Second, I don't let my dog roam around and I am very well aware of people being anxious, but clearly you just hate on anything with dogs and are ranting here.
>This policy of allowing dog is pushed by a majority that cannot understand that some of us simply don't like dogs at all.
Should we also ban roses, because some people don't like them? How about no meat at the workplace because it could bother vegans?
There has to be some kind of compromise by everyone if people want to share a place. Be it accepting that some people love dogs, hate roses,....
At the end, if the majority likes something, you are on the losing end in a shared environment at least (as bad as that sounds). One could also argue it is rather selfish that you want a shared environment to suit your needs only.
If something bothers you that much then you have to somehow find a compromise. Maybe you can sit away from the dog owner coworkers or something or create "dog areas" and "no-dog areas." (Another compromise, like I mentioned).
Since I got fiber gbit up and down I try to relocate as much as possible of my homelab to real data centers (Hetzner) since I can't stand the noise. (I have 10ms ping to my server)
Then I use wireguard to connect it to my home network and make it act like a server in the home network. (All the traffic even gets directed through home)
I still have the main storage server locally though because otherwise I'd not be able to even watch movies if my internet went down.
My dream would be an all SSD storage server being near silet.
It's pretty simple. Because there isn't a QA. Microsoft laid them off and uses the "Insiders" as beta testers. But they reported this issue but Microsoft ignored it because it didn't get enough votes.
If it's the same as here in Switzerland, then it is not about "being caught." It's not a fine. It's a fee. Even if you declare your goods and pay taxes, it costs you a fee every time they check your package.
I remember when I first joined that I really liked how people who disagree here do not downvote but rather challenge you through a comment. It was a nice change from reddit...
But times have changed and people love to downvote here these days.
And what is the issue with just telling them that it could take a lot of work, so probably not? Why does it bother you if someone says thanks? It does not put you in any obligation to do anything...
I do not understand your point of view. Should we stop saying thanks in our daily life? Because it does not really do anything for anyone....
To me the following two messages give off two totally different vibes:
'Hi, can you implement <Feature that takes a month of work>? Thanks!'
'Can you implement <Feature that takes a month of work>?'
You hate dogs. Not we.
Second, I don't let my dog roam around and I am very well aware of people being anxious, but clearly you just hate on anything with dogs and are ranting here.