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#21
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On Nov 5, 10:54 am, "Gatt" wrote:
I'm just curious what thoughts or experiences people have with regard to the CAP. -Chris Chris, There is two CAP wings in my state. A power wing and a glider wing (which works exclusivly with cadets). I am a member of both and I have a nite and day difference in my experiences. Let me start by saying that I am in the clique and I get to do as much flying as I want to, so this isnt about sour grapes. The power wing has suffered from incredibly poor leadership over the years. It is full of pilots who just want to fly on the cheap and avoid any real work. The power safety meetings always degrade into arguments over who has the biggest twinkie. The safety record has been very poor (This is true nation wide so whatch out !!). The glider wing on the other hand has been one of the best experiences I have had in aviation. The commanding officer and everyone else has been great (Or we dont let them in ') ). The required safety meetings are fun, and I love working with the cadets. Much of your experience will depend on who is running the wing and who they let in the door. Good luck! KB |
#22
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On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Newps wrote:
The Wyoming guys sound like student pilots on the radio. You have to treat them with kid gloves. - Show quoted text - Ya know. I didn't join the CAP to get free flight time, I have my own plane and even my own airport. I joined so I could help another human being that needs help in a timely manner. Let's add up the Wyoming track record, they had four planes, two are destroyed, four people are dead, all in two years. The thing that really got a chuckle out of me was back about a month ago when the CAP was conducting a search for Steve Fosset the networks were interviewing a woman CAP rep who was very well spoken and sounded sincere, right up till the time a reporter asked her if any other pilots would be allowed to help search. Her response was " when the cowboys jump in their planes and start searching we will ground all of our planes". This was just days after one of "their" cowboys killed himself and two others in Northern Wyoming looking for a lost hiker. Now granted, during a search every one needs to be on the same page for safety there is nothing lost by getting pilots together, make a plan for the CAP to search a given sector and the others to each work different sectors. The more eyes looking down the greater chance of a find, and at the end of the day that's what search and rescue is all about. Her arrogent answer that day has sealed the deal for me stay far away from the CAP.... Just my two cents worth.... off my soapbox. Ben |
#23
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NW_Pilot wrote:
Yea, The only ones that have lasted in the US have been ones that could afford to keep with the times and technology. And are willing to work short contract stints. I work for a super-duper way big company (310,000 employees), and almost all of our programming is done on a contracting basis. An application gets ordered, it gets coded as fast as possible by 2000 guys in India, then the contractors get canned and there's no one to fix or modify the thing. One of the big issues today is the move to replace old databases with SAP, but all the old application SME's that "didn't keep up with the times" are gone. Some of the old apps include 30+ years of undocumented work arounds, and are based on many distributed, custom versions obtained via mergers and takeovers. These are the basic daily operation systems for the corporation. The vendors who sold the original applications either no longer have access to the talent, or they demand way-insane, got ya' by the short ones, consulting fees to help define the problem to be solved in SAP. |
#24
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On Nov 7, 4:01 am, B A R R Y wrote:
NW_Pilot wrote: Yea, The only ones that have lasted in the US have been ones that could afford to keep with the times and technology. And are willing to work short contract stints. The main reason businesses go for short term contracts (which are usually more expensive) is because is damn hard to find programmers out there to hire. Its a very, very tight market for employers. -Robert |
#25
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![]() "Robert M. Gary" wrote in message oups.com... On Nov 7, 4:01 am, B A R R Y wrote: NW_Pilot wrote: Yea, The only ones that have lasted in the US have been ones that could afford to keep with the times and technology. And are willing to work short contract stints. The main reason businesses go for short term contracts (which are usually more expensive) is because is damn hard to find programmers out there to hire. Its a very, very tight market for employers. -Robert It's almost as bad as the airlines there are programmers out there but no one wants to pay the labor rates! So they outsource it to the u.s. prison system or overseas to a poor third world country where people work for almost nothing. I am not going to spend 30-50k to learn new devices and languages and spend 1/4 of a year in classes to make 70-80K for maybe 2 years. Now back in the day mid to late 90's I was paid to take the classes from the client or provided contracts from leading device/component manufactures for attending. Money was great 3 to 4 times what's paid now then rapidly declined when they were able to outsource or bring in foreign workers and get tax breaks!! USA = United Slaves Of America |
#26
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I saw her speak several times, but I missed that one! Ya know even the best
politician screws up sometimes. I hope someone straightened her out there seems to be enough bad press already going around. But back to the question, I believe I saw there were several non-CAP planes in on the search. Ron Gardner wrote in message oups.com... On Nov 6, 9:59 am, Newps wrote: The Wyoming guys sound like student pilots on the radio. You have to treat them with kid gloves. - Show quoted text - Ya know. I didn't join the CAP to get free flight time, I have my own plane and even my own airport. I joined so I could help another human being that needs help in a timely manner. Let's add up the Wyoming track record, they had four planes, two are destroyed, four people are dead, all in two years. The thing that really got a chuckle out of me was back about a month ago when the CAP was conducting a search for Steve Fosset the networks were interviewing a woman CAP rep who was very well spoken and sounded sincere, right up till the time a reporter asked her if any other pilots would be allowed to help search. Her response was " when the cowboys jump in their planes and start searching we will ground all of our planes". This was just days after one of "their" cowboys killed himself and two others in Northern Wyoming looking for a lost hiker. Now granted, during a search every one needs to be on the same page for safety there is nothing lost by getting pilots together, make a plan for the CAP to search a given sector and the others to each work different sectors. The more eyes looking down the greater chance of a find, and at the end of the day that's what search and rescue is all about. Her arrogent answer that day has sealed the deal for me stay far away from the CAP.... Just my two cents worth.... off my soapbox. Ben |
#27
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On Nov 7, 4:45 pm, "R. Gardner" wrote:
I saw her speak several times, but I missed that one! Ya know even the best politician screws up sometimes. I hope someone straightened her out there seems to be enough bad press already going around. But back to the question, I believe I saw there were several non-CAP planes in on the search. Ron Gardner If that was the case, my faith in the system is somewhat restored. The Civil Air Patrol is a GREAT concept. It is the way that it's run that ruins it. One has to remember, all the CAP planes are owned by the US Air Force, as in they belong to all of us. The higher ups seem to forget that quite often.. Safe flyin guys. !! Ben |
#28
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On Nov 7, 2:21 pm, "NW_Pilot"
wrote: "Robert M. Gary" wrote in ooglegroups.com... On Nov 7, 4:01 am, B A R R Y wrote: NW_Pilot wrote: Yea, The only ones that have lasted in the US have been ones that could afford to keep with the times and technology. And are willing to work short contract stints. The main reason businesses go for short term contracts (which are usually more expensive) is because is damn hard to find programmers out there to hire. Its a very, very tight market for employers. -Robert It's almost as bad as the airlines there are programmers out there but no one wants to pay the labor rates! So they outsource it to the u.s. prison system or overseas to a poor third world country where people work for almost nothing. Man, that's certainly not what I'm seeing. Companies are paying at least 6 figures now plus benefits if they can get someone. I just interviewed a programmer with years of C and C++ experience. I asked her what the keyword "virtual" means in C++ and she didn't know. I asked her what they keyword "static" means in C in different places in code and she had no idea. Its a very tough market out there to find programmers who have done more than just write scripts for their IT department. -Robert |
#29
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![]() "F. Baum" wrote in message ps.com... On Nov 5, 10:54 am, "Gatt" wrote: I'm just curious what thoughts or experiences people have with regard to the CAP. .. Much of your experience will depend on who is running the wing and who they let in the door. Good luck! Thanks for the insights information (everybody.) I'm still waiting to hear from the unit commander, who hasn't returned my e-mail, and information from the CAP which will probably come in the mail any day. -c |
#30
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![]() "B A R R Y" wrote in message t... Some of the old apps include 30+ years of undocumented work arounds, and are based on many distributed, custom versions obtained via mergers and takeovers. These are the basic daily operation systems for the corporation. The vendors who sold the original applications either no longer have access to the talent, or they demand way-insane, got ya' by the short ones, consulting fees to help define the problem to be solved in SAP. You -just- described the future of my workplace. There's one person who wrote the app, hasn't documented it and the company now relies on it. They can't fire him because they replaced an industry-wide standard with a software monopoly owned by one employee who spends all day long looking up parts for his car. If he gets hit by a truck tomorrow there will be nobody to support the application that interfaces thousands of customers. We've been telling them that for three years, but...I don't know if it's some MBA method that has been getting taught or what...management everywhere seems to be a bunch of bobbleheads; they nod their heads at whatever you say all day long, acknowledging what a big problem it is, but they never actually -do- anything about those problems. When everything falls apart, they take their severance, find a job elsewhere and move one. SNAFU. -c |
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