> Many, when I describe intersectionality, people tell me I'm misrepresenting it or that people don't really believe it the way I've described. This entire article is a refutation of such individuals...intersectionality is exactly what I call it...a way to generalize individual experiences as representative of the group and stack them up against each other. They literally use the progressive stack in this article...being black is "one dimension" and female "another dimension" and being both is "worse" than one or the other, with being white and male as neutral or positive. How the hell am I misrepresenting this racist theory?
The problem is that a lot of what people call intersectionality are actually meta-theories surrounding it. All intersectionality actually says is that there exist issues at the intersection of identities that don't exist for either of the individual axes. It's like the opposite of Venn/Euler diagrams, where the exist things in the overlapping parts of the circles that don't exist in a single circle.
The meta-theories around this have taken it, combined it with the OOGD, and ended up with a lot of racists/sexist/x-ist ways of looking at the world, but that isn't the fault of intersectionality any more than racists using pseudo evopsych arguments are an indictment of evolution.
We just have "family tree" type powerpoint documents like this quick google search that we need to submit to the CSS every month even if nothing has changed. They're a pain in the ass to format but usually we only have to change out one of two names. CSS manages organizing them into a master recall roster.
It's not you, it's the recruiting process your company is using. It's broken. You're trying to do good work in a shitty system, and it's incredibly frustrating. Yes: it happens in many different companies, so not just you.
Two things rarely work in solving Recruiting-process issues: more people or more money. Think about it. You're describing a broken recruiting process. Adding more people to the mix just adds more confusion, stress, and conflict.
Money is an easy non-fix and just ends up being spent on "the trappings of Recruiting" like new systems, "better" job postings or being forced to going to a "fun team dinner, no drinks."
From what you've described, your company may not have the internal knowledge necessary to fix both your Recruiting and your team-performance issues.
But, if you want to figure out what's broken, start by mapping out the steps of your Recruiting process; keep your map simple How To Map a Process. Once you know how many steps you have, add in who owns each step and the average time it takes to move from one step to the next, etc.
Once you have your map, troubleshoot away: you'll see pretty quickly where the biggest pain points are: "Accounting is releasing all their annual Reqs at once with the same level of priority," "Jim in Marketing isn't providing feedback on candidates for over two weeks," "our assessments have a high abandonment rate"
You see where this is going - you can now try to fix what is really broken, versus hiring another Recruiter into a shit system.
If you decide to do this, post your questions and we'll help you out. It's pretty easy, really.
Hope this helps and let us know questions.
Your question isn't clear.
Are you trying to draw a flowchart on a piece of paper, but don't know how to do it? If so, see here
Or are you trying to write a program to draw a flowchart? If so, what language are you using, what have you got so far, and where are you stuck?
Totally agree with this... a good tool I found helpful early on is the Spider Diagram
Instead of evaluating products, you’re evaluating team members and what value (if any) they bring to the table. As a founder, this not only reassured my value but also identified gaps that needed to be filled via new hires or contractors.
I’m sorry OP if this isn’t what you’re looking for, but I hope it helps.
Be sure to document your hours worked, and what the avg hourly pay would be for those tasks (marketing, prototyping, sales, etc). This will give you a better idea of what you’re worth in $ for your time. All of this will be useful evidence during equity negotiations.
My instinct for software engineering is something UML related but...
A graph editor would probably work
Looks like there is a skill tree template on creately. Dunno how creately works but maye you can use it. https://creately.com/lp/skill-tree-maker/ I don't think creately is totally free, though.
Realistically, if you have a simplistic skill tree that is more like a hierarchy chart or organizational chart, you could probably find a free hierarchy chart or organizational chart maker. Especially if everything only has one prerequisite. More or less what that creately skill tree maker looks like anyway.
A flow chart maker might suffice as well though it would look weird.
It might look weird but a class diagram could probably model this.
If you need something more complicated, a UML package diagram might make more sense, but this starts getting really complicated. Might be necessary depending on what you are doing, though.
You can try our flowchart maker. It's a SaaS tool so you can edit and access your flowcharts from anywhere. You can even share with your friends and work together on your flowchart. Not sure what your language is but we do support 7 languages.
So George is Thor? Like Norse mythology Thor or Marvel? Also, why assassinate when outright take him on. You could intro King George III as Poseidon, god of the Sea. Mix up the Greek and Norse thing. Could be fun.
Use this to help with casting.
I'm a big fan of OOTP, having played for over 2 years and having tried once to run a league publicly on reddit. I'm a big nerd when it comes to making a history and stuff, I've always been a writer and it's like a story developing before you, I like it a lot.
Anyway, I'm making the game of all games, the league of all leagues.
I made a flowchart. Look at my flowchart.
It's like I take a game many people would find boring and make it even more boring.
Can anyone comment either on Trendnet or this specific product.
I was thinking about using this switch to get more networking ports, making this possible. The cable going around the house in the diagram represents cat5e going outside and around my house.
Yeah, these are pretty much the oldest laptops with onboard Gigabit. Pentium M high-end business laptops from 2003 or newer usually have gigabit Ethernet, I know from experience that at least the ThinkPad T4x and Latitude D6xx series do.
To run a router with a single NIC, you need to use VLAN tagging on the interface together with a smart switch with VLAN support. Diagram here
No, it is not both. Euler diagrams only show populated relationships, and so you can get your circle. Venn diagrams always show all possible set relationships even if sections remain empty, so you don't get your circle. Here, have it drawn for you.
I used the free version of Creately then imported various sections into Paint.net in order to merge them (Creately limits the number of nodes that can be placed).
Hi! sorry i'm late to this post!
I was thinking the same thing as you! i think i found what we needed!
This site has a "Decision Tree Maker" which i think works like a Crafting Tree!
https://creately.com/lp/decision-tree-maker-online/
Sorry if that didn't help you, either way, have a nice day :D
I actually learned all about this in college. Essentially, a religion has to have all or nearly all of these things to actually be considered a religion.
Philosophies, on the other hand, would just be a set of personal beliefs, morals, or ethics without being rooted in myths, symbolism, etc.
I came across the same issue when I switched to a Macbook and I used Creately ( https://creately.com) - on the web browser. It has real-time team collaboration features that were really helpful.
Late reply: You could try the Creately Org Chart Software. There is an online version (could based) as well as Windows, Mac and Linux versions. You could install it and sync your online diagrams. There are many free org chart templates available to get started drawing faster.
Icons are just google images and pasted in.
200/20 is perfectly fine for my usage. Also, my ethernet cables are all cat 5e/6 so I can get 1GB around the network thanks to Unifi.
All TV/Movies downloads mostly automatically so I don't really notice. The only time I really notice is downloading games.
And I know! I'll get one soon
Usually I use this website for flowcharts and the like, but it has enough features that will likely satisfy your needs.
https://creately.com/diagram-type/flowchart
Last time I used it was some years ago, and it was free back then.
In your example I would define it as a Composition relationship ("has a") because ClassA has a ClassB.
It's short for organisational chart. Basically it tells you the hierarchy and who is reponsible for which team. Here's a good example.
It's great in bigger companies because you can look up who is who and which person you need to talk to.
For highly complex graphs you might want to look into concept mapping, this way you can connect anything to anything.
Mind maps are only one way, downward. From top to bottom, from high level idea to details. That’s the beauty of it, anywhere you land your eyes on a map, you know how to read it, below there’s the details and above there’s the thought or concept you were coming from.
I don’t know any collaborative concept mapping app, but you can draw concept maps using a diagram editor like Creately, it has a good set of features for collaboration.
You can use our flowchart software to do this.
We recently created a YouTube video showing how to create flowcharts. You can see the splitting part in when using the decision symbol. You can see the splitting part from the 40'th second.
Give our mind map maker a try. It's an online tool and you can create many other diagram types too. Plus we have many mind map templates for you to get some inspiration.
Our online diagramming tool Creately is a great tool to have in your arsenal. You can create flowcharts, mind maps, org chats, wire-frames and so much more using it. It doesn't necessarily fit into any of the categories above but it sure is a handy tool for any startup.
Try our org chart software. It's an online tool so it's available in Canada. You can include photos, link to their company profiles and so much more using our tool.
If you want to get an idea about the types of org charts you can create using our tool check out this blog post highlighting org chart templates.
Some of our WBS templates are shared below. We also have some nice org chart templates. Some of them are hierarchical, but there are quite a few other models as well. Maybe one of them will fit your need.
The team templates look nice. However, the org chart templates link is not working. I work for Creately, an online diagramming tool and we also have some nice org chart templates that you can edit online. Have a look and let me know your thoughts.
Our diagramming tool Creately also has a desktop download that works on Linux. And our online tool works on any platform and syncs with the desktop version. So you can draw your diagrams offline, but still have access to them online.
Note: It's a closes source, commercial product.
A while back we did a website planning guide. I think you might find it useful.
It's our blog, so we obviously used our tool. The focus it not so much on the tools, but on different diagram types that can help you to get the job done. These include mind maps, sitemaps, flowcharts, wire-frames etc all of which can be drawn using our tool.
It's quite common, especially for large projects. Creating a flowchart is not that hard if you know the process well. You can create it and then get it double checked by your supervisor or a colleague.
UML is a bit hard. For starters there are many UML diagram types which are suited for different scenarios. Without a bit more information it's difficult to figure out which diagram is the best fit for you.
You can use our diagramming tool Creately to create both flowcharts and different UML diagram types.
We also have some great editable SWOT analysis templates if anyone is interested in creating them. You can edit them, export it and use it in your PowerPoint presentations, Word document or even embed them in your website.
Plus you can use our tool to create many other diagram types like flowchart, org charts, mind maps etc.
You can try our diagramming tool Creately. It's a diagramming tool that supports network diagrams so I'm not sure it qualifies as a professional tool used by network engineers. We do have many network diagram shapes including CISCO and AWS icons so you should be able to create them without a problem.
Check our mind mapping tool. It's an online app so you can use it on your desktop to create the mind maps. We also have a mobile app which you can use to view your mind maps on the go. You can't edit the mind map using the mobile app but you can do some things like sharing the mind map, adding notes etc using the mobile app.
You can try our network diagram drawing tool. We have a free plan so you can check the tool before committing to it. The personal plans is $5/month.
Plus you can use it to create many other diagram types like flowcharts, mind maps, process flows.
You can use our org charting tool. One key feature that most of our users find useful is the Creately player which you can use to embed your org chart in websites, on boarding documents etc. And any change you made to the original org chart would be reflected on embedded org charts. This makes maintaining org charts in different locations super easy.
You can try our concept map maker which is very easy to use. We also support drawing of mind maps, flowcharts and many other diagram types so all your diagramming needs should be covered by us. It's a web based tool so using Windows is not a problem.
Please not we have a free plan to try out the tool which limits you to 5 public diagrams. However, the paid plans start at $5/month. You can add links, images to your concept map and when you export them as SVG or PDF we preserver the links in the exported file.
You can try our flowchart maker. We provide you with many templates and have some unique and powerful features to speed up flow charting. Plus you can use it to draw many other diagram types like org charts, mind maps, UML diagrams and Venn diagrams.
P.S: I work here, so I obviously think it's the best :-) .
You can give our network diagram software a try. It's a SaaS tool and have all the standard AWS icons, CISCO icons and general network icons so you shouldn't have any problem getting the exact output you want.
P.S: I work here
I'm not sure what you mean y collapsible, is it something like a mind map where you can collapse sub branches? Anyway you can try https://creately.com , which is an easy to use web based tool. If collapsible is a strict requirement for you a dedicated mind mapping tool will be more helpful.
I remember a great one from like ten years ago, had a bunch of different ones you could get to with a drop-down list menu. Can't find it anymore. But I did find this one which has lots of examples. Hope it helps.
This website offer an online chart maker that seems to support images if you sign up. https://creately.com/Flowcharts-and-Workflow-Diagrams-Online
This mod lets you render items from in game. You can do a single item or an entire mod all at once. I used to render thousands of items from many mods. https://minecraft.curseforge.com/projects/blockrenderer
EDIT: Here's a basic crafting chart for the RS 64k Drive I did in Photoshop: http://i.imgur.com/MIbmRBt.png
Was disso a marmite type character before all this bother? Has he got his fans & his not so fans? Feel free to reply with Venn Diagrams as i seem to understand them better. https://creately.com/Draw-Venn-Diagrams-Online
tx
edit: boo the link wants flash. if refesue it on principle. I dunno what adobe did but i hate flash.
I'm not familiar with edx's course structure so I'm not sure what you know and what you don't, but database stuff isn't too bad. If you're really new maybe try reading/writing/manipulating data in a text file and go from there.
>How would I even start something like this?
I'd suggest something along these lines:
Decide exactly what you want your program to do. Keep it simple at first, you can always build on it later but starting with something huge might make life difficult.
Make activity diagrams. If you haven't heard of these before, here is an example. These help me immensely because it helps me stay focused on the program's structure and not lose track of what I'm trying to make it do.
Start coding
Good luck!
Most of the data is from academic papers, all cited in the post.
The biggest one is from SEIGMA, which just a few months ago released the most extensive study on problem gambling ever conducted. http://www.umass.edu/seigma/
The annual data on lottery sales is from the North American Association of State and Provincial Lotteries. http://naspl.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=content&menuid=17&pageid=1025
For the flowchart I used Creately. Everything else was done Excel and a little bit with D3.
I used this: https://creately.com/app/?tempID=hp27eh051&login_type=demo#
Didn't want to make an account so I used the windows snipping tool to capture my completed diagram and stitched the separate captures together in paint.
I found ER diagrams to be somewhat useful for quick prototyping of how parts of a system should interact. I'd say the biggest advantage of planning out your product this way is the fact that non-programmers should be able to understand how everything works. I'm building something in the medical industry with a paramedic (no programming experience) and a marketing guy (minimal programming experience, possibly understands conditionals but definitely not loops) and showing what properties each component (which eventually becomes an object in code) must have, and how they interact has been key in communicating. Here's a quick tutorial I Googled you'll probably pick it up quickly: link