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What kind of job does Dr. House from House M.D. have specifically?

House is a department head, specifically the hospital’s department of diagnostic medicine. However, the only doctors in his department apart from himself are his three fellows. Fellows are specialists who have completed a residency and are working on developing expertise in a sub-specialty.Because House is the only person in his department qualified in his sub-specialty (he’s essentially a diagnostic pathologist and is a board certified specialist in pathology) he’s always the attending physician on all of the cases he takes.In addition, because Princeton-Plainsboro is a teaching hospital and his fellows are in a training program, he’s a tenured professor too. In order to fire him, Cuddy would need unanimous consent of the board of directors of the hospital, and then only after House has had a hearing.House and his fellows appear to be on a fixed salary - they aren’t paid per procedure. House gets a budget every year to pay his fellows and perform procedures. The hospital bills the patients or their insurance companies for the procedures House performs, but in most years House’s department runs at a loss.

Which country is better to relocate to, Indonesia or Malaysia?

I have long held that Indonesians will one day have Malay maids.Hear me out.They have no religion in government, at least at the central government stage.It is not a Muslim apartheid country. All citizens are equal by law.The scale of corruption is lower. See 1MDB.The people are tougher, more enterprising, and more hard-working.They are more benign to foreign direct investment, the latest figures will bear them out.They have much higher foreign direct investment, which is the main driver for the economy.They have better tourism prospects.At this point in time, they seem to be handling problems better and have a firmer grip on positioning.Their government and political parties are not race based.Their natural resources are far more vast.Their pool of willing and able workers is HUGE.They are cheaper.Their food is more varied, their arts and crafts show great diversity. Just check YouTube for their music.They are Hindu friendly, look at the Ganeshas in their parliament and their currency. Malaysia barely tolerates other religions. placing restrictions on conversions and proselytizing, et al, but Indonesia accepts them. No one is coming to bust open your hotel door because they think the woman you are with is not married to you.For me, they have hugely talented artists and singers. Basically, they have a huge gene pool.They love chocolate, cheese and pizza, no qualms about internalizing from even their colonial masters what works for them.Frankly, if you were a foreign company, which country would you invest in? I didn't say you have to put all your facilities in downtown Jakarta. On the homefront, you will see many Malaysian companies investing in Indonesia. That's where the growth is. The only thing Indonesians come to Malaysia for right now is manual labour and medical tourism.Indonesia makes the head covering optional. Malaysia has a culture of shaming if you dont wear a head scarf.Non Muslim students encouraged to eat in the toilet during the Muslim fasting month so that FASTING Muslim students in the cafeteria do not have to suffer the sight of non Muslims eating. Other religions fast without fuss.All in all, Malaysia has behaved very badly on the world stage for quite some years. And its etched its reputation in stone.So, in conclusion, the only people that find Malaysia better to live in, all things considered, are political cronies and Malays, who benefit from a kosher apartheid system. The Muslim Department in the Prime Minister's Department in the Government gets a 1.4 BILLION dollar budget. That's 3.9% of the country’s budget for one group of entitled people. There is no Hindu Department or Atheist Department or Christian Department. This Muslim department exerts influence over even non-muslim affairs. They have been certifying fake halal meat for 40 years. Not one head rolled.Edit. I received a few messages about my eligibility to answer this question. Sigh. Well, I also spend time there and have relatives there. I can see a stark difference. Muslims eating pork in pork joints, the national Cathedral opposite the national mosque, political figures that keep insisting they are leaders for Indonesians, not muslims…….So yes. I really dont like the way Malaysians look down on Indonesians. The way we treat itinerant workers and maids etc. I think its demeaning. Just ask any Indonesian worker how he is treated.

What are the mistakes that beginner PC builders make?

My inbox overflows with questions about how to build a computer for X budget or if someone should buy part Z or Y.... Frequently you hear veteran PC builders say "building a computer is easy and anyone can do it" but they too often write off the knowledge that allows them to build PCs "with ease." So what are the mistakes that new builders make? These are the top five things I get the most questions about where new builders can go tragically wrong.Building with cheap parts.I want to be really clear here: There's a difference between parts that are a good value for budget builds and parts that are simply cheap. I love budget builds that are refined to give you everything you can want on your budget but don't leave you holding the bag on something that's going to blow up in your face months down the road. Where I see new builders getting into trouble is when they don't anticipate the impact of the cheap part down the road. The $20 case manages to be a basic box that you can shove all your parts in... then, come summer, I get frantic messages wondering why a system is overheating and crashing. Worse than the cheap case is the cheap power supply... just because it belts out lots of watts of power doesn't mean that it meets your needs and power supply failure kills more system boards, CPUs and graphics cards than just about any other component failure.Advice to new builders: My general standard for a PSU is to get one that is 80+ Bronze certified or better. Likewise, when you're looking at your case or system board, don't sort the list of available components by price and just pick the cheapest one because it doesn't seem to matter. A few extra dollars here and there can stop you from having to spend even more to replace things when problems manifest themselves down the road.Not paying attention to detailsA system board is a system board right? Wrong. The problem is, in many ways, new builders aren't certain how to compare all of the features involved in any given part. This results in some special awkward nightmares where you have a pile of parts show up from Microcenter or Newegg and then, in the midst of building things... something doesn't work. People get system boards that don't have enough fan headers and then have to spend more money on a fan controller or wiring harnesses. They buy cases only to learn that the mounting points for 3.5" drives don't also have mounting points for 2.5" SSDs so they then have to rustle up an adapter. Radiator incompatibility, not enough room for a tall CPU cooler... all of these things crop up when first time builders miss the little details about what makes one part different from another and they all cost money to fix.Advice to new builders: Take some time when you're ordering parts to double check things. You can't always get all the details you might need from retailer websites like Amazon or Newegg but in general, the manufacturers are very good about providing highly detailed specifications that you can check. Don't hesitate to hit up Corsair or MSI or whoever's website prior to clicking 'Add to Cart.'Really unbalancedThis kind of piggybacks off of the building with cheap parts bit. I see people bending over backwards to afford a GTX 1080 and then pairing it with the cheapest Pentium processor they can buy or throwing in a $1,000+ i7-5960X and getting a $15 air cooler to put on the chip. There's so much effort put into having the best of something that they give themselves problems that prevent them from actually getting all the performance that the high end part offers.Advice to new builders: If you feel like you've needed to make sacrifices to get a really awesome part in your build, step back and see how many of those sacrifices go away if you replace the really awesome part with something that's close, but not quite as awesome. I love FTW and K|NGP|N editions of GPUs, but is it worth giving up on an SSD for the 2-5 FPS they'd get you versus an SSC edition of the same card? Do you need the Evo Pro 950 SSD or can you make do with a more basic SSD and re-invest the money elsewhere?Losing stuffWhen you buy everything at once to build a new PC, I promise you, you're going to have parts left over. An SLI bridge that you don't need that came with your motherboard, or extra SATA cables, a dozen case screws of various sizes that you didn't wind up needing, heaps and piles of manuals... The amount of stuff you have left at the end of the build isn't insignificant. Novice builders frequently get rid of this stuff only to find that a year or two later they do need that SLI bridge or their computer won't boot and they don't know what the flashing code on the mother board means.... All the sudden the manual sounds like it'd be really useful to have but it's long gone.Advice to new builders: Save the box your system board came in. Into that go your manuals, receipts (in case you ever need to have something replaced under warranty), extra cables, left over thermal compound, case screws... All of it, into the system board box. System board boxes are the perfect shape for holding all of the manuals and driver CDs while still having enough room for the other stuff and now all of the items associated with that computer are in the same place should you ever need them.Poor assemblyA lot of first time builders make little mistakes that come back to haunt them later on. Forgotten thermal paste (or too much / too little thermal paste), CPU coolers that are over tightened, wiring run so taunt that over time it deforms system board headers, wearing wool socks on shag carpet while handling components. Again, like many of the things above, this is about the little things that can trip a person up and have consequences down the road that aren't always apparent because, hey, the system booted, right?Advice to new builders: If at all possible, invite a friend along that's done it before when you sit down to actually assemble so you have a little experience on hand as you mount and wire everything up. Failing that, there are several excellent Youtubers who have produced wonderful step by step tutorial videos and it can help to have at least a good video that you can pause, rewind and replay as needed while you're building.Building your first computer can feel overwhelming with hundreds of parts to choose from, dozens of acronyms, and a plethora of little details that can make your life rough down the line if you don't get it right. More than anything else, I'd encourage first time builders to take their time and if at all possible, bring some help along for the ride on your first one.Custom built PCs offer up some of the best performance per dollar and the ability to get exactly what you want. While the task might seem intimidating at first, if you take your time up front to make sure you've got everything that you need and that it will all work together and take your time in actually putting it together, you'll get a system that will last for years and that you can point to with pride and say: "I built that, and it's awesome!"

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