T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2019.1 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:47 | 6 |
|
Why do you ask?
(I own one, but I'd have to get it altered to tone down the
bell bottoms and wide lapels.)
|
2019.2 | Filenes Basement sells cheap suits! | ESOA11::BRAMHALL | | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:49 | 2 |
| It might do you good to go buy a suit throw it on and visit a customer
someday. You might learn something.
|
2019.3 | no way ... | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:55 | 5 |
| I think the only engineers who will be required to wear a suit will be
those who get laid off and have to go on job interviews.
... Bob
|
2019.4 | Janitors, too! | WMOIS::STYVES_A | | Fri Jul 24 1992 16:04 | 2 |
| I have a feeling that under the NEW AND IMPROVED DIGITAL janitors will
be required to wear suits.
|
2019.5 | | ECAD2::SHERMAN | ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 | Fri Jul 24 1992 16:15 | 3 |
| ... but, I'll still log in from home while in my underwear.
Steve
|
2019.6 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Fri Jul 24 1992 16:22 | 3 |
|
Gosh, Steve... you put on underwear when you log in from home??
|
2019.7 | 2 weeks active duty for engineers | KOLFAX::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Fri Jul 24 1992 17:01 | 13 |
| < It might do you good to go buy a suit throw it on and visit a customer
< someday. You might learn something.
This should be a requirement for ALL engineers, and engineering managers.
It establishes valuable "perspective". I believe 2 weeks "active duty" EACH
year would benefit the company as a whole. I've lived on both sides of this
fence. Generally (I know there are exceptions), those working in the engineering
centers have no idea what those in the field really have to do to sell or
support our products out here.
Al
|
2019.8 | | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Fri Jul 24 1992 17:31 | 22 |
| RE .7
>> -< 2 weeks active duty for engineers >-
I don't know if I'd want it to be a requirement, but I think it would
greatly benefit the company ... and for more than just engineers too.
I'm a technical writer, and I just recently spent about a week and a
half dealing directly with the customer for the project I'm working on.
I had to dress up too ... ;^) ... but it was worth it. That direct
interaction with the real user of my product (manuals) was one of the
best learning experiences I've had since coming to Digital, not to
mention that my productivity really went into high gear as a result
of having a clearer understanding of how the product we're developing
for them is going to be used in real life.
It's an eye-opening experience, and I think a large percentage of
Digital employees could benefit by a little more direct customer
contact.
... Bob
|
2019.9 | Can't tell the differance | ELWOOD::OBRIEN | | Fri Jul 24 1992 17:39 | 4 |
|
If we all wear suits, how will we be abl to tell the differance
between Engineering and Marketing????
|
2019.10 | | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Jul 24 1992 17:46 | 11 |
| re: .7, Al
>< It might do you good to go buy a suit throw it on and visit a customer
>< someday. You might learn something.
>
> This should be a requirement for ALL engineers, and engineering managers.
I'll buy into it as soon as the product managers can prove that they've done
it first.
-Jack
|
2019.11 | | POBOX::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Fri Jul 24 1992 18:01 | 6 |
| >> If we all wear suits, how will we be abl to tell the differance
>> between Engineering and Marketing????
Pocket Protectors.
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
2019.12 | To plagiarize a joke... | ALOSWS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Fri Jul 24 1992 18:08 | 9 |
| <<< Note 2019.11 by POBOX::RILEY "I *am* the D.J." >>>
>> If we all wear suits, how will we be abl to tell the differance
>> between Engineering and Marketing????
Marketing has adult supervision?
Al
|
2019.13 | It's a Quality catechism, too -- too bad | MLTVAX::SCONCE | Bill Sconce | Fri Jul 24 1992 19:07 | 17 |
| >< It might do you good to go buy a suit throw it on and visit a customer
>< someday. You might learn something.
>
> This should be a requirement for ALL engineers, and engineering managers.
Agreed.
Customer contact is the one thing I most miss at Digital. I'd be delighted
to spend two weeks' "active duty" in the field. I think many other engineers
feel the same.
(Yeah, I'll even put on a tie. The coat will cover the pocket protector. :)
In fact, I have proposed the active-duty idea, and more than once. But no
manager is measured on how well his engineers understand customers. So lack
of vision and support from the top (i.e., funding) is the problem, not ties.
|
2019.14 | There are different types of suits | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Fri Jul 24 1992 19:34 | 8 |
2019.15 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Fri Jul 24 1992 20:01 | 7 |
|
Ohmygod, it just dawned on me that suits mean ties. That will spell
disaster!!!
Engineers know that ties cut off the circulation to your brain, and then
you start thinking like a manager...
|
2019.16 | check out the shoes! | MAZE::FUSCI | DEC has it (on backorder) NOW! | Fri Jul 24 1992 20:03 | 8 |
| re: .9
> If we all wear suits, how will we be abl to tell the differance
> between Engineering and Marketing????
Hard-core Marketing types always wear wing-tips.
Ray
|
2019.17 | | MLTVAX::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Fri Jul 24 1992 21:33 | 5 |
| re: marketeers
As always, by their silver tongues ye shall know them.
:^)
-Jack
|
2019.18 | | XAPPL::DOULOS::Hobday | Ken Hobday | Fri Jul 24 1992 22:00 | 1 |
| Personally I read my mail while I'm air drying from a shower :-)
|
2019.19 | clothing allowance | ZPOVC::GGLOH | when the going gets tough... | Fri Jul 24 1992 23:14 | 5 |
| If there are clothing allowances given to those who need to wear suits,
why not?
My previous employer in U.K. did just that to get all of us to keep our
jeans at home and started to wear suits.
|
2019.20 | *some* of us would prefer ties | VIKING::TATISTCHEFF | well, lah-di-dah | Sat Jul 25 1992 03:02 | 4 |
| no suits don't mean ties - they mean scraping your legs and encasing
them in nylon.
lt ;-)
|
2019.21 | | BLUMON::QUODLING | OLIVER is the Solution! | Sat Jul 25 1992 18:40 | 8 |
| Back when I was in Field Servitude, in a very tropical area, I had a
"new" boss, who insisted on ties. So I found a white tie (about 4"
wide) and carefully wrapped it around the drum on the LP02 (That's a
drum printer for you young pups...). I let it dry, and wore it to the
next meeting with my boss. He took the point.
q
|
2019.22 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | Proud Parent of a fat git | Sun Jul 26 1992 12:22 | 4 |
| a bigger question is will engineers now be required to produce.
and if you do get them dressed up can you take them anywhere and let
them talk?
|
2019.23 | | GRANMA::MWANNEMACHER | Let's get to it | Sun Jul 26 1992 18:52 | 14 |
|
Lynne, you ain't (haven't) hadta (had to) wea (wear) a noose (tie) much
den (much then) ;'). () for the humor impaired.
I've been thinking about Digital dress and all recently. How about
some kind of uniforms? For techies and stuff, a pair of dress blues
and a golf type shirt with the "digital" logo on it. For sales and
other office personel, a pair of dress slacks and a button down shirt
with the "digital" logo on it. It may sound strange, but I think it
may be something.
Mike
|
2019.24 | From an "engineer" in the field... | MERIDN::BUCKLEY | ski fast,take chances,die young | Mon Jul 27 1992 00:24 | 35 |
| Having moved from "internal" to the field during the COD process, I can give
some insights. I have always worked hard but in the field (as a Software
specialist doing VMS support and Performance Tuning for Customers) you never
seem to get a break like you did when an internal project was "finished". There
is always another customer around the corner. It is not unusual to get a
voicemail giving directions to a customer site where you HAVE to be the next day
to work on a product that you've never seen before... So you leave the current
customer at 5pm, drive back to the office, download the software (I got my CD
last week, so no more net copies!!!) and try it out so you don't look like a
fool the next day. I really appreciate the CSC centers and they can be
lifesavers when it turns out that the documentation never showed up...
As for engineers (or product managers) coming to the field for two weeks each
year... I would agree ONLY if they have a SPECIFIC project to work on. Our
customers have a business to run and do NOT exist to give our people field
experience. We had a major problem at a 9000 site because of the 20+ Digital
people that came through the customer site and annoyed the staff (often with
the same questions that had been asked a week before) as if the customer had
nothing better to do then answer our questions. ONE way that I would give my
wholehearted support to an engineer in the field program, would be with
customers that have a problem with a product. We should get the engineer there
as soon as possible instead of wasting time pointing fingers as to where the
problem is. We had a problem with vt330's in multisession mode connected to
decserver 300's at a site that had bought 400 vt330's and 30 decservers.
It took over a month to get enginnering involved because each group said it was
the other groups problem, if we could get the two groups together at the start
and SOLVE the problem, we could avoid some serious customer satisfaction
problems.
I am not saying that this would be easy (every salesman in the world would
want the chief ALPHA engineer at THIER site the day after the first ALPHA
workstation crash), but we must always remember that computers SUPPORT the
customers business and the customer only notices the computer when it doesn't
work.
Dan Buckley, CT eis
|
2019.25 | Ties that bind...the neck. | DENVER::DAVISGB | Steempy, pick up your tongue! | Mon Jul 27 1992 11:41 | 22 |
|
Speaking of those who disdain wearing ties....
I remember a few years ago a 'marketing-type' as you all call them,
from Spitbrook, who would show up at DECworld wearing what looked like
a scarf, wrapped loosely about his neck (A Cravat, I think they're
called, but the dictionary definition is 'necktie').
Anyway, this guy always looked totally out of place among all the
regular 'ties', (half of which were properly knotted in a
full-windsor...fyi...even Peter Jennings doesn't know how to tie a tie
properly)
He seemed to always be the last holdout in the 'won't catch me dead in
a tie' crowd. Always looked like he was about to don a smoking jacket,
sit in a cushy chair, and introduce a late movie on Public TV.
Look at it this way, neckties may cut off the circulation, prompting
excessive leanings toward management, but at least you can hang
yourself with it when they throw you in a jail cell. (Just buy the
real thick ones).
|
2019.26 | Mebbe Bruce will sing this one too | CSOADM::ROTH | Legal aid from Dewey,Cheetham&Howe | Mon Jul 27 1992 11:57 | 5 |
| A new tune on the DEC hit parade?
57 suits and nothin' to wear
|
2019.27 | ? | XNOGOV::LISA | Give quiche a chance | Mon Jul 27 1992 12:50 | 4 |
| What are pocket protectors?
Lisa.
|
2019.28 | You hadta ask | 16BITS::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dog face) | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:25 | 11 |
| > What are pocket protectors?
Flat plastic "pouch" which fits in a shirt breast pocket with a plastic flap
which hangs over the front edge of the pocket. When you place a pen in the
pocket protector, rather than the pocket, the clip on the pen grabs the
flap/pouch rather than the pocket, and ink/pencil-lead, etc. don't have
as much of an opportunity to stain your shirt pocket from inside the pouch.
(Not many engineers really use them. We prefer to hang our pens from our ears.)
-Jack
|
2019.29 | | CSOADM::ROTH | Legal aid from Dewey,Cheetham&Howe | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:33 | 20 |
| <<< Note 2019.27 by XNOGOV::LISA "Give quiche a chance" >>>
> What are pocket protectors?
>
> Lisa.
A plastic 'pocket' of its own in which you can place pens, pencils,
sliderules(*), etc. and then place in your shirt pocket. The stuff all
clips to your pocket protector instead of your shirt. Sometimes the
pocket protector's flap that hangs over your pocket has some kind of
inscription or logo on it. I once had one with a Digital logo on it...
dunno where it is now.
Purportedly, use of a 'pocket protector' gives you immediate nerd status.
Lee
(*) Before the advent of electronic calculators there were sliderules. A
miniature one would fin in the pocket protector giving you elite-nerd
status (nerdus eliteus)?
|
2019.30 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:38 | 6 |
| One feature of pocket protectors is that they are properly
obtained free of charge, from someone trying to sell something.
As a result of this, another feature is that they are decorated
wit advertising slogans/logos etc, of the company which provided them.
Tom_K
|
2019.31 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:40 | 8 |
| Real engineers, in 1992, use palmtops. (Pen, what's a pen?) :-)
Gary
PS, before you ask, a palmtop is a computer about the size and shape of
a long wallet or oversized checkbook. Some are full-fledged PC's,
running MS-DOS; others are preprogrammed, with useful features, and
extensible with preprogrammed cards.
|
2019.32 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Mon Jul 27 1992 13:46 | 15 |
| re: .24
More seriously, how do you propose that engineers learn about customer
problems?
There are few substitutes for actually going, seeing, and working with
customers. Granted, such contacts need to be managed. In the example
you site, the account people should have had the right to say "you come
this date (so that everyone is here at once) or not at all," or else
partition the group so that it didn't interfere with the customer.
Most customers I've known are delighted to have a chance to gripe
directly at the engineers and engineering managers. It just needs to
be set up in such a way that both sides get benefits from the visit.
Gary
|
2019.33 | Practice Safe Engineering - Use Pocket Protectors | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Mon Jul 27 1992 14:36 | 19 |
|
Re: pocket protectors
A short-sleeve white dress shirt with a pocket protector has become the
leading symbol of nerddom (see Revenge of the Nerds and Back to the Future).
I remember joking with a DECUS counterpart about putting together a
"GEEKUS" freebie consisting of:
o pocket protector
o mini slide rule
o pen
o pencil
o white tape, with instructions for applying to bridge of glasses
Our chief concern was that none of the DECUS folks would get the joke.
(And we'd already been beaten to the propeller beanies...)
|
2019.34 | | VMSZOO::ECKERT | All dressed up to go dreaming | Mon Jul 27 1992 15:51 | 10 |
| re: .33
> I remember joking with a DECUS counterpart about putting together a
> "GEEKUS" freebie consisting of:
> o mini slide rule
You'd probably have a hard time finding slide rules these days.
If you know of a source, please let me know!
|
2019.35 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:03 | 1 |
| Does anybody under the age of 40 even know how to *use* a slide rule?
|
2019.36 | Log Log Duplex Decitrig | MAST::ARRIGHI | It's these Klingon crystals, Captain. | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:07 | 5 |
| re .34
I have three, but you can't have any.
Tony
|
2019.37 | | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:20 | 6 |
| re: .23
Hey, why not make us wear hats with a red star on the forehead? How
about brown shirts? Then, we'll all goose-step ;-)
-Ed
|
2019.38 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | okay, I'll take an IBM compatible | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:31 | 9 |
| >> <<< Note 2019.32 by TOKLAS::feldman "Larix decidua, var. decify" >>>
>> More seriously, how do you propose that engineers learn about customer
>> problems?
Visit the CSC that supports your product, and sit in on calls. I
guarantee within 30 minutes you'll have discovered all the little
things that cumulatively frustrate customers.
Simon
|
2019.39 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:32 | 5 |
| > Does anybody under the age of 40 even know how to *use* a slide rule?
I do. I think the cut off age is 35 though and I'm over that. :-)
Alfred
|
2019.40 | I resent that. | CHELSY::GILLEY | All of my applications are VUP Suckers! | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:33 | 5 |
| Re: .35
I'm 33, and yes, I know how to use one. However, I readily admit, I cannot
survive w/o my workstation.
|
2019.41 | | GIAMEM::LEFEBVRE | Personal Computer Group | Mon Jul 27 1992 16:48 | 7 |
| <<< Note 2019.35 by VERGA::WELLCOME "Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30" >>>
> Does anybody under the age of 40 even know how to *use* a slide rule?
Yup. I have 3 that my grandfather gave to me when I was a kid.
Mark_who's_closer_to_30_than_40.
|
2019.42 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Mon Jul 27 1992 17:14 | 20 |
| re:.38
> Visit the CSC that supports your product, and sit in on calls. I
> guarantee within 30 minutes you'll have discovered all the little
> things that cumulatively frustrate customers.
That certainly helps, but it's still limited. It will contribute
greatly to improving the quality of our existing products. It will
contribute somewhat to understanding customer problems (i. e., the
reason they're using computers in the first place, which generally has
little to do with flaws in our products), but it will probably miss
many opportunities for new approaches, new problems to solve, and new
products to sell.
I believe we need to improve the connections between engineering, the
rest of the corporation (marketing, support centers, sales, sales
support), and customers. Visiting the CSC's is a good idea; so is
visiting customers.
Gary
|
2019.43 | it took me two weeks | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Mon Jul 27 1992 18:28 | 7 |
| re: .38, .42
I did that, only I did it for two weeks instead of 30 minutes. That
experience convinced me that Engineering could benefit greatly from
frequent contact with customers. I, too, have been trying to push that
idea, and also with no success.
John Sauter
|
2019.44 | What I want to know is: | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Ask me about my Rotisserie team | Mon Jul 27 1992 18:37 | 1 |
| If suits are coming, will golf be far behind?
|
2019.45 | Porche v.s Pinto | RT95::HU | Olympic Game | Mon Jul 27 1992 18:51 | 9 |
|
Re : .-1
Or will the current Sales/Service Rep is going to have their Ford
Taurus fleet sustitute by "Porche" ?
Follow the leader !!!
Michael..
|
2019.46 | | MEMIT::CANSLER | | Mon Jul 27 1992 19:08 | 3 |
| ref .34
HARVARD COOP @ HARVARD SQUARE... and yes they do come in handy
if your batteries run out on your laptop.
|
2019.47 | Reps should look the part | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Mon Jul 27 1992 20:08 | 18 |
2019.48 | Customer Visits Work! | NEWVAX::PENNINGTON | And darkness was on the face of the Analyst... | Mon Jul 27 1992 22:14 | 6 |
| re: customer visits
I have worked at a large government site for the last five years, and
about 3 years ago, we had face to face meetings between a group from
engineering and the customer. One of the results of this and similar
meetings was many of the features in Rdb 4.1. It really can work, but
everyone has to buy in or it will fail. FWIW.
|
2019.49 | How many of you have not seen a slide rule? | TEMPE::LENF | Len F. Winmill @TFO, DTN 566-4783 | Mon Jul 27 1992 23:48 | 14 |
| Re: Slide Rules.
I hang my Post (Ivory covered Bamboo no less) in it's leather case on
the wall of my cubie as a reminder of the "good old days".
One day, honestly a co-worker (not a tekie) walked in and said "What is
that? A bayonet?"
I knew then that a generation must have passed.
By the way he still blushes when ribbed about it.
Len
|
2019.50 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Jul 28 1992 00:58 | 6 |
| RE: Ties. Generally speaking ties don't cut off the circulation. A
buttoned shirt that is too small does. If you feel constricted around
the neck with a tie on it's probably because you were not sharp enough
to buy a shirt that fits.
Alfred tcu
|
2019.51 | Big neck... | EDWIN::WAYLAY::GORDON | Purple Squirrels | Tue Jul 28 1992 01:04 | 7 |
2019.52 | I'm 28... and... | IOSG::WDAVIES | There can only be one ALL-IN-1 Mail | Tue Jul 28 1992 09:26 | 3 |
| whats a slide-rule.... ?
Puzzled of England...
|
2019.53 | | MAJORS::ALFORD | lying Shipwrecked and comatose... | Tue Jul 28 1992 09:51 | 13 |
| Re: .52
> whats a slide-rule.... ?
Something akin to an abacus little one.....
:-)
Re: .lots-back
I wore ties for 10 years, then I had to wear nylons....ties suddenly didn't
seem so bad after all...I *DEFINITELY* prefer ties to nylons and high heels...
|
2019.54 | | FEATHR::BLUEJAY | N45210: 194.5 SMOH, 24.3 SMWJ | Tue Jul 28 1992 11:24 | 9 |
| Re: slide rules
The spirit of the slide rule lives on in the aviation community. Many pilots
use a circular-type slide rule (officially known as an E6B) for various
calculations related to flying. I myself use one of these, finding them more
reliable than calculators that have batteries and easier to use in turbulance,
when trying to mash the right button can be a problem.
- Bluejay Adametz, CFII
|
2019.55 | | BEING::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Tue Jul 28 1992 12:37 | 7 |
| Re .34:
The Computer Museum has several sizes of straight slide rule and one
size of circular slide rule for sale.
-- edp
|
2019.56 | | VERGA::WELLCOME | Steve Wellcome PKO3-1/D30 | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:08 | 8 |
| re: .52
What's a slide rule? Assuming you are serious and actually don't know:
As .53 says, akin to an abacus, except a slide rule does multiplication
and division (and, depending on the scales it has, possibly squares,
square roots, cubes, cube roots, trig functions, and logrithms) instead
of an abacus's addition and subtraction.
|
2019.57 | Re. Pocket Protectors, etc | STAR::PARKE | True Engineers Combat Obfuscation | Tue Jul 28 1992 13:52 | 3 |
| Hardware Engineers use pocket protectors
Software engineers use keyboard condoms
|
2019.58 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:49 | 30 |
|
Again for the seriously slide-rule-challenged...
A simple multiplication slide rule is two pieces of ruler-type material
that slide against each other. On each is printed the logarithmic
values of 1 thru 10 in a linear manner. They are kept together by a
clear plastic collar, on which is scribed a thin vertical line that
crosses the two log scales. Working on the principle that you can multiply
two numbers by adding their logs, the slide rule allows you to add the
linear "length" of two numbers on a logarithmic scale to point to their
product on the same scale.
The process is as follows: Slide the upper scale so that the "1" (left
end of the scale) is directly over the multiplicand on the bottom scale.
Slide the plastic collar so that the vertical line is directly over the
multiplier on the top scale. The vertical line is now also over the
product, again on the bottom scale. You have used the sliding scale and
the collar to add the logarithmic "length" of the two numbers, to point
to their product.
You can plot the log values of 1-10 on two strips of graph paper to
reproduce this experiment. (Note: cutting two strips from a sheet of
log graph paper is considered cheating for the purposes of conceptual
education, but will produce more accurate results.)
(When I learned about slide rules, a hand calculator that was
approximately the size and thickness of a pack of playing cards, that
did +, -, * and /, and whose LED display ate through 9v. batteries
like candy, could be had for about $100.)
|
2019.59 | s lipsticks | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins ... Nature's greatest gift. | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:57 | 20 |
| Anent slide rules:
There asre still slide rules in daily use: they're called "flight
computers" and are used for aerial navigation by polits who don't trust
batteries.
These, and some others, are circular. Some circular slide rules have
fixed scales and transparent arms with lines scribed into them to set
up the appropriate ratios.
All slide rules work on the basis that an algebraic addition of two
logarithms results in a multiplication (and subtraction between two
results in a division). Some sliderules have secondary and tertiary
scales to show squarwes, cubes, etc. Some circular slide rules have
spiral scales for increased number of significant figures ("A slide
rule is a device where you multiply 2 by 3 and get 5.99," a math
teacher of my acquaintence once said). There have been cylinderical
slide rules, too.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
2019.60 | Slidddeeeee.... | MARX::BAIRD | Not bad, 4 out of 6 | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:09 | 11 |
|
Sheesh....in the current environment I thought EVERYBODY had gone back
and reviewed the slide rule.
SLIDE RULE - When your team's below .500 and more games out of first
place than there are left in the season, every base tag is a SLIDE.
Else you may find you're on waivers. (see also: Efforts not Results
Rule - ERR)
J.B.
proud owner of a Post Versalog and pocket "Baby" Versalog
|
2019.61 | | IW::GRACE | Struggling with my version of reality | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:19 | 11 |
| 0.02p
>> There have been cylinderical slide rules, too.
I own an OTIS King cylindrical.
Effective length of scale > 1 metre I recall.
Wonderful, wouldn't part with it ever.
Nostalga, more than just a thing of the past.
It's just like telling the children about sun-dials.
Chris
|
2019.62 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Personal Choice is more important than Political Correctness | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:41 | 6 |
| re .56
It's possible to do multiplication, division and take square roots on an abacus.
(I don't remember the details though.)
Rich
|
2019.63 | Could do trig on them too | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Tue Jul 28 1992 16:22 | 7 |
| My first 3 weeks in high school chemistry had nothing to do with
chemistry. Our teacher took that time to teach us how to use a slide
rule. My Pickett is a wall decoration at home.
Another good chunk of time in chemistry was spent learning how to
set up problems so that a minimum number of movements had to be done
on the slide rule.
|
2019.64 | | DENVER::DAVISGB | Steempy, pick up your tongue! | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:12 | 15 |
| When I was in my first year of Mechanical Engineering at New Mexico
State, we transitioned from slide rules to calculators ....1971-72.
One semester (fall '71) we were extensively trained in slide rule
theory....you could use calculators, but not on tests, since not every
one could afford this new gadget (or as Stimpy calls it, 'this space
time continuum thingy).
I think they were about $225 for a scientific TI.
The next semester (spring '72) you could use a
calculator on tests. The following semester (fall '72) you were
required to have a calculator.
|
2019.65 | Memories | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | You Bloated Sack of Protoplasm | Tue Jul 28 1992 17:17 | 21 |
| I remember doing Multiplication and Division on an Abacus. Essentially
repeated additions and subtractions. Worked best when you had a good
size Chinese Abacus. The little Japanese Abacus (I know that either
the Chinese version or the Japanese version has a different name, but I
can't remember what it was) was too small. I was taught to put the
multiplicand in the left side and to run off the beads as I added the
multiplier into the product on the right side.
Though smaller, I found the Japanese Abacii easier to use because the
beads were shaped with a sharp ridge on the outer rim as opposed to the
Chinese version which had round beads. My kids just found my old
Chinese Abacus, so I guess I get to teach them how to use it. Can't
find any of my slide rules, so that exercise in Ancient history will
wait.
Larry
I won't tell you how long ago it was that I learned how to use an
abacus.
|
2019.66 | ABACI | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins ... Nature's greatest gift. | Tue Jul 28 1992 18:30 | 10 |
| Re .65 (Larry):
> .................... The little Japanese Abacus (I know that either
>the Chinese version or the Japanese version has a different name, but I
>can't remember what it was) was too small. ...
The Japanese version is called a Soroban. It is also more streamlined
than the Chinese version.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
2019.67 | HP calculator trivia... | NEWPRT::NEWELL_JO | Latine loqui coactus sum | Tue Jul 28 1992 19:19 | 39 |
| To continue the rathole...
>When I was in my first year of Mechanical Engineering at New Mexico
>State, we transitioned from slide rules to calculators ....1971-72.
>One semester (fall '71) we were extensively trained in slide rule
>theory....you could use calculators, but not on tests, since not every
>one could afford this new gadget (or as Stimpy calls it, 'this space
>time continuum thingy).
>I think they were about $225 for a scientific TI.
>The next semester (spring '72) you could use a
>calculator on tests. The following semester (fall '72) you were
>required to have a calculator.
I worked for Hewlett-Packard 1971-73. I assembled, packaged and
shipped the first hand-held calculator, the HP-35, affectionately
known as the electronic sliderule.
They sold for $396.00. Today, you can get the equivalent for ~$15.
I clearly remember the controversy about classroom use. My brother
was a calculus major at Purdue Univ. and the first in his class to get
an HP-35 (compliments of me). He took a lot of heat because or it.
Ironically, the biggest revenue generator was sales from college
bookstores. HP Marketing really debated about the bookstore approach
because they didn't believe that students would have the $400.00
to fork out for the controversial calculator. Luckily they went
ahead with their plan and made a killing in that market.
The first week the calculator was in production, we shipped 20. In
one years time, we were shipping 1500 per shift, with three shifts
working around the clock and a 6 month backlog. Pretty incredible.
Jodi-
|
2019.68 | | POBOX::RILEY | I *am* the D.J. | Tue Jul 28 1992 21:14 | 11 |
| More calc trivia....
remember the "Bomar Brain"? That was an early four-banger. I had the
first calculator in my high school. It caused quite a stir about
having an unfair advantage.
"jackin' the house", Bob
|
2019.69 | wanted, 1 slide-rule | PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN | Mark @ COP, dtn 339-5318 | Tue Jul 28 1992 22:22 | 9 |
| Since we are soo deep into this rat-hole.....
Many years ago, I lost my older brothers slide-rule, and he won't let
me forget it. I am in Maryland, and I am looking to buy a replacement
slide-rule (mail-order, or whatever it takes). Does any one know where
I might find one?
Thanks,
Mark
|
2019.70 | Possibly where they teach Math and Science | CSC32::MORTON | Aliens, the snack food of CHAMPIONS! | Tue Jul 28 1992 23:54 | 16 |
| >> <<< Note 2019.69 by PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN "Mark @ COP, dtn 339-5318" >>>
>> -< wanted, 1 slide-rule >-
>>
>> Since we are soo deep into this rat-hole.....
>>
>> Many years ago, I lost my older brothers slide-rule, and he won't let
>> me forget it. I am in Maryland, and I am looking to buy a replacement
>> slide-rule (mail-order, or whatever it takes). Does any one know where
>> I might find one?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Mark
>>
Mark,
You might try a College or University bookstore.
Jim Morton
|
2019.71 | Slide rule? When you're caught reading a skin magazine | SNOC01::NICHOLLS | Problem? ring 1-800-382-5968 | Wed Jul 29 1992 00:48 | 1 |
|
|
2019.72 | SLIDE_RULE.PS, DIY slide rule for you youngsters! (450+ lines) | COL01::LELIE | I/O in progress | Wed Jul 29 1992 09:04 | 445 |
|
>> <<< Note 2019.69 by PRIMES::ZIMMERMANN "Mark @ COP, dtn 339-5318" >>>
>> -< wanted, 1 slide-rule >-
>>
>> Since we are soo deep into this rat-hole.....
>>
>> Many years ago, I lost my older brothers slide-rule, and he won't let
>> me forget it. I am in Maryland, and I am looking to buy a replacement
>> slide-rule (mail-order, or whatever it takes). Does any one know where
>> I might find one?
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Mark
>>
> Mark,
> You might try a College or University bookstore.
> Jim Morton
...or print the following stuff on a postscript printer, get a sharp knife
and some glue and there you are!
(boy, am I really _that_ old already to call you 'youngsters' ?!)
----cut here-------
%!
% slide_rule.ps
%
% A. Kinsman 7/31/91 (C) Copyright 1991, all rights reserved
%
% So the future generations will understand how we handled
% engineering problems without pocket calculators.
%
% Such a primitive tool to manufacture with such a sophisticated
% computer.
%
% for on glass debugging clear screen uncomment next line
%clippath 1 setgray fill 0 setgray
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
0 setlinewidth
/inch {72 mul} def
/scale-len 10 def % length of scales in inches
/hash-height 0 def
/hash-incr 0 def
/tag-it 0 def
/raise-5 0 def
/str 20 string def
/tags ( 123456789) def % zeros turn into blanks
% flip axis used for B&D scales
/flip-axis {
1 -1 scale
} def
% flip font used for B&D scales
/flip-font {
currentfont [ 1 0 0 -1 0 0 ] makefont setfont
} def
% flip both used for B&D scales
/flip-it {
flip-axis
flip-font
} def
% for log scales
% ( start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5 -- )
/hash-it
{
/raise-5 exch def
/tag-it exch def
/hash-incr exch def
/hash-height exch def
{
% draw vertical hash
dup log scale-len mul inch 0 moveto 0 hash-height inch rlineto
% extend 5 lines up a bit
raise-5 1 eq
{
dup 1000 mul cvi 1 add % round up a bit
str cvs
hash-incr log cvi 1 getinterval % ( asc-digit -- )
(5) eq { 0 hash-height .3 mul inch rlineto
}
if
}
if
% add number string
% ( num -- )
tag-it 1 eq % ( num bool -- )
{
1000 mul cvi 1 add % ( inum -- )
str cvs % ( string -- )
hash-incr log cvi 1 getinterval % ( asc-digit -- )
cvi % ( int -- )
tags exch 1 getinterval
show % ( -- )
}
{ pop }
ifelse
} for
stroke
} def
% for linear scales
% ( start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5 -- )
/hash-it2
{
/raise-5 exch def
/tag-it exch def
/hash-incr exch def
/hash-height exch def
{
% draw vertical hash
dup scale-len mul inch 0 moveto 0 hash-height inch rlineto
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dup 1000 mul cvi 1 add % round up a bit
str cvs
hash-incr log cvi 1 getinterval % ( asc-digit -- )
(5) eq { 0 hash-height .3 mul inch rlineto
}
if
}
if
% add number string
% ( num -- )
tag-it 1 eq % ( num bool -- )
{
1000 mul cvi 1 add % ( inum -- )
str cvs % ( string -- )
hash-incr log cvi 1 getinterval % ( asc-digit -- )
cvi % ( int -- )
tags exch 1 getinterval
(.) show
show % ( -- )
}
{ pop }
ifelse
} for
stroke
} def
% for linear scales with no labels
% ( start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5 -- )
/hash-it3
{
/raise-5 exch def
/tag-it exch def
/hash-incr exch def
/hash-height exch def
{
% draw vertical hash
dup scale-len mul inch 0 moveto 0 hash-height inch rlineto
} for
stroke
} def
/rule-c {
% start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5
1.0 1.0 10.0 0.20 1 1 0 hash-it % units
/Helvetica findfont 7 scalefont setfont
1.0 0.1 2.0 0.13 10 1 0 hash-it % 1/10ths
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
2.0 0.1 10.0 0.10 10 0 1 hash-it % 1/10ths
1.0 .01 2.0 0.07 100 0 1 hash-it % 1/100ths
2.0 .02 4.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/50ths
4.0 .05 10.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/20ths
} def
/rule-d {
% start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5
1.0 1.0 10.0 0.20 1 1 0 hash-it % units
/Helvetica findfont 7 scalefont setfont
flip-font
1.0 0.1 2.0 0.16 10 1 0 hash-it % 1/10ths
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
2.0 0.1 10.0 0.10 10 0 1 hash-it % 1/10ths
1.0 .01 2.0 0.07 100 0 1 hash-it % 1/100ths
2.0 .02 4.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/50ths
4.0 .05 10.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/20ths
} def
/rule-l {
% start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5
0.0 0.1 1.0 0.20 1 1 0 hash-it2 % units
0.0 0.05 1.0 0.15 1 0 0 hash-it3 % 1/2s
0.0 0.01 1.0 0.10 1 0 0 hash-it3 % 1/10ths
0.0 0.005 1.0 0.07 1 0 0 hash-it3 % 1/20ths
} def
/rule-ab {
% start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5
1.0 1.0 10.0 0.20 1 1 0 hash-it % units
1.0 0.1 10.0 0.10 10 0 1 hash-it % 1/10ths
1.0 .02 2.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/50ths
2.0 .05 5.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/20ths
} def
/rule-k {
% start increment end hash-height hash-incr tag-it raise-5
1.0 1.0 10.0 0.20 1 1 0 hash-it % units
1.0 0.1 6.0 0.10 10 0 1 hash-it % 1/10ths
1.0 .05 6.0 0.07 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/20ths
6.0 0.2 10.0 0.10 0 0 0 hash-it % 1/5ths
} def
% outlines of the device and some literals
/overlap .25 inch def % glue flap
/half-height 2.25 inch def % height of face
/draw-outline{
% boxes, and glue text etc.
0.0 inch 8.0 inch overlap add moveto
11.0 inch 8.0 inch overlap add lineto
11.0 inch 8.0 inch half-height 2 mul sub lineto
0.0 inch 8.0 inch half-height 2 mul sub lineto
closepath
stroke
% cutout area
0.5 inch 7.25 inch moveto
10.5 inch 7.25 inch lineto
10.5 inch 6.25 inch lineto
0.5 inch 6.25 inch lineto
closepath
stroke
% dotted line under glue
[5] 0 setdash
0.0 inch 8.0 inch moveto
11.0 inch 8.0 inch lineto
% dotted line between halves
0.0 inch 8.0 inch half-height sub moveto
11.0 inch 8.0 inch half-height sub lineto
stroke
[] 0 setdash
% draw slide
0.0 inch 3.0 inch moveto
11.0 inch 3.0 inch lineto
11.0 inch 3.0 inch half-height sub overlap add lineto
0.0 inch 3.0 inch half-height sub overlap add lineto
closepath
stroke
% comments
1.0 inch 7.3 inch .25 inch sub moveto
(1. Print or copy onto stiff paper.) show
1.0 inch 7.1 inch .25 inch sub moveto
(2. Fold on dotted lines.) show
1.0 inch 6.9 inch .25 inch sub moveto
(3. Cut this window out carefully.) show
1.0 inch 6.7 inch .25 inch sub moveto
(4. Glue tab back on itself, when dry, glue halves together.) show
.6 inch 8.1 inch moveto ( glue -- glue -- glue) show
5.0 inch 8.1 inch moveto ( glue -- glue -- glue) show
9.6 inch 8.1 inch moveto ( glue -- glue -- glue) show
/Helvetica findfont 8 scalefont setfont
2.1 inch 5.9 inch moveto
( (C) Copyright 1991, Andy Kinsman, P.O. Box 1457, Fairport, N.Y. 14450-1457)
show
6.25 inch 5.9 inch moveto ("Collector of Slide Rules" kinsman@ssd.kodak.com)
show
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
} def
% Comment out next two lines for viewing on glass
9.0 inch 0.1 inch translate
90 rotate
% uncomment out one of the following for the model size you wish
%1.4 1.4 scale % debug size model
.95 .95 scale % 10 inch model (just wouldn't fit on 11 inch page as designed)
%.8 .8 scale % 8 inch model
%.5 .5 scale % 5 inch model
.1 inch .5 inch translate
draw-outline
% C&D scales
gsave
0.5 inch 6.25 inch translate
flip-it rule-d flip-it
grestore
gsave
0.5 inch 1.50 inch translate
rule-c
grestore
% A&B scales
/scale-len 10 2 div def
gsave
0.5 inch 7.25 inch translate
rule-ab
grestore
gsave
5.5 inch 7.25 inch translate
rule-ab
grestore
gsave
0.5 inch 2.75 inch overlap sub translate
flip-it rule-ab flip-it
grestore
gsave
5.5 inch 2.75 inch overlap sub translate
flip-it rule-ab flip-it
grestore
% K scale
/scale-len 10 3 div def
gsave
0.5 inch 7.60 inch translate
rule-k
grestore
gsave
0.5 inch scale-len inch add 7.60 inch translate
rule-k
grestore
gsave
0.5 inch scale-len inch 2 mul add 7.60 inch translate
rule-k
grestore
% L scale on slide
/scale-len 10 def
gsave
0.5 inch 1.90 inch translate
rule-l
grestore
% add labels to scales
/Helvetica findfont 15 scalefont setfont
0.25 inch 7.60 inch moveto (K) show
0.25 inch 7.25 inch moveto (A) show
0.25 inch 7.05 inch moveto (B) show
0.25 inch 6.70 inch moveto (L) show
0.25 inch 6.25 inch moveto (C) show
0.25 inch 6.05 inch moveto (D) show
% add labels to slide
0.25 inch 2.30 inch moveto (B) show
0.25 inch 1.90 inch moveto (L) show
0.25 inch 1.55 inch moveto (C) show
% tables on back
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
4.50 inch 5.50 inch moveto (CONVERSION FACTORS) show
/Helvetica findfont 9 scalefont setfont
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto (LINEAR MEASURE) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto ( AREA MEASURE ) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto (VOLUME MEASURE) show
0.50 inch 1.67 3 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto ( WEIGHT ) show
0.50 inch 1.67 4 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto (ENERGY - WORK ) show
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 5.25 inch moveto ( PRESSURE ) show
/Helvetica findfont 8 scalefont setfont
% column 0
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 inch = 2.54 cm ) show
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 foot = 0.3048 m) show
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 yard = 0.9144 m) show
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 mile = 1.609 km) show
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 4.00 inch moveto (1 mile = 5280 ft ) show
0.50 inch 1.67 0 mul inch add 3.75 inch moveto (1 naut.mile = 1.152 mi.) show
% column 1
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 sq inch = 6.452 cm2) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 sq foot = 0.0929 m2) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 sq yard = 0.8361 m2) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 sq mile = 2.59 km2) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 4.00 inch moveto (1 sq mile = 640 acres) show
0.50 inch 1.67 1 mul inch add 3.75 inch moveto (1 acre = 43,560 sq ft) show
% column 2
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 cu inch = 16.39 cm3) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 cu foot = 0.0283 m3) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 cu yard = 0.7646 m3) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 U.S. gallon = 3.785 liter) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 4.00 inch moveto (1 U.S. gallon = 231 cu in.) show
0.50 inch 1.67 2 mul inch add 3.75 inch moveto (1 cu foot = 28.32 liter) show
% column 3
0.50 inch 1.67 3 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 Pound = 0.4536 kg) show
0.50 inch 1.67 3 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 Grain = 0.0648 g) show
0.50 inch 1.67 3 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 U.S. gallon = 8.345 lb) show
0.50 inch 1.67 3 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 cu foot of water = 62.43 lb) show
% column 4
0.50 inch 1.67 4 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 Btu = 778 ft-lb) show
0.50 inch 1.67 4 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 hp = 0.707 Btu/sec) show
0.50 inch 1.67 4 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 hp = 550 ft-lb/sec) show
0.50 inch 1.67 4 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 hp = 0.746 kw) show
% column 5
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 5.00 inch moveto (1 atm = 14.7 psi) show
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 4.75 inch moveto (1 ft of water = 0.4335 psi) show
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 4.50 inch moveto (1 in. of mercury = 0.4912 psi) show
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 4.25 inch moveto (1 in. of mercury = 1.133 ft of water) show
0.50 inch 1.67 5 mul inch add 4.00 inch moveto (1 in. of mercury = 780 ft of air) show
% add pi to the C scale
/Symbol findfont 8 scalefont setfont
5.47 inch 1.62 inch moveto 0 .05 inch rlineto stroke
5.47 inch 1.70 inch moveto (\160) show
% add pi to the D scale
5.47 inch 6.14 inch moveto 0 -.05 inch rlineto stroke
5.47 inch 6.02 inch moveto (\160) show
% doctor the log scale, replacing first .1 with a .0
% and last .1 with a 1.0
/Helvetica findfont 10 scalefont setfont
1 setgray
0.5 inch 1.90 inch .20 inch add moveto (.1) show
0 setgray
0.5 inch 1.90 inch .20 inch add moveto (.0) show
1 setgray
10.5 inch 1.90 inch .20 inch add moveto (.1) show
0 setgray
10.4 inch 1.90 inch .20 inch add moveto (1.0) show
showpage
|
2019.73 | are we talking just about anything here? | ZPOVC::GGLOH | when the going gets tough... | Wed Jul 29 1992 09:28 | 2 |
| This note started with discussions on suits, but ended up on the
slide-rules and abacus. Amazing!
|
2019.74 | flea-market, yard-sale | KOLFAX::WHITMAN | Acid Rain Burns my Bass | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:52 | 7 |
| < slide-rule (mail-order, or whatever it takes). Does any one know where
< I might find one?
Any decent sized Flea-market or big yard-sale always has at least one
slide-rule (usually for under $5.)
Al
|
2019.75 | | POWDML::COHEN_R | | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:54 | 16 |
|
The rathole about slide rules which has taken up space and
time in this particular topic is perhaps one of the finest
examples of why engineers should never go on customer calls.
People ignored the real purpose and began riding their own
favorite hobby horses. There's a world out there beyond
bits and bytes.
The fear that a tech-type would scuttle the greater purpose
a customer visit with myopic technical inanities is why, on
the whole, they should just stay at home with their work-
stations.
Most customer calls involve business solutions and business
relationships not enigineering seminars. Leave it as such.
|
2019.76 | have suit, will travel | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins ... Nature's greatest gift. | Wed Jul 29 1992 15:07 | 13 |
| Re .75 (Ralph):
Yes, you're right.
It's silly talking about stupid trivia like slide rules when the
burning topic of the basenote is:
.0>Will engineers soon be required to wear suits to work?
.0>I don't even own one.
It's really important to stick to the critical issues. :-D
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
2019.78 | | TOKLAS::feldman | Larix decidua, var. decify | Wed Jul 29 1992 16:07 | 8 |
| re: .75
I hope that you don't use this discussion as a reason for keeping
engineers away from customers. What engineers do behing closed doors,
among their peers, is no indication of their ability to do their jobs
when meeting with customers.
Gary
|
2019.79 | A "lost" art | SMEGOL::COHEN | | Wed Jul 29 1992 16:30 | 7 |
| > Any decent sized Flea-market or big yard-sale always has at least one
> slide-rule (usually for under $5.)
The last I saw of slide rules was in the late seventies in a college bookstore.
All the slide rules were in a large bin priced to go... 10 Cents.
Bob Cohen
|
2019.80 | | TELGAR::WAKEMANLA | You Bloated Sack of Protoplasm | Wed Jul 29 1992 16:31 | 8 |
| re .75 <Ralph>
I brought up the Soroban (Thanks Steve) yet my job is to
be in front of customers. Now I don't discuss the merits
of the Soroban against the Abacus when they are interested
in why they should by Rdb over {Oracle, Sybase, Ingres, ...}.
Larry
|
2019.81 | We all own at least one suit | CASPRO::LMARINO | | Wed Jul 29 1992 16:48 | 2 |
| What about our Birthday suits......;)
|
2019.82 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Wed Jul 29 1992 17:04 | 3 |
| Does anyone know what happened to K&E? Did they go down the tubes with
slide rules?
|
2019.83 | still around, I think ... | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins ... Nature's greatest gift. | Wed Jul 29 1992 17:31 | 6 |
| Re .82:
I believe K&E makes, among other things, graph paper, including
straight cartesian, polar, and both semilog and log-log varieties.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
2019.84 | A source for circular slide rule | EICMFG::AJK | Anton J. Kuchelmeister, @UFC | Wed Jul 29 1992 19:21 | 21 |
| re .69, source for slide rules:
Not really a source for (normal) slide rules, but: I happened to
skip over the 1992 Reference catalog for optics, science and
education (#12N1) of ES Edmund Scientific. In there is a circular
(!) slide rule:
"Authentic WWII Bombers Calculator"
Article # A36,776
Price is $15.95 (+handling charge)
Edmund Scientific Company
101 E. Gloucester Pike
Barrington, NJ 08007-1380
Order by phone: 1-609-573-6250
1-609-547-3488
by FAX: 1-609-573-6295
For general product information: 1-609-573-6879
|
2019.85 | Pickett Slide Rules | GLDOA::MADISON | | Thu Jul 30 1992 00:02 | 12 |
| I still have my trusty PICKETT slide rule along with the
instructions and carying case. (You know, the one that will allow you
to carry your slide rule from your belt). I don't know if Pickett is
still in business, but their old address is listed below. You might
drop them a note and see what they say.
Pickett, Inc.
Pickett Square
Santa Barbara, California
93102
Good Luck
|
2019.86 | I have a Digital Circular Slide Ruler!!! | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | I am NOT a bottlecap! | Thu Jul 30 1992 00:47 | 9 |
| And while we are continuing to discuss something that has nothing to do
with business suits :-)
I have a small circular slide ruler that had printed around the middle
the following message:
" digital solve problems with a pdp-11"
I got it many years ago when I was in college as a give-away from DEC
|
2019.87 | Au contraire | NEWVAX::SGRIFFIN | DTN 339-5391 | Thu Jul 30 1992 02:05 | 29 |
| re: .75
> examples of why engineers should never go on customer calls.
^^^^^
Wrong. And in general, generalities are very dangerous.
> The fear that a tech-type would scuttle the greater purpose
> a customer visit with myopic technical inanities is why, on
> the whole, they should just stay at home with their work-
> stations.
> Most customer calls involve business solutions and business
> relationships not enigineering seminars. Leave it as such.
I would say all sales involve technical solutions to business needs
(exceptions would be management consulting, etc., where you only alter the way
they accomplish the work, without any technology component to the solution).
I assume you aren't in sales. If you are selling to the CEO or CFO, your
comments are correct. When selling to the end user or CIO, I think you miss
the mark. You want to generate enthusiasm at all levels. Marketing, sales
and sales management should be doing the selling at the CEO and CFO level, and
sometimes the CIO level. "Technical inanities" are what the end users, and
sometimes CIO, want to know about. They can be very myopic, especially when
you are trying to tell them they should be doing their job differently.
Steve
DS (formerly EIS)
(thanks Mike)
|
2019.88 | it is good for engineers and customers to talk | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Thu Jul 30 1992 02:33 | 14 |
| i think engineers should talk to customers to know the problem,
because without knowing customer problem it is hard to solve it.
but sometimes customers dont know what they want too, and engineers
will tell them what they need to solve their problem.
i think there should be regular meetings set up between engineers
and customers.
but any engineer who comes in with a slide ruler will not be allowed
to the meetings.
/nasser
a software engineer (i think)
|
2019.89 | to sum things up | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Bon noyade! | Thu Jul 30 1992 13:37 | 3 |
| Suits vs. slide rules, in a fight to the death!
Boy, does that say something about DEC culture, or what?
|
2019.90 | heavy irony | BOOKS::HAMILTON | All models are false; some are useful - Dr. G. Box | Thu Jul 30 1992 17:03 | 6 |
|
It might be interesting to investigate what happened to companies
who made slide rules, but did not transition to calculators.
Glenn (who thinks that this thread is hilarious and even topical
in a bizarre and ironic way)
|
2019.91 | I can see it now.... | CHELSY::GILLEY | All of my applications are VUP Suckers! | Thu Jul 30 1992 19:52 | 3 |
| On a resume:
Can perform calculations without batteries........
|
2019.92 | Who Cares? | MDCRAB::PAULTER | | Fri Jul 31 1992 17:04 | 4 |
| It is frightening that a topic like "Suits?" would have 90+ replies
in it. If engineering has nothing better to do that worry about
what they have to wear to work, maybe that is the root of our problems
at Digital...
|
2019.93 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Fri Jul 31 1992 17:36 | 5 |
| re .92:
Don't attribute to too much free time what can be explained by
terminal frustration...
|
2019.94 | The stats don't support your accusation | DYPSS1::COGHILL | Steve Coghill, Luke 14:28 | Fri Jul 31 1992 18:27 | 27 |
2019.95 | An idea for a new product!!! :-) | WHYNOW::NEWMAN | I am NOT a bottlecap! | Fri Jul 31 1992 20:02 | 3 |
| Since there is so much interest in slide rulers has anyone considered
replacing the DECwindows MOTIF calculator application with a
DECwindows MOTIF Slide Ruler application? :-)
|
2019.96 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sat Aug 01 1992 06:03 | 11 |
| Right. And as you use your mouse to move the slide or the curser, the
numbers being slid over appear in a window so you can know precisely
when to stop. The higher the mouse is, the higher the precision shown
in the windows and the slower the numbers move with each mouse
movement. That combined with a multiple precision package will let the
digitally-produced analog slide rule have even more precision than
standard calculators.
Now all you need is a method to move the mouse automatically and make
decisions based on the resulting numbers. I'm sure the DCL gurus can
handle that with ease.
|
2019.97 | | ELWOOD::LANE | | Sat Aug 01 1992 10:44 | 2 |
| ...reminds me of the MIT student who wrote a calculator program using Roman
numerals. The documentation, of course, was in Latin.
|
2019.98 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sun Aug 02 1992 04:19 | 3 |
| Actually, while I was at MIT, there was a Roman numeral calculator
program on the PDP-1. But documentation? In Latin? At MIT? You
gotta be kidding! Harvard maybe, but not MIT!
|
2019.99 | why they might have done it in Latin | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Sun Aug 02 1992 05:08 | 12 |
| ref .-1
When I was reading Gauss biography, I learned he wrote his big works
in Latin, even though he did not have to, he could have done it
in German, and that would have made it more accessible and more
understandable, since Latin is apparently is a more terse language, but he
considered Latin to be the 'real' scientific language, and it showed the
author to be a true scientist. not that Gauss needed to prove himself more.
but that was 150 years ago.
I bet that someone at MIT who wrote that documentation did it for
similar reasons..
|
2019.100 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Aug 03 1992 01:33 | 3 |
| Re: .-1
I don't think you know much about MIT. :-)
|
2019.101 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Aug 03 1992 14:04 | 4 |
| There's a supermarket in Cambridge that's frequented by both Harvard and MIT
students. A student-type was standing in the express line with many more items
than were allowed. Quipped one observer to another, "He's either a Harvard
student who can't count or an MIT student who can't read."
|
2019.102 | I beg to differ | PHDVAX::LUSK | Ron Lusk - Digital Services | Mon Aug 03 1992 14:53 | 10 |
| If you don't mind,.... Somewhere in Spitbrook there is a former
colleague of mine, BS from MIT in Math and Humanities, Master's in
Latin and Greek from BC, PhD in Philosophy from BC as well. Although
he graduated from MIT some years before I did, he and I have worked
together and enjoyed occasional communication in Latin together (his
far superior to mine, of course).
Among the eccentricities of MIT students may (no doubt) be found an
interest in languages (classical--e.g., Latin or COBOL--or modern--
z.B., German or C++ --or both--Hebrew, Welsh, FORTRAN...). ;^)
|
2019.103 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Aug 03 1992 15:59 | 3 |
| Re: .-1
Yes, there are exceptions.
|
2019.104 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Aug 03 1992 17:29 | 23 |
| Reminds me of the old line....
You can always tell a MIT student,
but
You can't tell him much!
Marc H.
|
2019.105 | Overeducated imbeciles | FORTSC::CHABAN | Pray for Peter Pumpkinhead! | Mon Aug 03 1992 19:24 | 9 |
|
My father has a better saying:
I can make something "Idiot-Proof" but I can't make it "PhD-Proof"
I suppose you could say the same of MBAs.....
-Ed
|
2019.106 | Back to Suits | MAIL::SCHULZ | | Thu Aug 06 1992 21:25 | 11 |
| Back to suits!!
If our customers or clients wear business suits, why shouldn't Deccies?
Shouldn't Digital look professional to the customer who it is trying to
serve?
A Question to ponder.
|
2019.107 | on cloths and customers | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Aug 07 1992 00:19 | 29 |
| .106
>If our customers or clients wear business suits, why shouldn't Deccies?
>Shouldn't Digital look professional to the customer who it is trying to
>serve?
>A Question to ponder.
I pondered it, but I thought that is the way it is allready?
If you are in contact with a customer , you should dress up nice, none
of the jeans clothing, and casual attire that Engineers are famous
for.
I know when I worked for EDS , I worked in an account where every week we
had a meeting with the DEC local sales/marketing/support people, every week
we sat down over donuts and coffee, and talked about support issues, a
kind of 'how things going' type of meeting, and to see if there are any
problems in our account that DEC needs paying attention to.
Every DECeee who came to the meeting was well charmed, especially the DEC
local unit support manager, my memory about him is that he was extra-well
dressed, and very sharp looking, and a big and fresh flower always
illuminating his jacket in a delightful manner, his perfume progated
the room and filled the atomosphere, I was highly impreesed with theses
people.
/Nasser
I spelled checked
|
2019.108 | The impression counts, too | EICMFG::AJK | Anton J. Kuchelmeister, @UFC | Fri Aug 07 1992 06:25 | 3 |
| It's simply etiquette to show up well-dressed in front of customers.
Now, think about what this means, - what means well-dressed is
relative, and who are your customers?
|
2019.109 | | STOKES::BURT | | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:02 | 18 |
| Can't hold back on this one: what difference does it make if you're
wearing a suit or jeans? You're still getting paid x and still capable
of doing y, probably even more productive in jeans than in a suit. All
the suits I see sit around and chat about how to fix the problem, then
the jeans (now wearing a suit) come in to fix it and first thing they
ask? "Mind if I take off my coat?" My answer: "Sure, might as well
take off the tie, too. I wouldn't want that getting caught in
something." You think suits mean anything in 1) a third world country?
or even 2) a rival industrialized nation? 1) = probably reminds them
off how oppressed they are and 2) = some surreal game centered around
"his/her suit is better than mind; guess I have to charge more for the
finished goods." (mostly hypothetical, but best guess is probably
pretty close to actual reasons, IMO. Afterall, it is friday, right?)
Slash the suits and enter a world based on quality and expertise, not
appearance.
Reg.
|
2019.110 | Wear what fits the role. | FINALY::BELLAMTE | Me fix! Want bannana NOW! | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:41 | 25 |
| A good rule of thumb is: When in Rome, wear what the Romans are
wearing. This isn't always practical. In field work it's not uncommon
to go to a bank in the AM, in your suit, and then have to go to
an oil refinery in the afternoon, where all the customer's folks
are wearing "work clothes". Then you feel out of place, ask if you
can take off your coat, and some smart ass says, "Why don't you take
off your tie too", because he's made uncomfortable by the unspoken
message you suit is sending him. Unfortunate, but sometimes
unavoidable.
You only get one chance to make a first impression. The sad
thing is that with some customers who are unable to determine
your level of technical expertise, this is your only chance to
make any impression. I would love to be able to go to any
customer's site in comfortable clothes (jeans and T-shirt?), and
have them be dazzled by my performance. In reality, the message
most customers receive from you when your dressed in a comfortable
manner, and they're in penguine suits is: 1) "I'm a slob, and I don't
care what you think of me, my company, of the appearance of your
business establishment", or 2) "I'm a freakin' guru on this stuff, and
you're a dunce, so I can dress anyway I please and you can just get
stuffed!". Either impression is undesireable. Only a very few will
really think, "That persons dress is not a issue, performance is
all that matters".
|
2019.111 | It's what's inside that counts | LURE::CERLING | God doesn't believe in atheists | Fri Aug 07 1992 12:50 | 25 |
| I have been working in sales support for about 7-8 years. Before that
I was a delivery specialist. The common rule of thumb was to dress in
the same manner that the customer dressed. If they wore jeans, you
wore jeans. If they wore three-piece suits, you wore three-piece
suits. University people feel more comfortable if you show up wearing
a brown suit instead of a navy or pin-stripe or three-piece suit. Or
you could wear slacks and jacket anytime to universities. If I am
going to talk with technical folks, I dress a little more laxly than if
I am going to meet witht the president of a company. It all depends.
In general, my rule of thumb is to dress equal or one notch higher.
Too much higher and it makes them feel uncomfortable. Too much lower
and they think you don't care. (I have also been on the other side of
the table, and I have a lot of friends on the other side of the table,
so this is not just a digit talking.)
A great deal of it boils down to common courtesy to your customers. To
imply that those that wear jeans are the only ones that can solve
problems is being rather haughty. When I was a customer, we had a
`jeans' come in to work with us. We asked him to leave because we were
training him (that is, he knew less than we did). A `suit' came in and
the problems started to get solved. I have also had the other
situation.
tgc
|
2019.112 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Aug 07 1992 13:56 | 18 |
| re .107:
> illuminating his jacket in a delightful manner, his perfume progated
^^^^^^^^
> the room and filled the atomosphere, I was highly impreesed with theses
^^^^^^^^^
> people.
>
> /Nasser
> I spelled checked
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Are you sure?
On the topic, I've heard of cases where an engineer dressed up to meet
a customer, and the customer didn't believe that he was really an engineer.
I think engineers should wear engineer-type clothes -- pocket protectors
and taped glasses should be mandatory.
|
2019.113 | hI could swear I did, I'll check what version of DECspell I use | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:07 | 19 |
| ref .112
>re .107:
>> illuminating his jacket in a delightful manner, his perfume progated
^^^^^^^^
>> the room and filled the atomosphere, I was highly impreesed with theses
^^^^^^^^^
>> people.
>>
>> /Nasser
>> I spelled checked
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>Are you sure?
I'll QAR it immediately !
Thank you,
/Nasser
I spelled checked
|
2019.114 | | SGOUTL::RUSSELL_D | | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:09 | 5 |
| re: spelling
It's just poetic licentiousness. ;-)
DAR
|
2019.115 | Might be a technical problem. | AKOFAT::SHERK | Ignorance is a basic human rite. | Fri Aug 07 1992 14:54 | 4 |
| Nasser,
You really should check your personable dictionary.
Ken
|
2019.116 | on spellings in DEC notes files | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Aug 07 1992 18:28 | 28 |
| Some one mailed me mail today saying I was rude for intentionally making
spelling errors, he must referred to the note I wrote few back .
this person who send me the mail, could at least have asked before
offending me with his mail, and should have given me the chance to
explain what happened.
I cant believe anyone in his right mind would say that, I have been
double checking for quite a while now, and I started to say that too at
the end, what must have happened in this note forth mentioned is that I
must have spelled checked it, then last minute did some changes and forgot
to spell check it last minute, but I have already written "I spelled
checked" at the end.
Why should I be screamed at for this? Why do people pick on me when
I make one or two stupid mistakes in writing while many other
do make same spelling errors and no one says anything?
When I wrote "I'll QAR it", I was kidding, we are QARing thing all the time
here , it is an Engineering joke in a way, I did not mean to trap someone
into some evil trap that I have so masterfully set up and been planing
for for days.
Well, that is all have to say, if anyone want to scream more at me
go ahead. this is your chance.
/Nasser
I spell checked this
|
2019.117 | I feel much better, Now :-) | COMET::BARRIANO | choke me in the shallow water... | Fri Aug 07 1992 18:45 | 14 |
| RE <<< Note 2019.116 by STAR::ABBASI "i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI))" >>>
> Well, that is all have to say, if anyone want to scream more at me
> go ahead. this is your chance.
Hi Nasser
AAAAYYYYYYYYYYIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks, I feel much better now :-)
Regards
Barry
|
2019.118 | Burn this Message Before Reading | MARX::BAIRD | Not bad, 4 out of 6 | Fri Aug 07 1992 19:11 | 30 |
|
re .116
Nasser,
Having followed your entries for some time, I feel the need to
comment.*
I was one of many who reading your entries for the first time developed
an instant mental picture of the author. Only in subsequent replies
from some of your co-workers did I begin to get the idea that my
mistake was not my doing, but part of an orchestrated effort. Your
style and insightfullness is refreshing. Your wit most convoluted.
Alas, you are not on the proper distribution lists.
Any objections or complaints you receive are really not directed at you
but, at your initials. In Memorandum of Understanding #3514-10 (which I
can't quote here without the author's permission) it is scheduled thus
that, Q1 93 be dedicated to causing grief to employees with initials of
N.A. Hence all the inside, P.C. folks are on your case. But not really.
It's only orders they're following, see?
So, hang in there and don't get depressed. Oh, and since this message
is only for your consumpution, please heed the reply title.
Thanks much for the grins.
* - The need to comment feels a lot like heartburn after a hasty lunch.
Replying here or Alka-Seltzer makes it go away.
|
2019.119 | | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Aug 07 1992 19:23 | 3 |
| I'm willing to make as many allowances for people whose primary
language is not English as I hope they would make for me if the
circumstances were reversed.
|
2019.120 | Thanks, but that is not I want | STAR::ABBASI | i^(-i) = SQRT(exp(PI)) | Fri Aug 07 1992 19:33 | 10 |
| ref .-1
thank you kindly, but I really dont want people to make allowances for me
because my first language was not English, I just want them to pick on me
by an amount equal to that that someone whose first language was English
gets picked on by.
No special treatments please.
/Nasser
I spell checked this
|
2019.121 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Fri Aug 07 1992 19:58 | 21 |
| Certainly any of us will do the same quality of work whether we
dress in a suit, or in jeans.
Customers want to feel comfortable with those they do business
with. In many cases, dressing a particular way meets a customer
need. In the past, we could get away with not meeting this need
because we could meet a much bigger need that could not be
easily met elsewhere. The customer needed us more than we needed
the customer, and so, the customer ignored the smaller need,
in order that the larger need was met.
That situation is no longer true. There are now a sufficient
number and quality of providers of computing services that
the customer can afford to pick and choose. The customer doesn't
need us any more, and if we want to be successful we must meet
the more of the customers needs, even if they don't appear to be
logical. Otherwise the customer will go to a vendor who meets
both the need for computing equipment, *and* the need for
feeling comfortable with how suppliers dress.
Tom_K
|
2019.122 | not clothes - try RESPECT | VCSESU::JOHNSON | | Fri Aug 07 1992 23:39 | 33 |
| I could be all wet (I frequently am) but it seems to me that, at least
when on a customer's site, our TOTAL persona - attitude, demeanor, and
appearance - should reflect candor and respect. I have dealt with far
too many impeccably dressed used car salesmen and an equal number of
gentlemen in dirty coveralls. Any bets on who's company I'd prefer ???
Many years ago in at a long forgotten place called RCA Computer Systems
Division, I had the opportunity to actively supervise the installation
of a custom built tape sub-system I had helped design. The site was
operated by RCA for a customer, Conn. General Insurance in East Hartford.
When I arrived at the site, dressed appropriately to crawl under false
floors to re-route cables, I was met by the assistant site manager, also
an RCA employee, who knew only he was to "take direction from Mr Johnson"
who would arrive that day. When he saw me in blue jeans, he was certain
I could not possibly be the right Mr Johnson so he informed me, without
so much as an introduction, that "laborers are expected to use the rear
entrance".
As it turned out, I *** WAS *** dressed inappropriately after all. My
jeans stayed clean while the overly pompous assistant site manager, who
judged me solely by appearance, soiled his beautiful Brooks Brothers
suit while doing the work I came prepared to do.
To this day, I seldom wear a tie - BUT I certainly do when I go on a
customer visit. I try not to pre-judge others on appearance alone, and
I do my best to make the customer feel comfortable with my presence.
If that means I have to wear a Hart, Shaffner, and Marx three piece
suit with silk tie, well I do own one (somewhere) that might still fit.
Conversely, I have also worn a T-shirt and jeans to a data center pizza
lunch with a few Fortune 500 CEO's. Take your pick.
/mj
|
2019.123 | situation makes a difference | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Sat Aug 08 1992 19:19 | 18 |
| re .-the last couple...
when I come to work here at ZKO I wear blue jeans. I may pass
customers in the hall, but I also may crawl around under systems
without fear of expensive damage to nice clothes.
last time I was onsite with a customer, I was better dressed than any
of the bank's employees (except the first morning, when the airline
hadn't yet found my bags).
I figure if there are customer personnel visiting my home turf here at
ZKO, they should understand that if they are not dealing directly with
me they do not know what the requirements of my job might be, so they
should not judge my attire in passing. If they are dealing with me,
I'll apply the same consideration I show when I'm visiting their home
turf.
--bruce
|
2019.124 | Sure does... | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Sun Aug 09 1992 00:23 | 5 |
| re .123
Nice attitude, if it's a sellers market. Too bad it ain't.
/Butch
|
2019.125 | | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Sun Aug 09 1992 19:10 | 12 |
| .124> Nice attitude, if it's a sellers market. Too bad it ain't.
In either a buyers market or a sellers market, packaging and image
matter.
In a rational market, substance matters more than either package or
image.
What I was saying in .123 is that I'll concentrate on that substance
rather than worry about managing external perceptions. And if the
market gets so crazy that image outweighs substance enough to drive me
out, I'll just find another market (or make one).
|
2019.126 | Horses for courses.... | ASICS::LESLIE | Goodbye, Yellow Brick Road. | Sun Aug 09 1992 20:23 | 6 |
| Actually I found that jeans always guaranteed interest from a customers
technical folks whilst all the suits talked.
Fine by me.
/a
|
2019.127 | in the eyes of the beholder | ALIEN::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Mon Aug 10 1992 16:46 | 13 |
| .126> Actually I found that jeans always guaranteed interest from a customers
.126> technical folks whilst all the suits talked.
That reminded me of a frequently repeated comment by the supervisor in
Edu Services who hired me into the corporation to teach system
internals and software support courses, to the effect that students in
the introductory "user" courses wouldn't trust any instructor who didn't
wear a suit, and the system programmer students wouldn't trust anyone
who did.
Of course, that was back in the old days, when we sold technical
products to technical users and couldn't keep up with demand...
(hm, wonder if there's any subtle insight hidden somewhere there?)
|
2019.128 | jes' valuin' them differences | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Motivationally Challenged | Mon Aug 10 1992 19:13 | 18 |
| Well, I guess the cut-offs and the muscle shirts will have to go (the
suit will hide the tatoos too, so I guess that's two birds with one
stone). ;^}
Seriously, though, I was wondering about some other things. Do you
think I'll have to get rid of the beard? It's kind of long, but I do
try to keep it nice and trim. And the hair -- I can always put in a
pony tail, I guess. I wear glasses -- is this the right time to switch
to contacts? Then there's the earlobe I lost in some bar in Hong Kong
somewhere. Are there prosthetics for that kind of thing? Can I write
it off as a tax deduction (I don't think I can expense it, can I?)?
Umm, let's see what else? Oh yes, I did try pot once -- though I
didn't inhale. I haven't gotten up to much adultery lately, as I'm
still single -- though I did lust after Gennifer Flowers in my heart.
I am not now nor ever have been a member of the Communist Party (though
I was tempted to vote Socialist Worker once). Let's see ...
-- Cliff
|
2019.129 | Cliff, you forgot the nosering! | MIMS::HUSSEY_D | NOT the MAMA!!! NOT the MAMA!!! | Mon Aug 10 1992 20:26 | 1 |
|
|
2019.130 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Motivationally Challenged | Mon Aug 10 1992 20:44 | 7 |
| Dave:
How's it going down there? You know, on second thought, I think
.128 really sounds more like you than me. Nice hearing from
you,
-- Cliff
|
2019.131 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Mon Aug 10 1992 22:53 | 30 |
| To me, .121 summed it up best:
> Customers want to feel comfortable with those they do business with.
When I moved from Engineering (ZKO) to Sales Support, I bought a copy of
"Dress for Success", and used it to purchase 2 suits and accompanying
paraphernalia (ties, white dress shirts, etc). I don't wear suits every
day, but they are always available to me when I need them.
Wool suit with a boring tie or tie-died jeans with a Megadeth t-shirt, it
matters what you wear. And the best thing is to dress just slightly
better than the person you are trying to influence/sell to/whatever.
I guess this relates to the argument in another note about whether our
products should sell themselves because they are superior (with the side
assumption that sales people were sleazy and/or unnecessary), or whether
our company requires top-flight sales talent to beat the big blue marketing
machine. In a fight against IBM, we have to use their weapons, and one
of those weapons is what we wear (including nice suits).
RE: the question about beards
Ok, I guess you were kidding but I thought I would answer it anyway.
I have a full beard, and no one (customer or Digit) has even questioned
me on it. As far as I can tell, if you keep it neat and clean there will
be no problem.
-- Ken Moreau
|
2019.132 | on wearing a beard and its effects in DEC and beyond | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Tue Aug 11 1992 00:28 | 10 |
| ref .-1
I agree, a beard should not be an obstacle to success, as a matter of fact,
I know some very good engineers with big, long, and fully grown beards in
VMS engineering, all the way from senior consultants to principle
engineers, they all seem to function with ease , grace and efficiency
throughout it all.
/Nasser
I spell checked
|
2019.133 | It's `principal' in this context, not `principle' | FRAIS::EDDF12::ROBERTS | | Tue Aug 11 1992 11:38 | 2 |
| Is there a Grammar Checker callable from NOTES??
|
2019.134 | Although we could use a few "principle" engineers... | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Tue Aug 11 1992 12:32 | 1 |
|
|
2019.135 | let's focus on what counts ... | CUPTAY::BAILEY | Season of the Winch | Tue Aug 11 1992 13:17 | 15 |
| I once had a boss in another company who told me that if I wanted to
succeed in his organization I'd lose weight, shave my beard off, and
wear suits to work. His priorities were weighted more toward
appearance than toward performance, and eventually he ended up getting
canned because he couldn't manage to keep his better performers from
transferring to other jobs and his (customer services) organization
looked good, but fell short of it's intended purpose.
He also had this annoying habit of correcting people's spelling and
grammer, while ignoring the content of their message. I guess it's only
natural that when you don't have anything significant to add to a
conversation that you tend to focus on the insignificant.
... Bob
|
2019.136 | re .135 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Feeling empowered now, boy | Tue Aug 11 1992 13:32 | 7 |
| > He also had this annoying habit of correcting people's spelling and
> grammer, while ignoring the content of their message. I guess it's only
"Grammer"? "GrammEr"? C'mon, Bob, you did that on purpose,
didn't you?
-- Cliff
|
2019.137 | | GAZELE::MURRY | Revolution Calling | Tue Aug 11 1992 14:12 | 15 |
|
All this dress for success stuff is really pretty simple. When
you're selling something, whether it's your own skills or a DEC
product, it's to your advantage to dress for success.
I get a kick out of these people that say "well, OUR products are
so good they'll sell by their own merits." Fine, so you sell X
amount of that product. But you could have sold X + Y amount if
you had a little respect for the customer by dressing appropriately.
Are you out to prove that you can sometimes sell a product with
a bushy beard, or are you out to sell as much of the product as possible?
Dave
|
2019.138 | | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Aug 11 1992 15:03 | 1 |
| Do we have any products with bushy beards?
|
2019.139 | Uh huh | FINALY::BELLAMTE | Me fix! Want bannana NOW! | Tue Aug 11 1992 15:14 | 3 |
|
Yes. A STAR coupler in a 32 node cluster!
|
2019.140 | jes' jokin' | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Feeling empowered now, boy | Tue Aug 11 1992 15:55 | 24 |
| > I get a kick out of these people that say "well, OUR products are
> so good they'll sell by their own merits." Fine, so you sell X
> amount of that product. But you could have sold X + Y amount if
> you had a little respect for the customer by dressing appropriately.
> Are you out to prove that you can sometimes sell a product with
> a bushy beard, or are you out to sell as much of the product as possible?
OK, let me see if I've got this right:
Perverse
vaguely counter-cultural,
kind of adolescent,
totally unrealistic,
certainly outdated,
something or other
vaguely having something
to do with
issues of self-esteem
Product and honesty and stuff
sold like that
Before suit X X
After suit X + Y X - Y
|
2019.141 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Wed Aug 12 1992 10:12 | 13 |
| Re: .121
> Certainly any of us will do the same quality of work whether we
> dress in a suit, or in jeans.
Put me in a suit and tie and watch the quality and quantity plummet. Nice, open
polo type shirts are much more comfortable any day.
I have an article from the International Herald Tribune about this that I
must type in one day. It was most illuminating.
Gavin
|
2019.142 | be carfull not to tie the tie to tight | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Wed Aug 12 1992 12:46 | 17 |
|
ref .-1
I agree, you point out a very important point that can affect the
health and well being of many digital employees, ties , specially work
ties, are known to reduce circulations of blood into the upper regions of
the body, resulting in reduction of critically need oxygen supply to the
neutrinos in the brain, with many undesirable side effects as
hallucinations, confusion, increased stress levels, shaking of the spin ,
to name a few.
Iam not a Medical Doctor, but it is wise for any who is going to
try something like this to consult their family physicians for proper
guidelines on this subject.
/Nasser
I spell checked
|
2019.143 | Be carfull?? | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's all ones and zeros | Wed Aug 12 1992 13:22 | 11 |
|
re .-1
Nasser, you really must stop saying that you spell checked.
What is Iam? And please explain what "shaking of the spin"
is.
This re-checking of replies that you have said that you spell
checked is wasting time and company resources. ;^)
John
|
2019.144 | It's the Department! | LARVAE::NOBLE | | Wed Aug 12 1992 13:30 | 9 |
|
Re .-1
I think you got the wrong idea on Nasser's Terminology.
"I Spell Checked" is the department he works in which has nothing
whatsoever to do with spell checking as you understand it.
:-)
|
2019.145 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Aug 12 1992 14:17 | 2 |
| Hmmm. I thought "I spell checked" meant he had done it once in his life
but had decided never to do it again. Like bungee jumping. :-)
|
2019.146 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Wed Aug 12 1992 14:19 | 17 |
2019.147 | it's a matter of dress | SGOUTL::RUSSELL_D | | Wed Aug 12 1992 14:51 | 5 |
| Tom,
What are you selling to that customer who wants you to wear a dress???
;-)
DAR
|
2019.148 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Aug 12 1992 15:38 | 1 |
| What does the customer want?
|
2019.149 | | GIAMEM::LEFEBVRE | I brake for tailgaters | Wed Aug 12 1992 15:52 | 13 |
| <<< Note 2019.141 by RUTILE::WYNFORD "Dorn a Loon" >>>
>Put me in a suit and tie and watch the quality and quantity plummet. Nice, open
>polo type shirts are much more comfortable any day.
I like dressing casual as much as the next person, but how can what one
wears to work have such an impact on one's performance? Feeling
comfortable is one thing, dressing according to the situation is
another, but to say that the quality and quantity of your work will
suffer due to a suit and tie is a bit much, IMO.
Mark.
|
2019.150 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Aug 12 1992 16:39 | 2 |
| It's just a question of how much a person dislikes a suit and tie.
Your mileage probably differs.
|
2019.151 | dress me up dress me down | PIANST::JANZEN | Writing: a 6K-year tradition | Wed Aug 12 1992 16:45 | 8 |
| I asked the question in .0 because I read in a paper
that BP wears suits and KO doesn't always.
I believe that it is possible to buy a tailored or altered suit
in which you are comfortable. Buy shirts with the right neck
size and don't strangle the tie. Have someone go with you to make
sure you don't get a coat that doesn't CYA etc. That can be
critical.
Tom
|
2019.152 | Is there anyone I didn't get to? | SHALOT::ANDERSON | I Spell Checked | Wed Aug 12 1992 20:36 | 41 |
2019.153 | =) =) =) | LEASH::KLEMANS | | Wed Aug 12 1992 20:49 | 6 |
|
I Like you too, Nasser!
Kiep up the goud werk, =), We need the humor.
M.K.
|
2019.154 | | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Wed Aug 12 1992 21:12 | 24 |
| Can you imagine ZKO with everyone wearing suits?
I wouldn't be able to get any work done, I don't think. I can go out
and meet customers and teach and demo and be "on" while dressed up,
because it feels like part of the work. I also smile and sound really
energetic and enthusiastic while doing this, something that would be
very tiring to try to do while writing or developing something.
I haven't yet figured out how to sit in my cube behind a terminal and
think and write and be creative with a suit on. I have to make sure I
don't get it dirty, don't spill things, don't drop things and have to
crawl around on the floor, never bend over in view of other people, and
avoid unjamming printers or xerox machines all day.
The last time I had an important customer visit downtown Boston in the
financial district, an adolescent with a 50 pound boom box neatly
nailed the nylons and a large chunk of leg on the T on the way in.
I arrived at the customer site with a 4" wide run in the nylons on top
of a gash that started to bleed every time I moved. I joked with the
customer that I didn't need to use my leg to do a great demo, but
secretly thought that jeans would have been simpler all the way around.
Oh well, anything for mother DEC!
|
2019.155 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | ...57 channels, and nothin' on... | Thu Aug 13 1992 13:37 | 17 |
|
For Nasser...
Owed Two Checkers
By Cindy Speer
I have a spelling checker
It came with my PC
It plainly marks four my revue
Mistakes I can not sea.
Iran this poem threw it
I'm sure your pleased too no
Its letter perfect inn its weigh,
My checker tolled mi sew?
|
2019.156 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Thu Aug 13 1992 14:39 | 7 |
| > Can you imagine ZKO with everyone wearing suits?
I don't believe that anyone suggested that. What was suggested
was that when meeting with a customer, we should dress in the way
the customer expects a professional to present themself.
Tom_K
|
2019.157 | re .156 | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Aug 13 1992 14:51 | 3 |
| I suggested it! But I just suggested imagining it. ;-]
|
2019.158 | | BEING::MCCULLEY | DEC Pro | Thu Aug 13 1992 15:42 | 24 |
| .149>>Put me in a suit and tie and watch the quality and quantity plummet. Nice,
.149>>open polo type shirts are much more comfortable any day.
.149> I like dressing casual as much as the next person, but how can what
.149> one wears to work have such an impact on one's performance? Feeling
.149> comfortable is one thing{...}but to say that the quality and quantity
.149> of your work will suffer due to a suit and tie is a bit much, IMO.
IYO. Feeling comfortable is part of being able to perform at peak.
If I am wearing clothes that cost an appreciable part of a week's
salary (eg, several days pay) I am more aware of the costume and
potential threats of damage to it than I am when I am wearing jeans
that cost an hour or two and are more durable. That little bit of
distraction is just enough to make me uncomfortable and take the edge
off my concentration. When I'm dealing with system issues of the
degree of complexity that I enjoy, that difference can be significant.
There is a difference depending on environment, also. If I am
presenting material in a formal meeting, the environment is less likely
to pose hazards and I do not have the same degree of distraction. If I
am crawling around cabling systems or trying to debug hardware, the
hazards are much higher than normal and wearing jeans instead of a suit
is preferrable. So it still comes back to the situation and adapting
to it...
|
2019.159 | | FREE::GOGUEN | A closed mouth gathers no feet | Thu Aug 13 1992 16:13 | 6 |
| So what's the big deal?? You meet with a customer, you wear a suit.
You sit behind your terminal all day at ZKO, you wear jeans.
Did I miss something?? :-)
-- dg
|
2019.160 | just a guess... | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Aug 13 1992 18:23 | 3 |
| I think the big deal is that some of us thrive on what you describe in
.159, and some people fear that some day we may no longer have a
choice.
|
2019.161 | dress the part | ODIXIE::RHARRIS | Bowhunters never hold back! | Thu Aug 13 1992 19:20 | 22 |
| Dress for the job. If you visit customers onsite or offsite, wear a
suit. You represent the company, and you should look your best. You
are the company to the customer.
If you are in front of a terminal answering calls all day, it is
probably proper to dress in business casual. If you are wearing jeans
and a t shirt, when a customer tour comes through the facility, that is
a negative. There is a place for everything. I work in the southern
area headquarters, and I know of alot of people including myself that
can get nice doublebreasted suits for under $150. I know alot of
people that work in the csc that wear fancy big name label GQ clothing
that cost more than two of my suits. I don't think that money has
anything to do with wearing a suit or not. Not to continue rambling
on, but just dress for the job. Be professional.
Remember, clothing is just HALF the presentation, attitude and
responsiveness are the other half.
fwiw, I really like the way Bob Palmer dresses, we need that image!
Bob
|
2019.162 | What does personal preference matter? | VFOVAX::PATTERSON | The world is flat, it's the universe thats round | Thu Aug 13 1992 20:00 | 19 |
| Why should a person be judged by the clothes they wear?
If the clothes are non-offensive and clean, why should anyone care
what someone else is wearing?
It is a form of descrimination and conformism to require (physically,
or by lower performance reviews) a person to dress in a specific
manner. Yet this is done in our socitity (both Digital and the US)
everyday.
Does the fact that I like to wear jeans mean I am less skilled/talented
at my job, than someone who likes to wear a suit?
If we should all dress to meet the expectations of our customers,
should we also all get the same hair cut as the customer? How about
height, if the customer is short, should we cut them off at the knees
so the customer won't have to look up at the employee?
Jim Patterson
|
2019.163 | | GAZELE::MURRY | Revolution Calling | Thu Aug 13 1992 20:30 | 6 |
|
This topic has nothing to do with skill. It has everything to do
with customer perception. It's been shown over and over that when
you wear a suit, the customer is more agreeable to what you're
trying to get them to do (buy, signup, whatever).
|
2019.164 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Thu Aug 13 1992 20:49 | 24 |
| Oh, man, I can't believe this gets so much attention.
You know, if they instituted dress codes around DEC, I'd probably be the first
to start wearing jeans with REAL BIG holes in them, and tee-shirts that serve
double duty as moths' nests.
But, I fail to see how what I wear affects the quality of my work. As it
happens, I was a software engineer, and I spent most of that time wearing
business suits to work. In the last nine years, I've only worn any sort of
pants at work once. Over the last seven years, it's almost always been a
(skirted) business suit of some sort. Why? Because I want to.
Now, I don't wear ties, but I do keep the top button to my blouse buttoned. It
doesn't cut off the circulation to my brain, it doesn't make me feel
uncomfortable at my desk, and it hasn't (yet) hindered my performance on the
job in any way. Nor does it distract me. Face it, there's not much that I can
do to damage my clothes when my job is to type at a keyboard all day.
I don't care whether an engineer wears a $1K suit or a "butt floss" bikini to
work. I just don't understand why it's necessary to trash one form of dress
over another. If someone tells me that I have to dress a certain way, yes, I
feel indignation. That's different from having to say "Well, I can't wear suits
at work, because they'd degrade my performance". The latter is true only if you
make it so.
|
2019.165 | I know, a rathole | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Thu Aug 13 1992 21:33 | 17 |
| Except that if you have an odd body type and don't quite fit size
whatever, either squeezing into the parts that are tight or swimming in
the tent-like parts can be distracting and uncomfortable. You have the
option to buy custom tailored business clothes, I suppose. Or shop
endlessly to find the few that fit you.
LL Bean type clothes always seem to find a way to conform to your body
after you wear them a while...plus they are always sold as separates.
I'm not advocating looking like a slob in front of customers, although
imho, customers that walk through an engineering site should be prepared to
see people who look like they are paid to think, code, and write, not
dress up.
I am saying that for a subset of people, business clothes are an
extremely uncomfortable stretch that are best saved only for those
occasions that really require them.
|
2019.166 | | OXNARD::KOLLING | Karen/Sweetie/Holly/Little Bit Ca. | Thu Aug 13 1992 23:32 | 10 |
| Re: Well, I can't wear suits at work, because they'd degrade my
performance". The latter is true only if you make it so.
No, it's true when it's true. I'd say I'm 10 to 15% more productive
when I wear comfortable clothes, because zero cells in my brain are
devoted to topics like: will this rip my nylons? what's going to show
and how much damage will I do to expensive clothes if I sit on the floor
to rip the innards out of my pc? oops, can't put my feet up and read
docs comfortably, etc.
|
2019.167 | Enough starch in the jeans + | TPSYS::BUTCHART | TNSG/Software Performance | Fri Aug 14 1992 01:26 | 14 |
| I wear suits, I wear jeans, I wear stuff in between, and I haven't seen
sillier arguments against suits in a long time. I wear what I think
will make the people I'm meeting with feel comfortable (and willing
to buy).
If your suit is uncomfortable, you don't know how to buy a suit, you
have an overly rigid mind set, or you have some fairly specific
allergies. In any of those cases, you need help. Get some, and stop
whining. Don't expect any sympathy from me for plaints indicating
mental rigidity. The company has enough people with those symptoms.
/Butch
|
2019.168 | ... and where are those wing-tip Reeboks? ... | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Aug 14 1992 03:20 | 19 |
| The comfort issue is probably an "acquired taste" issue - if one were
required to wear a suit regularly, one could get used to it an
accommodate the inconveniences. (Though an engineer wearing a suit will
get enough "You going for an interview?" questions during the course of
the day to try anyone's patience.)
I generally follow the "my turf / your turf" approach - a customer
seeing me at ZKO will see me the way I customarily work - usually twills
and sports shirts - even if I'm in a meeting with said customer (formal
presentations would be an exception, but I've yet to give one to a
customer on home turf, and I don't get involved with sales-oriented
customer meetings - primarily tech exchanges). Outside of my "home turf"
(i.e. DECUS) I'll wear jacket and tie ... and occasionally, my suit ...
I did buy one a few years back for DECUS. I can't imagine going so far
as a double-breasted, pin-striped, or vested getup, though; I'm an
engineer, not a funeral director.
For people that wear suits regularly - doesn't it get boring to always
wear the same thing? Or do you actually have more than one suit?
|
2019.169 | is this just men whining only note? | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Fri Aug 14 1992 03:55 | 12 |
|
This discussion seems concentrated about ties ,suits , double breasted
attire, vested jackets and the like , which is all cloths for our
gentleman-type-employees, but what about our ladies-type-employees?, do
they have same issues to ponder as the ones that our
gentlemen-type-employees seem to be pondering in as far as the fine line
differentiating clothing related issues and matters that seems to
distinguish casual from business type of clothing?
Thank you,
/Nasser
I spill checked
|
2019.170 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Fri Aug 14 1992 10:31 | 21 |
| >.149>>Put me in a suit and tie and watch the quality and quantity plummet. Nice,
>.149>>open polo type shirts are much more comfortable any day.
>.149> I like dressing casual as much as the next person, but how can what
>.149> one wears to work have such an impact on one's performance? Feeling
>.149> comfortable is one thing{...}but to say that the quality and quantity
>.149> of your work will suffer due to a suit and tie is a bit much, IMO.
I am a writer. I cannot type well or concentrate (due to discomfort) when
wearing long sleeves or with a closed collar. Simple as that. It is not "a bit
much". It's a fact.
The idea of wearing suits is only relatively recent. It, along with 9-5 working
days, should go the way of the dodo. Impress with the quality of your work, not
by the fact you wear a $1000 suit and commute with the masses.
I have only worked in one place that had a dress code. Guess which member of
their staff was allowed to work in jeans and tee-shirt? Not me, I was too
junior. Nope, the one guy they could not afford to lose. I think it was that
place that finally convinced me of the hypocritical nature of such things.
Gavin
|
2019.171 | | AIMHI::BOWLES | | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:13 | 29 |
|
Note 2019.159 Suits
159 of 170
FREE::GOGUEN "A closed mouth gathers no feet" 6 lines
13-AUG-1992 12:13
So what's the big deal?? You meet with a customer, you wear a suit.
You sit behind your terminal all day at ZKO, you wear jeans.
Did I miss something?? :-)
-- dg
I copied note # 159 for you to read again. What could be more clear?
End of story,
Chet
|
2019.172 | | TOMK::KRUPINSKI | Repeal the 16th Amendment! | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:19 | 13 |
| >I have only worked in one place that had a dress code. Guess which member of
>their staff was allowed to work in jeans and tee-shirt? Not me, I was too
>junior. Nope, the one guy they could not afford to lose.
That's sort of my point. There was a time when many customers
"could not afford to lose Digital" as a supplier. So they put
up with a number of things from us that they wouldn't have, except
that we had something they wanted. Now, the market has changed,
and they can get what they want from a number of sources.
They don't need us anymore. So if we want to effectively compete,
we must change.
Tom_K
|
2019.173 | | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Fri Aug 14 1992 13:53 | 19 |
| In the field, we wear what our customers expect us to wear.
For most customers, this is a standard "IBM" dark colored business suit.
For some customers, this is business casual (golf shirt, casual pants, shoes)
...some customers are very explicit... if you wear a suit, you don't get in.
For one particular customer, a steelmill, you wear workboots, old jeans, and
stuff you may never be able to wear again. Hardhats, ear plugs, and eye
protection are issued at the door.
This gets real interesting when you have to call on more than one "type" of
account on the same day. (Field offices don't have lockers or even "real"
restrooms)
You wear what is required to close the sale, regardless of how it affects your
circulation.
Bob
|
2019.174 | | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:10 | 10 |
| Nasser asked about women's business clothes - Karen and I and Lee way
back have all mentioned the horror of nylons. Some women really do
like wearing them; some women tolerate them; others find them brutal.
Just having them near my skin gives me the creeps, but I make an
exception and wear them for funerals and DEC customers.
It would be nice to have a very professional looking women's suit with
slacks become a fully acceptable alternative to suits with skirts, but
I wouldn't currently feel right about going to a customer site in a
pantsuit. What do other women think about this?
|
2019.175 | | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:12 | 24 |
|
What a bunch of baloney all of this is.
Since when does the employee define the job?
If your boss tells you what the appropriate attire for the job is to be, then
that is what you wear. Period.
Clothes are made of cloth. They are easily altered with needle and thread. If
it's too big, take it in, if its too small, let it out. Simple as that. If the
collar is too tight, get a bigger collar.
If you cannot conform to the dress standards (or any standards for that matter)
that the job requires, I am sure that there is someone who will.
So, would you rather be unemployed than have to wear a suit instead of jeans?
If so, then I agree with the Japanese about the American work ethic.
Sheesh, what a bunch of whining babies.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.176 | | FIGS::BANKS | This was | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:20 | 34 |
| So far:
Long sleeves have never interfered with my ability to type, and I do a *LOT* of
typing.
Closed collars have not interfered with my ability to breathe or think. Even
snug closed collars.
Never once have I worried about running my hose while typing, nor for that
matter, have I ever run my hose on the many occasions that I've had to open a
system up to install a new disk drive, crawl under the desk to recable, or any
of the other dozens of non-programming things that I find myself doing.
This is not to say that I don't have a problem keeping my hose intact at work.
The biggest problem I have is snagging them on the rough edges of the chairs
in the cafeteria. Most of the work related hose running happens on my breaks.
Again, this doesn't interfere with my job.
Now, I have no problems with someone prefering not to wear this sort of
clothing at work. I do have problems with someone telling ME that my wearing
what I wear interferes with my work.
Although, if I wanted to play along, I could talk about how wearing
uncomfortable jeans (yes, I DO find jeans to be extremely uncomfortable) would
interfere with my work, therefore I shouldn't do it, and therefore, it
interferes with everyone's work. The trouble is that my experiences are my
own, and just because I have a hard time working in jeans doesn't mean that
everyone else would, too.
And, I might point out that my discomfort in jeans is largely of my own making.
I'm just not used to wearing them, and I'm not used to all the places that they
pinch, grab and squeeze that a skirt doesn't. Again, if I'm uncomfortable in
some sort of clothes (assuming that they fit reasonably), that's mainly of my
own making.
|
2019.177 | | TEXAS1::SOBECKY | It's all ones and zeros | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:34 | 16 |
|
Umm..I haven't had a chance to read all the responses, so my
question may have already been answered..
Is a dress code being instituted in Digital? Or is this topic just
a big "what if" exercise?
BTW, I agree with the responses that say "dress to make the
customer feel comfortable" and "when at your desk, wear jeans
and when at customer sites, wear a suit (or whatever the customer
wants you to wear)".
What could be simpler?
John
|
2019.178 | | KNGBUD::B_SIART | Say something that makes me think! | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:34 | 9 |
| reply .175
Okay then, if the company PAYS for my suits then I'll wear
them. But when one is on a VERY limited budget, (i.e. read DIVORCED)
and doesn't presently own any suits, what do you expect those people
should do?
-B
|
2019.179 | DEC pays for jeans? | HERON::BLOMBERG | Trapped inside the universe | Fri Aug 14 1992 15:57 | 9 |
2019.180 | | JMPSRV::MICKOL | We won with Xerox in '92 | Fri Aug 14 1992 16:04 | 10 |
| I think what all of this chatter means is that people are different. I've been
in Sales Support for almost three years and I really dislike wearing a suit.
Unfortunately, it is required that I wear suits frequently. I have 5 suits and
they fit ok, but nothing beats a nice golf shirt, casual pants and a pair of
comfortable sneakers. Fortunately, I have a manager that allows us to come
into work in business casual clothes if we're not meeting with customers.
Regards,
Jim
|
2019.181 | | SYSTEM::COCKBURN | Craig Cockburn | Fri Aug 14 1992 16:18 | 43 |
| > <<< Note 2019.179 by HERON::BLOMBERG "Trapped inside the universe" >>>
> -< DEC pays for jeans? >-
> I'm in a similar situation. I like wearing a white shirt and a tie.
> I don't even own a pair of jeans. But of course, if the company
> pays for a pair of jeans, I might wear them - in the office. (No, I'm
> not a manager, I'm hacking Fortran and Macro.)
Jeans are considerably cheaper than a suit. You can buy a decent pair of
jeans and a t-shirt for less than $30. I doubt a suit would be so cheap.
Jeans are also casual wear, suitable for wearing at home. Look around at
the weekend and see how people are dressed when they're not at work.
Given the choice, most people would rather be wearing casual clothes
which cost less rather than tarting themselves up.
Many customers who wear suits don't wear them because they want to, they
wear them because they have too, because it's a rule where they work.
I used to work for a life assurance company, and they took this to riduculous
extremes. I had to wear a suit and tie even though it was 90F in the office
(an attic with no air conditioning) and I was operating machinery which the
tie could have got caught in. Women (doing the same job, in the same office)
could wear anything, including tight jeans. Fair?
100 years ago, people wouldn't even have considered the possibility of turning
up to an office in anything less than a suit. Thank goodness for enlightened
companies such as Digital, Apple and Microsoft. Nowadays, things are a bit
more flexible as people measure what you achieve rather than what you look
like.
In some countries you are thought less of as a result of your skin colour.
Fortunately, many countries no longer discriminate on that appearance, but
still we persist with the suit scenario. Is it really that different?
When you look at attitudes of 100 years ago, you can see that today we're
much more casual. Suits are getting less necessary, what we need to think
about is how comfortable we are with the rate of change.
Suits are a relic of the past. If more women had been working back in
history when this silly traditional got hold, then perhaps they would
have a narrow minded dress code too.
Craig
|
2019.182 | | SYSTEM::COCKBURN | Craig Cockburn | Fri Aug 14 1992 16:38 | 6 |
| There was an article on the back page of Computing or Computer Weekly
in the last few weeks about a company which IBM sold recently. The
company in question has since banned the wearing of ties on Fridays
because people were taking themselves too seriously.
Craig
|
2019.183 | Others do it, why can't we? | RIPPLE::NORDLAND_GE | Waiting for Perot :^) | Fri Aug 14 1992 16:50 | 13 |
|
RE: entire subject
Very interesting program on "Street Stories" last night about a place
called Delancy Street where they 'rehabilitated' parolees and other
down_and_outs. Their technique - called "Act As If", if you want to BE
successful, ACT successful. One key element - you WILL wear a coat and
tie. By the way, it is one of the most successful programs of its type
in the country.
Gosh, I wonder if DEC can be 'rehabilitated'?
JN
|
2019.184 | Nothing wrong with dressing up | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Fri Aug 14 1992 17:10 | 31 |
| To this point, I had been "read-only" on this subject.... BUT
It is interesting... When I worked back east, in PKO1, I'd wear a dress
shirt and tie (no coat required) everyday... because it was the
required atire. I was comfortable, and once in awhile, I would even
wear a suit, because I was REAL comfortable in a suit (as long as I
could fit into it, that is).
Since moving to Colorado, I have had to adapt to a VERY new lifestyle
of VERY casual atire... as a matter of fact, the few times I had my
"east coast" atire on, it was pointed out to me that the only people
who wear such things here are sales-types and customers..
When I travel to the east, I actually look forward to wearing the suit.
Though the casualness of life here has caused my suit to shrink a few
sized 8^).....
I for one would like to see some kind of middle road in this area. I
know of companys that dress in suits on Monday thru Thursday, then
"dress down" on Fridays.... BUT, even there "dress down" dress code is
of reasonable atire, as to look at least presentable.
IMHO, there are some places in Digital that have gotten carried away
when it comes to "dressing down" (casual).... I mean, some of the stuff
people wear would have been used in my house, as rags, long before they
reached the state these people wear them...
Just one persons' opinion..!
Bob G.
|
2019.185 | ... and are these open standards? ... | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Aug 14 1992 17:38 | 10 |
| >If you cannot conform to the dress standards (or any standards for that matter)
>that the job requires, I am sure that there is someone who will.
I don't disagree with this (tone aside), but it hasn't been established
that for engineers that "the job requires" a different mode of dress
than casual. Nobody I've worked for has ever suggested otherwise. And I
haven't noticed any notes in here which indicated "my boss told me to
wear X but I refuse to" or anything similar.
So *who* is not "conforming to the dress standards"?
|
2019.186 | Dress as appropriate for your situation. | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Fri Aug 14 1992 18:02 | 29 |
|
There's a bottom line to all this:
Do what is appropriate to your situation.
We are all professionals, from the assembly workers to the veeps.
Act that way.
If you are a salesman serving the financial district, you have no business
coming to work any less formal than a serious suit.
If you work in a dirty manufacturing job, a suit would be ridiculous.
If you work in software engineering, you wear what local norms say you should,
which gives you a LOT of latitude.
Customers are not stupid. They understand all this, and expect us to
dress according to our own norms. I have heard of customers who would
not listen to a "techie" in a suit, because they believed that any real
engineer would not wear one.
I have been told by a customer, quote, "We don't wear suits here. You can if
you want, but we'd all be more comfortable if you didn't."
You do what's appropriate to the situation. That is not global any more than
our situations are all alike. In some situations, dressing down allows the
customer to regard you as "one of the team". That opens a lot of ears.
Lose the parochialism.
Just because one form of dress is the right thing for your situation doesn't
mean that it is right (as in the most productive for Digital) in others'
situations.
Kevin Farlee
|
2019.187 | In my book successful peole dress casual. | VFOVAX::PATTERSON | The world is flat, it's the universe thats round | Fri Aug 14 1992 21:00 | 16 |
| > Very interesting program on "Street Stories" last night about a place
> called Delancy Street where they 'rehabilitated' parolees and other
> down_and_outs. Their technique - called "Act As If", if you want to BE
> successful, ACT successful. One key element - you WILL wear a coat and
> tie. By the way, it is one of the most successful programs of its type
> in the country.
Ah, but you miss the point. Who get to decide what a successful
person must look like? No matter how successful (you can measure
by any terms you want) I become, I will not by choice wear a tie.
I do however wear a tie (slacks, and dress shirt) monday thru thursday
not by choice, not because we have customers here, but rather because
my manager has asked that of our group.
Jim Patterson
|
2019.188 | not an entitlement | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Fri Aug 14 1992 21:58 | 65 |
| <<< Note 2019.178 by KNGBUD::B_SIART "Say something that makes me think!" >>>
>> Okay then, if the company PAYS for my suits then I'll wear
>> them. But when one is on a VERY limited budget, (i.e. read DIVORCED)
>> and doesn't presently own any suits, what do you expect those people
>> should do?
You BUY one!
When I was fresh almost out of college and had NO money I still managed to find
a way to buy a suit to wear to interviews. Once I got a job I managed to find
the money to buy a full weeks of nice clothes to wear to the office. I had to
do without cable TV for my first year. I had to do without a VCR the first
year. I did without a LOT of stuff this first year until I had stuff paid off.
However, I did what was neccessary to become successful. I did what was
neccessary to get the job. I did what was neccessary to keep the job.
I worked in an environment that was even more casual than DEC (if you can
believe that!). However I still wore white shirts and a tie. I do know that it
made a difference in people's perceptions of me. I heard the talk on the
grapevine and overheard conversations when they thought I was out of earshot.
YOUR ATTIRE MAKES A DIFFERENCE.
Sure, it doesn't make you a better performer or more competent, but it DOES
affect people's impressions of you. Plain and simple, there is a psychological
effect.
Years ago there was a survey taken of high school students. They were asked to
evaluate their teachers. In all cases the teachers who dressed 'up' (not
neccessarily suits, but even sport coats) consistently got the better reviews.
I can go on and on about studies to support this assertion. It is fact.
But none of it matters when it comes to a job.
The EMPLOYEE does NOT define the job, the EMPLOYER does. If I am told that I
must wear a blue pinstripe suit from now on and I have a closet full of grey
pinstripes, you can bet I'll go out and buy a blue one. Period. Of course my
alternative is to rebel and refuse, but what does that serve? My management
will get upset and we will now have a problem. Eventually I would probably be
replaced.
I don't know of ANYBODY who can't be replaced.
There is NOBODY in this or ANY company who is so critical to the company that
the company cannot do without them, nor find someone to replace them.
Look around you at the people who have been TFSO'd. If they were told 'you can
stay but you have to wear a monkey suit', what do you think that they would do?
Most of them would be GLAD to do so.
I just feel that if you are going to let your attire stand in your way of doing
your job, then you are indeed not interested enough in working for a living.
A job is not an entitlement.
If you cannot be a team player, you will be left to go to another team. Nobody
needs a dissenter these days.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.189 | example of a sloppy dressor person who was a success | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:01 | 22 |
| Yes, I agree too, it is also known that Einstein used to be sloppy
dresser, he sometimes used to forgot to put on socks or put on a pair
that were miss match, I read that his wife used to nag him about
his sloppy cloths all the time.
but he was a success, as we all know, by any means of the word.
Iam so impressed by him, I've been trying to emulate him for a long time,
but to no avail, I tried every thing, with socks and with no socks,
tried different pairs at the same time, tried one sock on one foot, and no
sock on the other, but nothing seems to work.
but the point of the wise of this all, is that people can be very
successful even if they are very sloppy dressers, and we should not
judge the content of the book by its cover !
well, enough wise talk for now, you all have a very good weekend.
Thank you,
/Nasser
I spell checked
|
2019.190 | that's show biz ! | SALSA::MOELLER | I spill czech | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:05 | 7 |
| Rant all we want, first and subsequent impressions are important.
I ditch the tie on days I don't see customers. Sometimes, if the
customer is an engineering group, I'll 'forget' to wear the tie.
No sense alienating your audience.
karl
|
2019.191 | which label do you wear? | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:10 | 31 |
| >> >If you cannot conform to the dress standards (or any standards for that matter)
>> >that the job requires, I am sure that there is someone who will.
>>
>> I don't disagree with this (tone aside), but it hasn't been established
>> that for engineers that "the job requires" a different mode of dress
>> than casual. Nobody I've worked for has ever suggested otherwise. And I
>> haven't noticed any notes in here which indicated "my boss told me to
>> wear X but I refuse to" or anything similar.
>>
>> So *who* is not "conforming to the dress standards"?
Well, as you are aware, there is for the most part, not much in the way of a
dress standard at DEC. Most people are left up to their own choice.
The point I wanted to address was the attitude that seems to be pervading the
note that some people feel that they have some sort of 'right' to dress however
they want and if DEC wants otherwise, then DEC is responsible to pay for that
attire.
Maybe the tone I used was too emphatic (it was meant to be). But my attitude
still stands. DEC pays us to do a job. If DEC wants us to dress a certain way,
then that too is part of the job (it comes with the 'territory').
Again, how many of us are willing to be unemployed v/s have to wear a {form of
attire which you feel is uncomfortable}?
For me, wearing the UNEMPLOYED label is the most uncomfortable attire of all.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.192 | | SUBWAY::CANZONERI | SuperNatural | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:29 | 24 |
| Last year when I was part of an engineering group and never saw
customers I routinely went to work in jeans and a t-shirt. As a favor
to an ex-boss I agreed to go with a salesrep to a customer (a large NY
bank) to investigate some performance issues on their cluster. We were
supposed to go on a Tuesday. Monday morning the salesrep calls and
asks if we could go today instead:
Me: "Uhh okay, but first I'll have to go home and throw some
go-to-see-the-customer clothes on."
Her: "Don't bother. You'll probably have more credibility dressed
the way you are."
They bought >$1,000,000 worth of hardware to upgrade their cluster
and the VP in his three piece suit didn't bat an eye at my jeans and
sneakers.
I only own one suit. I'm a six footer, weight 270# and have a
chest size of 52". NO ONE makes suits to my demensions off the rack.
Last suit took over $100 in alterations and I still looked dopey in it.
I wear it on the first customer visit and from then on it's just a
shirt and tie. No one has complained yet.
-Sal
|
2019.193 | ... and sometimes Banana Republic ... | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:34 | 3 |
| > -< which label do you wear? >-
Dockers.
|
2019.194 | Much adieu over Nissan? | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Aug 14 1992 22:47 | 16 |
| What I see are these two points:
>Well, as you are aware, there is for the most part, not much in the way of a
>dress standard at DEC. Most people are left up to their own choice.
...
>Maybe the tone I used was too emphatic (it was meant to be). But my attitude
>still stands. DEC pays us to do a job. If DEC wants us to dress a certain way,
>then that too is part of the job (it comes with the 'territory').
The first point seems to negate the reasons to get excited about the
second, it strikes me. If and when the first point changes, the second
suddenly becomes relevant.
Until then...
|
2019.195 | What does a 270# engineer wear?.... | STUDIO::HAMER | ain't no luck, I learned to duck | Sat Aug 15 1992 11:45 | 11 |
| >>They bought >$1,000,000 worth of hardware to upgrade their cluster and
>>the VP in his three piece suit didn't bat an eye at my jeans and
>>sneakers.
>>
>>I only own one suit. I'm a six footer, weight 270# and have a chest
>>size of 52".
So Sal, you don't see a connection here? The VP figured you'd crush him
like a bug.
John H. :-)
|
2019.196 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Sun Aug 16 1992 04:45 | 1 |
| So all our sales people should look like Arnold Schwartzenegger?
|
2019.197 | to our beloved sales people, let the force be with you :-) | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Sun Aug 16 1992 06:25 | 33 |
| <<< Note 2019.196 by SSDEVO::EGGERS "Anybody can fly with an engine." >>>
>So all our sales people should look like Arnold Schwartzenegger?
Yes!
If the customer don't buy, twist those big muscles, and have them sign on
the dotted lines for the deal of your life time.
Be gentle and kind, for the initial time, then spread those shoulder pads
across the table and among the crowds, and show them some of your clean
shirt and how much it really shines.
When the customer seems to retreat , confused about the whole deal,
remove the labeled tie and threaten them with wearing your dirty and
only blue jeans.
When all seems in despair, ask for a brief to go outside and change
and be even more of a sleek.
If the deal is falling indeed, increase your weight and scream, or
better yet, spread your hair with more of that shiny cream that you
saw on TV.
In the field, meeting with customers at ease, is how one can succeed,
so don't be a creep , dress up with the best of gear, even if it means,
being a little funny and weird , but what ever you do, make sure you
don't end up looking like an Engineer , else you might lose that big deal.
/Nasser
I spell checked !
|
2019.198 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Mon Aug 17 1992 10:41 | 66 |
| Re: .175 and .188:
What a tolerant and understanding fellow you are, Steve... Not!
>When I was fresh almost out of college and had NO money I still managed to find
>a way to buy a suit to wear to interviews. Once I got a job I managed to find
>the money to buy a full weeks of nice clothes to wear to the office. I had to
>do without cable TV for my first year. I had to do without a VCR the first
>year. I did without a LOT of stuff this first year until I had stuff paid off.
You remind me a lot of the Monty Python sketch in which the rich cats are
sitting around discussing how poor they were when they were young. With the
exception of people like George Bush we were all young and impoverished when
we started out. Your self-righteous tone cuts no ice with me.
>However, I did what was neccessary to become successful. I did what was
>neccessary to get the job. I did what was neccessary to keep the job.
I became successful by doing a good job, not by adopting a suit and tie.
>The EMPLOYEE does NOT define the job, the EMPLOYER does.
Uh? Employment is a negotiated situation. It is *not* a master/servant
relationship. It is up to you to negotiate and define what you want from your
employer and it is up to the employer to define what he/she wants from you.
If you both agree enough, you sign on the dotted line. Nowhere does it say in
any of my contracts that I shall become a serf...
>pinstripes, you can bet I'll go out and buy a blue one. Period. Of course my
>alternative is to rebel and refuse, but what does that serve?
You are incredibly subservient.
>There is NOBODY in this or ANY company who is so critical to the company that
>the company cannot do without them, nor find someone to replace them.
By the same token, no company is so great that its employees can't leave for
greener pastures.
>Look around you at the people who have been TFSO'd. If they were told 'you can
>stay but you have to wear a monkey suit', what do you think that they would do?
>
>Most of them would be GLAD to do so.
My mind boggles at this assertion. Unless I refer back to your previous
statements, in which case it fits with your world view. You might want to
put your question to those who have gone to Apple, for example...
>I just feel that if you are going to let your attire stand in your way of doing
>your job, then you are indeed not interested enough in working for a living.
>
>A job is not an entitlement.
>
>If you cannot be a team player, you will be left to go to another team. Nobody
>needs a dissenter these days.
How does change start? The last thing a company in trouble needs is a bunch of
yes-men who won't question anything that comes down from on high. Wasn't there
a dissenter called Rose back in the 60s who decided that sitting at the back of
the bus wasn't acceptable...?
Have you read "What Color is Your Parachute"? You might find it enlightening.
If I wanted to wear a uniform I'd have joined the Army.
Gavin
|
2019.199 | Just curious about your leitmotif... | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Mon Aug 17 1992 10:43 | 10 |
| Re: .191
>Again, how many of us are willing to be unemployed v/s have to wear a {form of
>attire which you feel is uncomfortable}?
>
>For me, wearing the UNEMPLOYED label is the most uncomfortable attire of all.
Why do you feel that the only two alternatives are Digital or unemployment?
Gavin
|
2019.200 | The man in the flyaway foulard | SUPER::PARMENTER | No mail to Craig Shergold | Mon Aug 17 1992 13:25 | 2 |
| Dilbert is a computer geek who rarely sees a customer, but he always wears
a tie.
|
2019.201 | | VANGA::KERRELL | Dave Kerrell @REO 830-2279 | Mon Aug 17 1992 13:54 | 7 |
| >I had to do without cable TV for my first year. I had to do without a VCR the
>first year.
This is a wind-up isn't it? I mean, doing without cable tv and VCR are hardly
sacrifices are they?
Dave.
|
2019.202 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Aug 17 1992 18:51 | 2 |
| Hmmm. I've been working for DEC for 28+ years, and I still don't have
cable TV or a VCR. Is that because I don't wear suits?
|
2019.203 | Two distinct problems | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Mon Aug 17 1992 19:35 | 2 |
| Nope, you're stuck in a time warp. The lack of a suit is indicative
of a completely different problem that you have.
|
2019.204 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Aug 17 1992 22:49 | 4 |
| Re: .-1
Gee. I hoped the lack of a suit would cancel out the lack of a VCR.
You're telling me the problems are additive. Damn!
|
2019.205 | Suit first, then VCR, I see | BSS::GROVER | The CIRCUIT_MAN | Tue Aug 18 1992 11:27 | 9 |
| YUP... get a suit and the VCR will come.....!
Varied Customer Response
8^) :^)
Have a nice day.!
|
2019.206 | Coffee: Caff or de-caff - that is the question | ARRODS::DOOLABH | | Tue Aug 18 1992 12:16 | 10 |
| Re .189
/Nasser,
Whilst not being meticulous in his mode of dress, Einstein was adamant
that drinking coffee early in the morning or late at night was
conducive to lowering the quantity and quality of brain cells.
Harry
Is my spell checker working OK?
|
2019.207 | thanks! but may be you are a little too late ;-) | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:47 | 22 |
| >Whilst not being meticulous in his mode of dress, Einstein was adamant
>that drinking coffee early in the morning or late at night was
>conducive to lowering the quantity and quality of brain cells.
>
>Harry
>Is my spell checker working OK?
yeah, and now you come and say!
when the damaged cells are beyond the hope of any repair !
running around confused and in utter despair
asking for the fuel they so much desire and crave
to hold them higher and shake them in the worst of rage
but we don't really much care
we need the nicotine and what ever is in there
to lose the loved cells is the price one must dearly pay
to live happy and elevated or just smart but de-hydrated
is the question we all must ask as we drink our daily caffeinated
/Nasser
TM
I spell checked
|
2019.208 | What it appears to be | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:57 | 37 |
|
Let me pose a question.
When you (plural) interviewed for your current (or initial) job (which is an
assumption on my part) at D.E.C., how many of you wore jeans, T-shirts, etc.?
For those of you for whom D.E.C. is not your first and only employer, how many
of you EVER interviewed in jenas, T-shirts, etc.?
I suspect that the number (if not zero) is quite low.
The point is, you dress nicely to make an impression on a potential employer.
You feel that the company has something you want (a job) and you are willing
(if not adamant) to present as positive an image about yourself as is possible.
You know that there will be several applicants for the job to which you are
applying. So you want to maximize your opportunity in getting the job.
Sure you know that you are the best qualified and that your resume',
accomplishments, ability, etc. should speak for themselves, however you still
dress as nicely as possible in an effort to maximize your impact on a potential
employer.
If nothing else, it is considered a courtesy as well.
The point I was trying to allude to in my previous posts was that appearance
does make a difference when all else is equal. Sometimes all that someone knows
about you is your appearance. You have one shot at a first impression, don't
blow it.
Dress as you feel is appropriate, but bear in mind, even if it is not a
conscious effort, people DO take your appearance into account when they think
about you.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.209 | Jheesh. | CHELSY::GILLEY | All of my applications are VUP Suckers! | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:59 | 6 |
| Steve,
I've been married for 14 years now. Does this mean I should start
brushing my teeth? Could it be that I'm making a bad impression with my wife?
Charlie :-))))))
|
2019.210 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:34 | 7 |
| Steve, if you must know, the last interview I went to I dressed as I always am;
short sleeved open neck shirt (polo/golf type), casual trousers and Reeboks.
I got the job...
Most of my other interviews have been by phone...
Gavin
|
2019.211 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:34 | 12 |
2019.212 | Suits: a slippery, certain slide to Hell | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Dictated, not spell-checked | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:35 | 19 |
| Suit
VCR
Answering machine
Microwave
Golf lessons
Espresso machine
Cellular phone
Porsche Targa
Worrying about the capital gains tax
Voting Republican!
|
2019.213 | Turtleneck worked for me at DEC | WOLF::BECK | Paul Beck, VMS SSG | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:37 | 11 |
| For what it's worth, when I interviewed at DEC (coming in from the outside) I
wore a sports jacket and turtleneck and Sears-esque slacks - no tie (nor
T-shirt and jeans; I never wear T-shirts to work anyway). Got the job. That was
over fifteen years ago; maybe things have changed.
It would never occur to me to suit up for a job interview which was a transfer
with*in* DEC - I'm always puzzled when people within DEC that I'm interviewing
show up dressed to the nines. My reaction is something along the lines of
"here's someone who doesn't understand the culture - that's odd" - not a
negative reaction, but not positive either - neutral.
|
2019.214 | For suits? Or against T-shirts? | WOLF::BECK | Paul Beck, VMS SSG | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:45 | 8 |
| >Dress as you feel is appropriate, but bear in mind, even if it is not a
>conscious effort, people DO take your appearance into account when they think
>about you.
Is the distinction being drawn suit versus open collar, or My Three Sons casual
versus Abbie Hoffman Chicago Seven unwashed? The topic is "Suits", but the
counter-example is always "T-shirts and jeans". There's a wide middle ground
between suits and T-shirts.
|
2019.215 | Engineering must be different | SYORPD::DEEP | Bob Deep - SYO, DTN 256-5708 | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:56 | 10 |
| I know of no one in the field sales organization who would consider interviewing
in anything less than "business attire" (read suit and tie).
I would also question the judgement of someone who would show up for an
interview in a sales organization wearing anything else.
Just plain common sense...
Bob
|
2019.216 | | GUIDUK::FARLEE | Insufficient Virtual...um...er... | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:30 | 12 |
| ... and if I were going for an interview in an engineering organization,
I would not persume to violate their norms and make them (and myself) feel
uncomfortable by wearing a suit. I wouldn't show up grimy either, just neat
and casual.
The point is that you do what is appropriate for each situation. This
corporation is varied enough that nobodys situation can or should be
applied globally.
Kevin Farlee
Spell check? what is "spell check"???
|
2019.217 | This is all true too! | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Dictated, not spell-checked | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:05 | 65 |
| I don't want to play can-you-top-this, but I once had an interview on a
fishing pier. "I'm the one in the Durham Bulls cap," said my
prospective employer. I did not wear a suit (though I was tempted to
wear my OP's).
If I may be serious for a moment (very hard to do BTW), I have had
interviews and jobs at companies that cover the whole range --
sartorially speaking, that is. I've found that where I had to wear a
suit I just simply wasn't that productive. I felt very uptight, I felt
like I couldn't speak my mind, I felt like I had to play politics, I
felt like I had to look busy, I felt like appearances were more
important -- I just didn't feel like myself. Where I've been able to
wear jeans or could throw the frisbee in the hallway or could go out
for an ice cream run, I just felt a whole lot better. Even more
important, though, I felt a lot more productive, creative, involved,
valued. But I don't think it was all me. This may be a wholly
subjective impression, but it seemed like the companies which had dress
codes were also the ones where creativity was stifled, where politics
were played, where intiative was not encouraged, where hierarchy was
rewarded.
To return to interviews for a moment, when I was in my last semester at
school I made up my mind not to interview at IBM at all (though they
were the largest presence on campus at the time, and I could have had
my pick of jobs). I simply figured that their dress code said
something about them, and that it was something I didn't particularly
want to hear.
I was attracted to DEC for a lot of the reasons that I was turned off
by IBM. In fact, when I was ready to make a decision, I was getting
pretty downright counter-suggestive about the whole thing. I remember
this one company out in San Francisco that offered me $6000 more, put
me up in a nice suite overlooking the Bay, had one of their VPs call me
all the time. DEC, on the other hand, put me up at HoJo's (at one
site), skipped taking me out to lunch (at another). "Hey," I said,
"this is the company for me!" And I was right! Half of my graduating
class went to the company out West -- and all were gone after a year of
total burnout. I stayed at the same DEC site for 5 years -- and really
enjoyed every minute of it.
What I'm wondering about though -- and why this note is important to me
-- is whether that old DEC culture is really changing? And I think
suits are an important (though perhaps somewhat arbitrary) symbol of
what we're talking about here. No, I agree that wearing suits to a
customer site is a non-issue. And, no, I don't typically wear denim to
a job interview.
On the other hand, though, I have this picture of Ken in my office that
just speaks volumes about this whole matter. It's gotta be the
doofiest picture of him I've ever seen (and that's saying a lot). He's
standing in a canoe, wearing a shirt he obviously got from K-Mart
(which also happens to have one button unbuttoned), about the most
nondescript brown pants you can imagine, a really silly battered-up
hat, and a great crooked-tooth grin. Hey, this is a guy I can really
work for!
I know the whole things's all relative (and I certainly don't want to
force anybody to wear jeans -- heaven forbuid that you should be
comfortable and productive). But I think we're talking about a lot
more than suits here. I would like to stay with DEC and see if the
important stuff stays the same under the new DEC. Unfortunately,
though, I won't have that chance. Anyway, it's been fun. Good luck
to you all.
-- Cliff
|
2019.218 | it is plain common sense, I agree Bob, reflections from memory | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:14 | 19 |
| ref .215
I agree with you Bob. %100.
I recall, in the good old days, when I interviewed with DEC software
services back in beautiful Seattle, I arrived fully groomed and totally
bright, I had on my best suit (the only one I ever had) and a clean shirt
just out of the laundry-mat, topped by a fashionable hair fully combed and
pulled to my right.
no way, would I have arrived , wearing the jeans and looking like a
broken wheel spinning out of some Halloween.
I got the job, may be because of my smart, but also for the charm
carried on by my power tie, I bet you high.
and only then, I relaxed , and threw the dreaded tie, and lived happily
ever after with my neck feeling just fine.
/Nasser
TM, patent #314721
I spell checked
|
2019.219 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:20 | 16 |
| > I've found that where I had to wear a
> suit I just simply wasn't that productive. I felt very uptight, I felt
> like I couldn't speak my mind, I felt like I had to play politics, I
> felt like I had to look busy, I felt like appearances were more
> important -- I just didn't feel like myself. Where I've been able to
> wear jeans or could throw the frisbee in the hallway or could go out
I've worked in offices where one had to wear a suit. How productive
I was or how comfortable I was depended (and still does) a lot more
on general attitude of the place then the dress code. I worked for
Digital in NYC for a while. Casual attire in "the city" is a tie
and sports coat. We used to throw frisbees in the hall in the DEC
office (after hours) all the time. And I didn't let the suit keep
me from using my unicycle as commuting transportation either.
Alfred
|
2019.220 | hypothetical question - is $$ a factor? | CDROM::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Tue Aug 18 1992 19:31 | 12 |
| Suppose you're one of the people who values wearing what you like to
work and working in a productive but casual environment (like ZKO).
If someone offered you $15K more a year, would you be willing to go to
a glossy, high visibility environment (like Stow) and dress up in a
suit everyday? Assume the work would be different, but you think you'd
like it ok - the only difference is environment and what you have to
wear.
How about $30K?
There are no right or wrong answers to this question ;-)
|
2019.221 | Don't I wish . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Tue Aug 18 1992 20:31 | 6 |
| re: .220
I work in Stow and it is neither glossy nor high visibility!! It may
have been when Jack Shields worked here but not any more. It is very
much like any other facility where there are folks in suits and folks
not in suits. (and they don't pay us an extra 15K to dress up!!) :-)
|
2019.222 | double standard? | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Tue Aug 18 1992 22:32 | 28 |
| <<< Note 2019.210 by RUTILE::WYNFORD "Dorn a Loon" >>>
>> Steve, if you must know, the last interview I went to I dressed as I always
>> am; short sleeved open neck shirt (polo/golf type), casual trousers and
>> Reeboks. I got the job...
>>
>> Most of my other interviews have been by phone...
Ah, now I guess we get into the differences between contractors and permies.
As I recall, you are a contractor. Does this mean that there is a double
standard for contractors and permanent hires?
Also, is this an isolated incident, ie: in total, how many interviews have you
been on, on how many did you dress casually vs. formally, and how many did you
actually get in both categories?
I too got many a job via phone interviews during my tenure as a contractor.
Then again, in such circumstances you are able to 'sell' the client on yourself
and your abilities. There is NO visual 'interference' running between the two
of you. That is one thing about the email system, not only can you not tell
anything about the individual by appearance, but there are no verbal clues
either. Even the name itself isn't the 'tipoff' it once was.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.223 | Ken Memorablia | JGODCL::APETERS | Nasser for Precedent! | Wed Aug 19 1992 07:57 | 8 |
2019.224 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:20 | 40 |
| Re: .217
Cliff, you've made a couple of important points here.
> sartorially speaking, that is. I've found that where I had to wear a
> suit I just simply wasn't that productive. I felt very uptight, I felt
> like I couldn't speak my mind, I felt like I had to play politics, I
> felt like I had to look busy, I felt like appearances were more
> important -- I just didn't feel like myself. Where I've been able to
> wear jeans or could throw the frisbee in the hallway or could go out
> for an ice cream run, I just felt a whole lot better. Even more
> important, though, I felt a lot more productive, creative, involved,
> valued. But I don't think it was all me. This may be a wholly
> subjective impression, but it seemed like the companies which had dress
> codes were also the ones where creativity was stifled, where politics
> were played, where intiative was not encouraged, where hierarchy was
> rewarded.
This sort of thing has been the subject of a number of studies over the years
and you have come to same conclusions as they did. The really innovative,
creative type of companies all had a very loose structure; people came and went
at all hours, they wore what they felt was comfortable and everyone was on
first name terms (sound familiar?). After a while, some companies "settled
down", established their market and stopped innovating as much. That's when the
politics and suits started to make an appearance. The really creative folks
then moved on and created new small companies. If you want a non-Digital
example, read Guy Kawasaki's book, "The Macintosh Way". The parallels with
Digital's early years are there in Apple.
Some people prefer the sense of belonging that comes with wearing a suit in a
business environment; if you are all wearing grey three-piece suits with yellow
power ties, it's easy to blend in and feel safe. Others prefer the individual
statement and warmth of creativity that can go with it. Attempts to force
people to cross their own barriers inevitably will fail, whichever the
direction of the push.
So, you have to find a company that reflects the way you see the world. I agree
with you, Cliff, the thought of working at IBM.... Brrrr!
Gavin
|
2019.225 | my theory of why some are better at this venue than others | STAR::ABBASI | I spell check | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:10 | 26 |
|
after giving this some deep thought, I came to a realizations that
seems appropriate at this point for some one to summarize what we have
learned from all this exciting discussions in the last few weeks.
I believe that the source of it all stems from your childhood days,
my theory is that those little children who were never sloppy
and drank the milk without blubling it all over the place, and had
their naps when asked to, these are the ones who end up going
to the interviews dressed up real nice, and they'll grow up to
be our managers , sales people and VP's.
but those children who did lots of crying and whining and always made a
big mess and run away when it was time to be fed, and never took the nap
when told to, these ones will end up to be sloppy dressers and go to the
interviews in jeans and T-shirts, and they'll grow up to be the Engineers
that we all know and love.
I except some people to argue with me on this, I know , it sound too
radical , but I ask each and every of you to step back as I did, and
reflect, and really think about what I just said, before jumping in and
telling me that Iam full of it or something even worse.
my same 2 cents. as usual
/Nasser
|
2019.226 | Data Point | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:18 | 8 |
| re .225
I was a messy child, and am now an engineer. I'm also a messy adult,
and have no desire to change. When I interviewed at Digital I wore
casual-dressy clothes. I have never owned a suit. I do not ever,
ever, ever want to work in management, marketing or sales.
-ellie
|
2019.227 | | SUBWAY::CANZONERI | SuperNatural | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:46 | 17 |
| Someone mentioned the necessity wearing suits to interviews for
sales/sales support type jobs.
My last interview within DEC was for a delivery job. I wore jeans, a
flannel shirt and motorcycle boots. The jeans also had a decent sized
tear in them (admittedly I got the tear that day whilst debugging a
cabling problem - damned raised floors :-). Since I rode my motorcycle
to work that day I also had a severe case of helmet hair. I got the
job.
The only time I've worn a suit to a DEC interview was to my first one.
But then I had just graduated college and was pretty stupid at the
time.
-Sal
|
2019.228 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:11 | 17 |
| I was a messy child and am not that tidy as an adult.
It's jeans and t-shirt at home.
However, I always dress well to come into the office, and always wear
a suit (no tie!) when consulting with customers. The customers I deal
with are similarly attired.
The only time I feel uncomfortable is wearing high heels on the tube if
I have to go to London to see a customer. A small inconvienince that
isn't a big deal.
Its horses-for-courses, I wear what I believe fits the occaision, and
what the customer expects - we want the business, and they are paying
after all.
Heather Whose desk is never tidy!
|
2019.229 | | RUTILE::WYNFORD | Dorn a Loon | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:41 | 21 |
| Re: Nasser
You forgot the middle ground between suits and jeans; smart casual. How does
that fit with your model? Such children spilt their milk but took naps at
the right time...?
Re: Steve
Yes, I'm a contractor. But I was also a permie once. I decided along time ago
that my work should speak for itself and that what they see is what they are
going to get. That way, there are no false expectations created by the
interview. If they don't like the lack of tie, doubtless they will indicate
this, directly or indirectly, and I will not get the job. On the other hand, a
company that is that superficial is not one I would wish to be associated with
anyway...
This discussion shows one of the many reasons I quickly abandoned all thought
of becoming a lawyer or accountant when I was younger. In retrospect, it was
one of the best decisions I ever made!
Gavin
|
2019.230 | Assorted thoughts | PHDVAX::LUSK | Ron Lusk - Digital Services | Wed Aug 19 1992 18:37 | 28 |
| First, I am a developer/engineer, primarily what _The New Hacker's Dictionary_
defines as a "toolsmith". When I worked in Engineering I wore jeans and a
T-shirt; now, in the field, I wear what's appropriate: first meeting, a suit;
next, sport coat; regular work, shirtsleeves [and optional tie, as
appropriate].
Second: my sister has a management consulting company and teaches in the
business school at Rutgers. She likes to use the Myer-Briggs Personality
Type classification for working with her clients; as well, she has applied
the test to all her relatives, I among them. I fell into a class which
is described by terms remarkably similar to those used in describing hackers
in TNHD, referenced above. Of most interest in the current topic was a
sidebar in one book which discussed clothing styles and the "types". My type
(which probably fits many engineers) was described as "taking it as a personal
affront when clothes wear out", and wearing what's comfortable, etc. (My wife,
who has found with horror how many of my clothes predate 1975, laughed her
head off--and then realized it might be a permanent affliction.)
Other types: those who excel in (or tend to end up in, excellent or not)
managing, sales, personnel handling, etc., had (as a whole) different
attitudes towards clothing. The religious differences displayed here may
be rooted in the differences whereby some create elegant algorithms, and
others orchestrate complex sales situations. "The eye cannot say to the hand,
'I don't need you!'" See 1 Corinthians 12:12-26 (with loose application to
a corporation).
[I don't think it would be fair to apply verse 23 to those who have to
wear suits, by the way. ;^) ]
|
2019.231 | Selling out? | TRADE::SHAPIRO | Steve - Will consult for food! | Wed Aug 19 1992 20:08 | 34 |
|
While I would like to assume that all of you know who George Carlin is, I am
sure that some of you do not. George is mostly a standup comic and one of his
trademarks is his tie-dyed T-shirts (and beard, jeans, etc also).
I would also like to assume that everyone of you know what Saturday Night Live
is. Briefly, it started in 1975 as a sort of pseudo-improv comedy presentation
to television (some have likened it as the successor to the successful Rowan &
Martin's Laugh-In show, in fact, Gary Owens who was the booth announcer became
that for SNL). Anyway, SNL gave us the likes of Chevy Chase, Eddie Murphy,
Garret Morris, Gilda Radner, John Belushi, Dan Aykroyd and many more.
Well, when SNL was originally being put together, they wanted a BIG NAME to
headline as guest host for the original pilot.
They thought that George Carlin would be perfect. However, the network had a
problem with his attire (remember, this was 1975 and the networks were very
conservative in programming). They were hesitant to let George go onstage in
front of millions of viewers in his T-shirt. They wanted him to wear a 3 piece
suit.
Well, I'll never forget that night when I watched the pilot. Here comes George
Carlin, a penultimate child of the '60's wearing a 3 piece suit. But wait,
somethings odd. Sure enough. He wore that 3 piece suit, but instead of a dress
shirt and tie and dress shoes, he wore one of his T-shirts and sneakers.
Apparently it worked. 8-)
Read into it what you will, but I feel that that kind of summarizes the whole
point of this topic.
Regards,
Steve.
|
2019.232 | | POWDML::COHEN_R | | Wed Aug 19 1992 20:53 | 8 |
|
Carlin started as a standup comedian in super ivy league
suits and buttoned-down oxford suits long before "Occupation:
Foole" and SNL and thinking he was the reincarnation of
Lenny Bruce. Id est: He got solid credentials before he was
able to afford the luxury of doing his own thing. When he
jocked at WEEI years back, do you think he showed up for his
first interview in a ponytail and tie dye?
|
2019.233 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Aug 20 1992 05:10 | 3 |
| Re: .-1
I don't know. What did George Carlin wear to his WEEI interview?
|
2019.234 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Tue Aug 25 1992 13:01 | 5 |
| re: SNL
Gary Owens played the part of a booth announcer on Laugh In.
The real booth announcer on SNL was/is Don Pardo, of Jeopardy and
other game show fame.
|
2019.235 | not at Harvard Coop | CX3PT2::KOWTOW::J_MARSH | | Mon Nov 09 1992 21:11 | 8
|