T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
984.1 | subsidiarity? | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jul 03 1992 11:07 | 1 |
| My OED goes from "subsidiarily" to "subsidiary".
|
984.2 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Sat Jul 04 1992 09:54 | 1 |
| subsidiarity - the fact or quality of being a subsidiary.
|
984.3 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Sun Jul 05 1992 18:59 | 5 |
| >Apparently (according to OED
>sources interviewed) there are only 3 known English words in existence
>ending in "iarity". - Side quiz - name the other two!
Familiarity and peculiarity. [Done without a dictionary.]
|
984.4 | | VANINE::LOVELL | � l'eau; c'est l'heure | Mon Jul 06 1992 05:32 | 16 |
|
re .2
� subsidiarity - the fact or quality of being a subsidiary.
Was this a definition or a guess?
It does not cover the meaning that the European Community are arguing over which
is extremely subjective.
Douglas Hurd personally defines the meaning as "minimal interference"
(i.e. of a central authority over component authorities)
re .3
Yes - those were the OED examples quoted.
|
984.5 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Stale Vestige of a Bygone Era | Mon Jul 06 1992 08:02 | 5 |
| > "Very Well, let's have a competition to invent another term"
>
> Perhaps JoyofLexers could oblige.
Subsidiariocity? Subsidiaraciousness? Subsidiaristicality?
|
984.6 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Seeking the Philosopher's Stone | Mon Jul 06 1992 08:23 | 7 |
| >It does not cover the meaning that the European Community are arguing over
>which is extremely subjective.
>
>Douglas Hurd personally defines the meaning as "minimal interference" (i.e.
>of a central authority over component authorities)
Sounds like Humpty Dumpty --
|
984.7 | Hurd guilty only by association | MARVIN::KNOWLES | Caveat vendor | Tue Jul 07 1992 05:59 | 6 |
| But the Humpty Dumpty in this case wasn't Douglas Hurd (who hasn't
go the figure for it anyway). I believe some Eurocrat first used
it in the context of the Bonn government `interfering minimally'
with the L�nder.
b
|
984.8 | | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Wed Jul 08 1992 18:13 | 8 |
| Re: .4
My .2 was obviously a definition, given that it describes the meaning
of a word. Whether it bears any meaningful relationship to what the EC
use the word to mean is moot; it is simply the result of a quick
linguistic/etymological analysis of the word in question. :-)
-dick
|
984.9 | Painful "planfully" | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Thu Jul 09 1992 08:45 | 5 |
| I'm too lazy to find a more appropriate topic. From LIVEWIRE:
> The objective of this calendar is to provide managers with
> timely information which will optimize their ability to planfully execute
> their human resource management responsibility.
|
984.10 | me be human resource | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Thu Jul 09 1992 10:33 | 7 |
| re .-1 Arrrggghhhhh!!!!!!! Who *writes* that stuff???
"... planfully execute their human resource management
responsibility."
Funny how it almost sounds like English.
|
984.11 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Jul 09 1992 16:57 | 4 |
| Given the present economic circumstances, I don't like the word
"execute" in there. I find that far more ominous than "planfully".
:-(
|
984.12 | VTX CRYSTAL_BALL? | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jul 10 1992 12:24 | 6 |
| I planfully took a look at VTX HR_EVENTS.
From the introduction:
This infobase is designed to list all the Significant Human
Events that will happen over the next quarter.
|
984.13 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jul 24 1992 13:33 | 2 |
| Gasp -- I thought I heard Bob Palmer use "planful" in his DVN message to
employees. Say it ain't so!
|
984.14 | Is so! | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Fri Jul 24 1992 14:05 | 0 |
984.15 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Fri Jul 24 1992 19:15 | 1 |
| NOT! ?
|
984.16 | Maybe it was planeful? 8^) | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Mon Jul 27 1992 06:24 | 0 |
984.17 | VNS to the Rescue | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Mon Jul 27 1992 06:39 | 16 |
| Just to plug the rathole (maybe 8^) here is the quote from today's Vogon News:
Digital - Bob Palmer's DVN speech
{Livewire, Worldwide News, 24-Jul-92}
Today, the Digital Video Network (DVN) broadcast a 10-minute address to
employees by President- and CEO-Elect Bob Palmer. The following is a
transcript of that speech.
o o o
It is to get competitive, and to do it in such a way that we can stay
competitive; and also in such a way that we maintain the important core values
>that have built this great company. That means that, in a planful way, we will
start redesigning the entire supply chain of the company: everything from the
time the customer gives us an order to the time we deliver and collect for
delivering a reliable, quality product, service, software, or what-have-you.
|
984.18 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Ask me about my Rotisserie team | Mon Jul 27 1992 07:41 | 4 |
| > <<< Note 984.16 by RICKS::PHIPPS >>>
> -< Maybe it was planeful? 8^) >-
Are you familiar with the term "noyade"?
|
984.19 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Jul 27 1992 09:34 | 3 |
| Re: noyade
It looks like an anagram for "day one".
|
984.20 | Dare I ask? | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Mon Jul 27 1992 10:12 | 11 |
| I'm almost afraid to ask. What's noyade? (Not much. What's noyade
with you? 8^| )
<<< Note 984.18 by SHALOT::ANDERSON "Ask me about my Rotisserie team" >>>
> <<< Note 984.16 by RICKS::PHIPPS >>>
> -< Maybe it was planeful? 8^) >-
Are you familiar with the term "noyade"?
|
984.21 | Never tried it myself. | SMURF::SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Mon Jul 27 1992 15:01 | 3 |
| Noyade is another word for drowning.
-dick
|
984.22 | Spending too much time in HUMANE::DIGITAL | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Ask me about my Rotisserie team | Tue Jul 28 1992 07:53 | 53 |
| NOYADE n. Mass execution by drowning, as in revolutionary France. The
technique was invented by a "monster of ferocity" (to quote Maunder)
named Carrier, and involved some one hundred and fifty people being
shut up in the hold of a ship, which was then scuttled in the Loire.
This was called, rather delightfully, "Carrier's Vertical Deportation."
"Have a good old noyade, now," you cry out to the Seventh Grade as they
depart in the school bus for their swimming lesson. Knowing your
penchant for esoteric vocabulary, they smile tolerantly and turn their
full attention to defenstrating (q.v.) the phys. ed. teacher.
-- The Superior Person's Book of Words, Peter Bowler
"Planeful" seemed simply like an up-to-date version of "noyade,"
especially when you think about that other "planful" that was bouncing
around the net, and referred to something like the "planful execution
of one's human resource management responsibilities."
Though, of course, a "noyade" (in, say, the Merrimack River) would be a
lot more cost-effective, I suppose they have to justify those enormous
restructuring costs in some way.
Here are some other terms that might come handy in the interregnum:
o INGRAVESCENT a. Growing worse or more severe
o SUPEREXCRESCENCE N. Something growing superflusously. "Sir, allow
me to inform you that you are superexcrescent."
o CADUCITY n. The dropping or shedding of a disposable part ... when
its function has been performed and is no longer needed
o DIMISSORY a. Sending away; permitting to depart
o JUGULATION n. (i) Interruption of the progress of a disease by dire
measures; (ii) throat-cutting
o FUGELMAN n. A drill-sergeant or other soldier who stands in front
of a group of soldiers so that they can follow his lead; henace, any
front-man, spokesman, or leader who cuts an imposing figure and compels
the members of an organization to dance to his tune
o THAUMATURGE n. A wonder-worker, miracle man or magician
And, hopefully:
o ANABIOSIS n. Revival after apparent death; reanimation after a coma
so deep that all vital signs have become imperceptible.
The author leaves it as an exercise to the reader to create a note
using each word in combination.
-- Cliff
|
984.24 | Bon noyade! | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Jul 28 1992 10:48 | 12 |
| Re. 22: Sheesh, I've gotta get me a copy of that book! "Noyade" had,
'til now, escaped my notice... [Though the technique wasn't invented in
France. I distinctly recall reading of its use by ancient
civilizations, including Egypt. Hmmm; anybody need a topic for a
research paper? ;-)]
Coincidentally, today is the 37th anniversary of a tragic quasi-noyade
(i.e., it was inadvertent, or so I assume): according to my "Murder Can
Be Fun" calendar, "A wave sweeps a girl's junior high school swim class
away from shore on the Ise Sea near Tsu, Japan; 36 of 47 drown."
-b
|
984.25 | Re .23 | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Ask me about my Rotisserie team | Tue Jul 28 1992 14:09 | 1 |
| Pretty good, but you forgot NOYADE
|
984.26 | New version of .23 - can't rename this note. | SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:17 | 13 |
| The current rumors of impending NOYADE have sprung into being because
Digital has been floundering in an INGRAVESCENT financial situation for
some time now. One method devised for dealing with this problem has
been to ferret out SUPEREXCRESCENT employees and groups, who are then
subjected to CADUCITY by their DIMISSORY superiors. This practice has
been attacked by both employees and the media as remarkably JUGULATORY.
In response, the company has now inducted a new FUGELMAN, who it is
hoped can perform THAUMATURGICAL ANABIOSIS in a timely manner.
There.
-dick
|
984.27 | One-upspersonship spoken here | SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Tue Jul 28 1992 15:20 | 6 |
| Re: .22, .25, .26
Oh, BTW, I don't think you actually specified that the words be used in
sequence in a somewhat sensible, at least not nonsensical, form.
-dick
|
984.28 | Oh! I get it! Must be gallows humor. | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Wed Jul 29 1992 10:05 | 6 |
| Lay out one day and see what happens?
Planefull = modern noyade
Have the plane full of prisoners take off with only enough fuel to
reach cruising altitude. 8^|
|
984.29 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Jul 29 1992 11:19 | 8 |
| Re: .-1
Just who is going to fly it under those circumstances? What makes you
think an airplane with dead engines can't fly and land? From a
cruising altitude of 35K feet, a 747 can glide 180+ miles with no
engines.
twe, spoilsport when it comes to nasty things in aircraft
|
984.30 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Bon Noyade! | Wed Jul 29 1992 14:11 | 9 |
| > Just who is going to fly it under those circumstances? What makes you
I have a few suggestions. ;^)
> think an airplane with dead engines can't fly and land? From a
> cruising altitude of 35K feet, a 747 can glide 180+ miles with no
> engines.
Now, how wide did you say the Atlantic was again?
|
984.31 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Wed Jul 29 1992 20:41 | 6 |
| I still want to know who would be willing to fly it out over the
Atlantic. And who would be willing to spend $30M+ to carry out the
exercise.
Oh, well, never mind. It's all a rathole from the really important
things in this topic. :-)
|
984.32 | Congress... | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Thu Jul 30 1992 06:18 | 3 |
| > Atlantic. And who would be willing to spend $30M+ to carry out the
Just tell 'em it's a fact-finding mission. ;^)
|
984.33 | | SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Thu Jul 30 1992 14:42 | 10 |
| Re: .29
Gliding 180+ miles from 35000 feet is nothin'. There is a famous war
story about a U2 pilot who radioed Bermuda to say he'd just had a
flameout. They asked him for his direction and distance; he gave them
a direction and said 300 miles. They asked him his altitude and he
said 12000 feet. They said ditch and hold tight, they'd be out to get
him. He said, nah, just keep the runway clear. And he glided in.
-dick
|
984.34 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Thu Jul 30 1992 20:02 | 14 |
| Re: .33
The glide ratio of a -747 is about 24. The glide ratio of a U2 is
higher. The glide ratio of my sailplane is 42. So with my sailplane,
from 12,000 feet, I could glide about 95 miles.
I don't believe the glide ratio of a U2 is 132. (300 miles from 12,000
feet). The most highly competitive sailplanes, with 1990's technology,
have a glide ratio of about 60.
There are some war stories about U2s flaming out at 80,000 feet (and
possibly higher) and doing as .-1 relates. So the only thing I doubt
about .-1 is the 12,000 feet figure. It just isn't efficient to fly a
U2 that low: the fuel consumption is too high.
|
984.35 | | SMURF::BINDER | Rem ratam agite | Fri Jul 31 1992 06:33 | 5 |
| i don't sweare it's true, I only say that's the way I heard it. I do
contend, however, that there are lots of things most of us wouldn't
believe about certain military aircraft. :-)
-dick
|
984.36 | | SHALOT::ANDERSON | A Truly Sick Individual | Fri Jul 31 1992 07:00 | 6 |
| Fellas:
I think your U2 took a wrong turn somewhere back around .30.
The flying conference is in ZEPLIN::HEAVIER_THAN_AIR_FLIGHT.
-- C
|
984.37 | U2, Brute? | RDVAX::KALIKOW | Partially sage, and rarely on time | Fri Jul 31 1992 07:04 | 5 |
| feel better now?
:-)
|
984.38 | U2?! Wrong Conference!! | RICKS::PHIPPS | | Fri Jul 31 1992 08:19 | 3 |
| Take it to TIMBRE::MUSIC or MARVIN::UK_MUSIC or SUBURB::MUSICIANS_UK
(I've always wanted to do that 8^)
|
984.39 | | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jul 31 1992 09:14 | 8 |
| re: $30+M/747
for note:
- $1 billion restructuring component for 15,000 departures is ~$67K
- $30M 747 for 450 closely packed passengers is ~$67K
Bon (or bonne, as has been noted elsewhere) Noyade, indeed.....
|
984.40 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Mon Aug 03 1992 19:34 | 4 |
| >REGENT::POWERS
>re: $30+M/747
With a name like Powers, shouldn't you talk about U2 instead?
|
984.41 | | SUBWAY::BONNELL | Happy! Happy! Joy! Joy! | Sun Aug 09 1992 20:08 | 8 |
| To go back to the original topic...
The NY Times "On Language" column, guest authored by Anthony Burgess,
devtoted several paragraphs today to "subsidiarity"
regards...
...diane
|
984.42 | another possibility | SHALOT::ANDERSON | Motivationally Challenged | Mon Aug 10 1992 13:29 | 40 |
| Check this out. Not only is the focus of this particular
method on the proper group, it's also much more cost
effective. I'm just wondering how to say it a francais.
-- Cliff
excerpt from THE WALL STREET JOURNAL (many moons ago)
18 CHINESE MANAGERS EXECUTED FOR SHODDY QUALITY
BEIJING - Eighteen factory managers were executed for poor product
quality at Chien Bien Refrigerator Factory on the outskirts of the
Chinese capital. The managers - 12 men and 6 women - were taken to a
rice paddy outside the factory and unceremoniously shot to death as 500
plant workers looked on. Ministry of Economic Reform spokesman, Xi Ten
Haun, said the action was required for committing unpardonable crimes
against the people of China. He blamed the managers for ignoring
quality and forcing shoddy work, saying the factory's output of
refrigerators had a reputation for failure. For years factory workers
complained that many component parts did not meet specification and the
end product did not function as required. Compressors were cracked,
leaked freon and the electrical components were sub-standard.
Complaining workers quoted the Plant Manager as saying, "Ship it.
"Customers, who waited up to five years for their appliances, were
outraged, he says. "It is understandable our citizens would express
shock and outrage when managers are careless in their attitudes toward
the welfare of others."Refrigerators are among the most sought after
consumer items in Communist China. "Managers in charge of production
and engineering failed to perform any useful corrections to the quality
problems for the last 20 years." Haun said. "Our soldiers are
justified in wishing to bring proper justice to these errant managers."
The executed included the Plant Manager, the Quality Control Manager,
the Engineering Managers and their top staff.
|
984.43 | | SSDEVO::EGGERS | Anybody can fly with an engine. | Mon Aug 10 1992 16:36 | 3 |
| Sounds a bit extreme. Shooting the plant manager and promising to come
back next year might have effected the same result. Unless a
management TFSO was what was actually desired.
|
984.44 | starting at the top... | PAOIS::HILL | An immigrant in Paris | Tue Aug 11 1992 01:19 | 16 |
| Re .42
Another good example was at Japanese Air Lines (JAL).
When, at about the end of 1991, the board of directors realised the
company was heading for a loss they started by cancelling their own
summer bonus payment. (I recall that summer bonuses normally amounted
to about 4 months salary).
They then introduced a 3% salary cut for themselves and all the most
senior managers, about 400 people in total.
Once these two steps had been taken and publicised they approached the
unions and asked for further ideas about cost reduction.
Nick
|
984.45 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Tue Aug 11 1992 20:17 | 7 |
| Digital is doing something similar. Bonuses are being cut though not
eliminated entirely. However, the cut applies to all employees, and
the cut is larger for employees who have the title "manager," regardless
of whether the "manager" has ever had any influence over corporate
decisions that might be able to attract or keep customers.
-- Norman Diamond
|
984.46 | But they don't tell us what they're doing.. | PAOIS::HILL | An immigrant in Paris | Wed Aug 12 1992 03:47 | 11 |
| Norman
The difference is that JAL directors publicised what they were doing to
themselves BEFORE they tried to do anything to their staff.
The self-imposed suffering on the most senior Digital management is, in
my experience, poorly publicised and when it is publicised is done in
such a way that it sounds apocryphal rather than real. Either that or
we read about it in the national/international press.
Nick
|
984.47 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Wed Aug 12 1992 18:47 | 10 |
| >The self-imposed suffering on the most senior Digital management
That I haven't read about at all.
I did read that Ken Olsen resigned though, first on Usenet (Clarinet's
Newsbytes), then internally (Vogon News Service), and then the Japanese
national press. Wondering if I'll read it on an official corporate
channel some day.
-- Norman Diamond
|
984.48 | Are we straying from the original topic just a bit? | ERICG::ERICG | Eric Goldstein | Wed Aug 12 1992 23:42 | 11 |
| .47> I did read that Ken Olsen resigned though, first on Usenet (Clarinet's
.47> Newsbytes), then internally (Vogon News Service), and then the Japanese
.47> national press. Wondering if I'll read it on an official corporate
.47> channel some day.
For stories like this, VNS usually carries the Livewire report. I believe that
Livewire qualifies as "an official corporate channel".
Incidentally, KO apparantly told a meeting of engineers that he was fired.
Would you say that the president of the corporation qualifies as "an official
corporate channel"?
|
984.49 | | JIT081::DIAMOND | bad wiring. That was probably it. Very bad. | Thu Aug 13 1992 01:59 | 14 |
| ND>> Wondering if I'll read it on an official corporate channel some day.
EG> VNS carries Livewire [...] "an official corporate channel".
Yup, that's what I saw. I don't know how to access Livewire itself.
EG> Would you say that the president of the corporation qualifies as "an
EG> official corporate channel"?
Of course, but the Digital visibility of his lips does not often extend to
[now to force some relevance to the topic :-) ]
subsidiarity.
-- Norman Diamond
|
984.50 | | SUBWAY::BONNELL | Happy! Happy! Joy! Joy! | Thu Aug 13 1992 07:00 | 10 |
| >> Yup, that's what I saw. I don't know how to access Livewire itself.
$ VTX LIVEWIRE
(I don't know if there's an alternate path if you don't have access to
VTX)
regards...
...diane
|