Take your kids to work day [modified]
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In as much as any of them are 'real' days. I have worked at three places that had a TYDTW day, only marginally less than those that had the TYKTW day.
Henry Minute Do not read medical books! You could die of a misprint. - Mark Twain Girl: (staring) "Why do you need an icy cucumber?" “I want to report a fraud. The government is lying to us all.” I wouldn't let CG touch my Abacus! When you're wrestling a gorilla, you don't stop when you're tired, you stop when the gorilla is.
I've never heard of take your dog to work day! That seems a bit crazy! If you have a couple dozen dogs, there are bound to be conflicts, barking, not to mention messy carpets! You'd have to watch where you step! :laugh:
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Lloyd Atkinson wrote:
MS Paint often amuses small children
MS Paint often amuses EVERYONE! :laugh: Besides, my daughter is so far beyond MS Paint already. She can even navigate her way around YouTube which scares the crap out of me! I have to keep one ear open just to make sure she's still just on the Disney videos, or something like that. Then again, even some of them have been over-dubbed with who-knows-what. :omg:
2 years ago I introduced a senior architect's 4 year old son to youtube. Worked for hours!
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
Why not try to explain what you're actually doing? When she loses interest after a few minutes, you could ask her what she would like to use a computer for. Maybe having her draw on a white-board or piece of paper. You'll be amazed what things children can come up with.
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I've never heard of take your dog to work day! That seems a bit crazy! If you have a couple dozen dogs, there are bound to be conflicts, barking, not to mention messy carpets! You'd have to watch where you step! :laugh:
Now that would be funny... friend of mine has more than 50 hound dogs. I am just imagining him bringing all of them to the office. :)
"I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by." (DNA)
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twohowlingdogs wrote:
Totally annoying.
I would be VERY annoyed about that, I don't like Dogs at all!
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f
So far, no one seems to have cracked this!The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob! "People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
Maybe what we really need is: Take your beer to work day! :beer: :laugh:
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Maybe what we really need is: Take your beer to work day! :beer: :laugh:
To throw at the dogs? :-O
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f
So far, no one seems to have cracked this!The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob! "People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
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I worked at a place (small business) where some of the people would bring their dogs to work every day! Totally annoying.
If you know what I mean...and I think you do...
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
When I was providing company subsidized daycare on one of these days (which is what us low-mid level people have to do with management's children when they go to meetings), an African boy looked at this: http://images.cloud.worthpoint.com/wpimages/images/images1/1/0309/08/1_84334e47a022f68b4e84534e9890327d.jpg[^] And yelled, "Let me play with Obama!" It took about 30 minutes to convince him it wasn't Obama. At my old job, hardly anyone had children, but at my current job their children are closer to my age than I am to their age (older shop). Hopefully I won't have to watch my language.
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
modified on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 2:20 PM
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To throw at the dogs? :-O
See if you can crack this: b749f6c269a746243debc6488046e33f
So far, no one seems to have cracked this!The unofficial awesome history of Code Project's Bob! "People demand freedom of speech to make up for the freedom of thought which they avoid."
No, to throw at my mouth! :laugh:
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When I was providing company subsidized daycare on one of these days (which is what us low-mid level people have to do with management's children when they go to meetings), an African boy looked at this: http://images.cloud.worthpoint.com/wpimages/images/images1/1/0309/08/1_84334e47a022f68b4e84534e9890327d.jpg[^] And yelled, "Let me play with Obama!" It took about 30 minutes to convince him it wasn't Obama. At my old job, hardly anyone had children, but at my current job their children are closer to my age than I am to their age (older shop). Hopefully I won't have to watch my language.
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
modified on Wednesday, April 27, 2011 2:20 PM
Something is wrong with the link, it screwed up your signature.
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Something is wrong with the link, it screwed up your signature.
Thank you for pointing that out!
Craigslist Troll: litaly@comcast.net "I have a theory that the truth is never told during the nine-to-five hours. " — Hunter S. Thompson
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
The most exciting things my daughter remembers is the hot cocoa machine and the DVD I rented for the day. Now she thinks what I do at work is watch movies and drink cocoa, not true, I drink coffee and surf the internet. :)
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
One year when one of my kids was that age I brought them in and they learned what I did (same as you) and then I had them testing software. They found a bug, we entered it into the bug tracking system and one of the team members fixed it.
Steve Maier
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Lloyd Atkinson wrote:
MS Paint often amuses small children
MS Paint often amuses EVERYONE! :laugh: Besides, my daughter is so far beyond MS Paint already. She can even navigate her way around YouTube which scares the crap out of me! I have to keep one ear open just to make sure she's still just on the Disney videos, or something like that. Then again, even some of them have been over-dubbed with who-knows-what. :omg:
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I've never heard of take your dog to work day! That seems a bit crazy! If you have a couple dozen dogs, there are bound to be conflicts, barking, not to mention messy carpets! You'd have to watch where you step! :laugh:
Get some blindfolds and implement a live action version of minefield (with the dogs laying the "mines") - the blindfolded player uses his/her nose to try and determine how many mines surround them :cool: :laugh:
Steve _________________ I C(++) therefore I am
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
Teach her webpaging and let her create her own page. likely not in your "area", but it's still creating (and less mess than glue and cardboard paper),
///////////////// Groucho Marx Those are my principles, if you don't like them… I have others.
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I've never heard of take your dog to work day! That seems a bit crazy! If you have a couple dozen dogs, there are bound to be conflicts, barking, not to mention messy carpets! You'd have to watch where you step! :laugh:
All part of the fun. In my last job, we usually had at least one dog (a boxer called Talula with a seriously loopy streak) knocking around either the Plymouth office or the local marina where we were based for "wet" sonar equipment trials. Talula was for all intents and purposes the team mascot. :)
Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
Take her in with you, spend an hour showing her what you do and what you've been working on, then let her finish it for you while you spend the day playing video games on your phone. Kids learn a lot faster than we do...
Will Rogers never met me.
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Take her in with you, spend an hour showing her what you do and what you've been working on, then let her finish it for you while you spend the day playing video games on your phone. Kids learn a lot faster than we do...
Will Rogers never met me.
Roger Wright wrote:
Take her in with you, spend an hour showing her what you do and what you've been working on, then let her finish it for you while you spend the day playing video games on your phone.
Now that is a great idea! Better yet, I'll send her to work for me, and I'll spend the day in 1st grade. :laugh: :cool:
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In the US tomorrow it's 'Take your kids to work day'. As the name suggests, it's the day you take your kids to work with you. ;) My dilemma: My daughter (7 years old) is excited about the idea, and really wants to come visit my work. But ... all I do is sit all day staring at a computer monitor! In the past, my company planned things for this day, but this year, they have nothing planned. It's going to be BORING for her, she just doesn't realize it. What should I do? Any other programmers bringing their kids to work? Do you have something planned for them to do? I guess I live close enough to work that I could drive her home at lunchtime, if she is really bored. What to do? :confused: UPDATE: Well, my daughter is sitting right next to me at work while I write this. So far so good. Thanks for all the responses, everyone! :thumbsup:
modified on Thursday, April 28, 2011 9:25 AM
I brought two of mine on seperate days a while back. I planned a few work related and non work related activities for them in advance and both boys really enjoyed it. The day I brought the younger boy, I set him up in an empty workspace nearby with his oragami book, scrap paper, and scisors. He made all sorts of figures which he gave out to everyone in the office. Next, lunch out at the nearest strip mall followed by a visit to an free exhibit in the business park. That afternoon I had him help me set up and verify a test station which we shipped to a contractor before going home. For the older boy, I set up a junk workstation with VS Express and pointed him to a CodeProject article on how to write your first game. With the exception of lunch and the free exhibit, I hardly knew he was there most of the time.