Coronavirus - Overall
-
@Victor-Meldrew said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
Possibly people will work in the office 1-2 days a week?
Not sure that helps the quarantine issue? Not contagious some of the time?
OK being a bit facetious.
I think working from home will suit some occupations a whole lot more than others. IT? Piece of piss. Tyre fitters? Less so. In theory at my place we all have the ability to work from home but the reality is that some things have to go out in hard copy and then again we need to be able to deal with the mail. Not as simple as it might seem for many businesses.
-
@Catogrande said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
Not as simple as it might seem for many businesses.
For sure. But I think the amount of home-working could well reach critical mass.
-
Impressed with the supermarkets here re home delivery.
Tell them you are self-isolating and they will txt you just before they arrive and leave your stuff on your door-step if you wish. Also giving priority to people on receipt of an email from a GP.
Might help stop silly panic buying as well
-
Anyone know what happens if you are blocked entry to a country? Trying to help get my brother out and there is serious risk they might not make the cut-off for singapores border closer at midnight sunday. Do they send you back from whence you came or put you in holding somewhere? Singapore will be just a transit enroute to NZ.
-
@Rembrandt Does he have a travel agent? I got blocked from going to Korea last week but the travel agent managed to get us on a flight home straight away from Japan which was a big relief. Had to pay 550 extra for it but it would have been a lot worse had we got stuck in Korea. Could be a struggle if he doesn't have a travel agent though.
-
@African-Monkey yep he is dealing with an agent..agent is trying to book them a flight back via vancouver for next week. To me that is way too late and canada will block spain travellers by then. Hopefully they know best.
-
@Mick-Gold-Coast-QLD he got it wrong. He's a young man and young men do stupid things. He's apologised now.
-
Last night my son's basketball was called off. The Mrs received a text from the team manager to say in the interest of health etc. My wife in her infinite wisdom asked: "is it because of the Coronavirus?"
Yesterday, after watching events like the Grand Prix get canceled as any events that gather more than 500 people will be. She bought her entry into a multi-event, due to take place next weekend which sees roughly 900 people compete...
So at least there is still a level of normalcy in my day to day life.
-
@raznomore said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
@Mick-Gold-Coast-QLD he got it wrong. He's a young man and young men do stupid things. He's apologised now.
Man-boy Gobert is 27 years old.
In even funnier, more comic news another player on the team has since tested positive. He has yet to mock the panickers by pawing the media microphones and dictaphones, and the players' gear, bags and locker doors in the dressing room; followed by a heartfelt apology penned by someone else with an education.
From the New York Post:
“There’s reportedly “a lot of frustration” among teammates with Gobert, whose coronavirus diagnosis Wednesday night spurred the suspension of the NBA season and whose cavalier initial response to health protocols may have contributed to teammate Donovan Mitchell subsequently contracting the virus.
“The Jazz are fortunate that they don’t have to get back together and start playing games again right now,” ESPN insider Adrian Wojnarowki reported Thursday night on “SportsCenter” with Scott Van Pelt. “There is a lot of work to do to repair relationships, not just between Donovan Mitchell, Rudy Gobert, but others in the locker room. There’s a lot of frustration with Gobert.”
ESPN previously reported Gobert had been “careless” in the locker room, touching teammates and their belongings, prior to his diagnosis. That led to a frenzied scene at Wednesday night’s Jazz-Thunder game and a quarantine for Jazz personnel in Oklahoma City while they were tested for coronavirus."
This incident led to cancellation of the NBA "until further notice", from ESPN:
*Jazz general manager Dennis Lindsey got the call. Gobert had tested positive for the coronavirus.
"Within minutes, Lindsey, Thunder GM Sam Presti, Bennett, (NBA Commissioner) Adam Silver and Oklahoma City county health officials had to decide how to proceed. They landed on: Postpone the game, confine both teams to their locker rooms, test everyone who came in close contact with Gobert, and put anyone who came in close contact with those people in isolation until those test results were in.
As soon as a player tested positive, Silver knew he would have to suspend the NBA season indefinitely. There was no more debate. There was not even time to notify the other teams.
"This was a split-second decision," Silver would later say."*
As for the bloke who gets to sweep up after the fans have left and who now has no work - what does he do when it comes time to pay his rent? Show the landlord a copy of the donkey's apology?
-
@Mick-Gold-Coast-QLD Man you are tough of late! The guy acted like an ass. But it just indicates how the average guy in the USA probably viewed the virus a week ago. And it's not like he will be the only guy to contract it. Far from it and it may help educate their people as to how serious this situation is. Sports were going to shut down and it's not all thanks to one guy
-
@Rembrandt Yeah it's crazy. The day our agent blocked us from going to Korea, Japan blocked Korea and Korea did the same to Japan until March 31 so had we Jumped on that plane, we would have been stuck in Korea for a while before having to do an isolation period somewhere so we got very lucky. Hope it all works out for your brother.
-
@JK said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
Wow even WWE smackdown went ahead with no crowd. My son is watching It now and it’s all from the performance centre with empty seats.
Weird considering how much the crowd interaction is a part of the experience
-
@antipodean said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
@chimoaus said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
@antipodean said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
In other good news, just got a text from work - mandatory WFH from Monday.
Nice, how much actual work can people do from home though?
For me basically 90%. It's how I can manage stuff OS for example. For some of my engineers they could do 75% but can't due to security constraints so more like half. At least a quarter of the time they can't even have a mobile phone with them. Then for others 90% requires a physical presence.
I can 100% work from home, I just need the internet and a zoom connection. I'd likely get more work done, less going for coffee and lunch, chatting with the workmates.
-
@Mick-Gold-Coast-QLD this is all pretty much bullshit Mick. Would it have been less careless touching the team ball in practice or putting a sweat-covered screen up for Mitchell to come off?
Yeah, he made light of the situation and it was ill-timed and potentially lead to someone getting the virus. But there were probably many other instances, where the virus could have spread, like the ones I just mentioned where Rudy would have just been doing his job.
-
-
@canefan said in Coronavirus: should I be panicking yet?:
@Mick-Gold-Coast-QLD Man you are tough of late! The guy acted like an ass. But it just indicates how the average guy in the USA probably viewed the virus a week ago. And it's not like he will be the only guy to contract it. Far from it and it may help educate their people as to how serious this situation is. Sports were going to shut down and it's not all thanks to one guy
"Man you are tough of late!" I'm confined to base, Canefan, recovering from something health-wise and I have time to read and comment for the moment. After a lifetime of action and leading and dedication to rugby, and junior cricket to a lesser extent, I have opinions which I am happy to express.
I missed the bit where someone attributed the shut down to this one fellow.
Just now the appalling stupidity of sports identities has attracted my attention, and the efforts of apologists to excuse them. Their clubs have numerous sessions teaching them to not be drongos but they are too dim to understand the moving pictures and short words used to get the message across.
I grew up with plenty of future stars in many sports (some of whom went on to grade for Canterbury) and met dozens of others - that's what you get when you've been around for a while. Thommo, Doug Walters, John Sattler, Peter Gallagher, Tom Veivers, Farr-Jones, Bugner, Tszyu, Topo - none of them behaved anything like it.
Each time Alan Border had a run of good scores, or local and good bloke Greg Matthews took wickets, our junior cricket registrations went through the roof. We were putting 120 or more young blokes on the field every rugby season and many of them went on to populate our Mighty Eastwood teams from Colts to First Grade for the next decade, all wanting to emulate (then shy) local Matt Burke.
They have a role to play in public life whether they like it or not, and despite the mugs believing they should not suffer such an expectation, and they ought to use it responsibly or get well out of sight.
In an outstanding interview in 2007 by Parkinson of recently retired Shane Warne¹ he left the best to last, and Warne responded with typical unadorned candor:
Warne: "... if you like me great, if you don't so be it. I am who I am."
Parkinson: "Role model?"
Warne: "Role model - I think I have been. There's a lot of kids who would like to be like me and hopefully a lot of them can not make the same mistakes that I have ... they can learn by me."
Shane Warne did not deny the influence his prominence brought. He readily accepted his behavior had an impact.
¹ I just watched his departure from the game at the SCG, reminding myself how this so cocky, flamboyant, fierce and able competitor left the arena with such understatement and humility. It was a special moment in Australian sport.
While I am on a roll - to illustrate just how readily and naturally Australians react to those people they admire:
We had a bad summer with widespread bush fires in Victoria. Television news showed the prime minister (that pasty looking Rudd sheila) arrive at a volunteer fire fighters camp in his limousine, alighting and walking towards them. They just stood silent and looked disinterested as he approached.
The same broadcast showed a similar visit elsewhere, in which Warnie jumped out from the front seat before his driver had come to a complete stop, strode forward with a grin, hand outstretched and "G'day fellas". He's a natural. These middle aged men moved as one, surrounding him with some applauding and others greeting him. It was all smiles, noise and mateship.