The reply by the Office was not what we expected: This is what happened: In these times of greatly-reduced personal contact the Local Staff Committee Munich thought it would be nice to email Christmas wishes to all our colleagues in Munich and to inform them about our plans to organise a General Assembly. No progress on Fixed-Term Contracts (an unfair system for a vulnerable younger generation: Just imagine being on a contract when the next Coronavirus crisis comes).ĭuring the very last days of 2021 we were disappointed yet again. Plans to abolish Flexitime (a system which requires minimal administrative effort, does not cost a dime to the Office, and is well appreciated and frequently used by staff) A Salary Adjustment of 0% (which corresponds to a real-terms cut in salaries of up to 5% because of inflation) Unhappy ending to 2021 – Happy New Year to everybody in 2022!įor staff the final months of 2021 were full of disappointment: Here’s the full publication from Munich Staff Representatives: How’s this one for a shameless and deliberate lie? As a reminder, Romano-Götsch elevated her career by propping up a dictator staff still loathes her for it. So people out there can see what sort of chronic sociopaths and liars we’re dealing with here. We hope that in 2022 the Office will put an end to unnecessary and arbitrary censorship of the staff representation and become a modern and open organisation worthy of the 21st Century.” Once again, the Office applies double standards. You are kindly invited to adopt the same approach on your intranet page.” Shortly afterwards, Ms Romano-Götsch and Mr Menidjel sent their own greetings by mass-email to staff. The Office rejected the request and answered: “the Office does not send mass e-mails with Christmas greetings to staff but posts a Christmas message on its website. “So people out there can see what sort of chronic sociopaths and liars we’re dealing with here.”At the “nd of 2021,” the message said, “the Local Staff Committee Munich (LSCMN) requested the sending of a mass-email on Office email addresses to share its Christmas greetings to staff. So naturally, as usual, a copy landed on our lap, alleging “Censorship of Christmas wishes”. THE FOLLOWING message was circulated earlier this week by the Local Staff Committee Munich (LSCMN) and sent around by members of SUEPO. Summary: The nihilists who run the EPO want a monopoly on holiday greetings to make matters worse, they’re censoring staff representatives in their intranet whilst inconsistently applying said policies Roy Schestowitzīenoît Battistelli 'deleted' holidays and António Campinos is ‘finishing the job’ Posted in Deception, Europe, Patents at 7:13 pm by Dr. Leave Your Comment Send this to a friendĢ022 Starts With Censorship of Christmas and Other Greetings at the EPO This one was last updated 10 hours ago.Īt the time of writing Lupa is aware of 1,590 active capsules, so it’s very likely this count will exceed 1,600 some time in the weekend. There are other clients such as Castor, which was last updated 4 months ago. Lagrange is being developed quite frequently and quickly, whereas Kristall was last worked on back in November. In the video the earlier version Lagrange is shown before the recent one. “Kristall is officially packaged for OpenBSD and select GNU/Linux distros.”The video above shows Moonlander, Telescope, Amfora, Kristall, and Lagrange, of which I have multiple versions installed. Kristall is officially packaged for OpenBSD and select GNU/Linux distros. Well, the latest addition to the ‘gallery’ is Kristall, which is thus far our favourite Gemini client because of its decent GNU/Linux (and Qt) integration, not to mention built-in support for some very rudimentary HTML. So we habitually present the differences between Gemini clients, which target different kinds of users with different needs, platforms (operating systems), and system capacity (some lack a GUI and cannot even attach a screen some are literally blind). THE Gemini “newcomers” often ask what to download rather than how to install or set up one’s own Gemini capsule (this typically comes next). Summary: There are many independent implementations of clients (similar to Web browsers) that deal with Gemini protocol and today we compare them visually, using Techrights as a test case/capsule
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