"my point is you get what you pay for. If you pay $50 for a laptop, your going to get a $50 laptop."
Not necessarily true. I paid $175 for an AVR and I got a $600 AVR.
Now if you are sweeping, and some knucklehead "muscled on" a .500MC2 connector onto a .500P3 cable, and you didn't have a .500P3 connector, coring tool, etc, on you, would you climb down that 45' pole and trek back to the truck or would you use the .540QR connector you have on you?
Yeah, thats what I thought. Your "you get what you pay for" mentality is bullshit. You know what the job entails and you know what you will be paid for the same expectations and you accepted it, good or bad. Don't be crying and bitching that you aren't paid enough to do the job correctly so they will only get what they paid for. And it isn't you who makes that decision since you aren't the one paying.
Yes, by the tone and words in your replies, you fit the description of a HACK.
Re: The definition of a HACK
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