!
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#668 | |
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6809 > 6502
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Aug 2003
101Γ103 Posts
22·23·107 Posts |
Quote:
Last fiddled with by Uncwilly on 2008-10-18 at 01:16 Reason: KW PBX |
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#669 | |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
2×5,393 Posts |
Just got back from a week's vacation and read this:
Quote:
Paul |
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#670 |
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"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA
22·3·641 Posts |
See? Ernst really needs that vacation now!
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#671 |
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Bamboozled!
"πΊππ·π·π"
May 2003
Down not across
2A2216 Posts |
I've had some sleep since my posting and have since realised there is an interpretation under which Ernst's statement is correct.
If he was referring not to the process of reaching a deflationary state but a stable state reached after a period of deflation then, indeed, a negative feedback would act to maintain that stability. We'll see which Ernst meant after he returns. Paul |
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