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UCGal
ParticipantUnder $1000 is pushing it for San Diego – but surprisingly I found 9 condos under $50k in San Diego.
UCGal
ParticipantUnder $1000 is pushing it for San Diego – but surprisingly I found 9 condos under $50k in San Diego.
UCGal
ParticipantAdding one more column to your data – distressed sales as percent of total sales – you can see that is dramatically increasing.
COE Dates Total Sales Distress Sales Percent
1/1/05-6/30/05 139 0 0.00%
7/1/05-12/31/05 128 0 0.00%
1/1/06-6/30/06 153 1 0.65%
7/1/06-12/31/06 164 0 0.00%
1/1/07-6/30/07 161 3 1.86%
7/1/07-12/31/07 173 18 10.40%
1/1/08-6/31/08 141 31 21.99%
7/1/08-12/31/08 153 39 25.49%UCGal
ParticipantAdding one more column to your data – distressed sales as percent of total sales – you can see that is dramatically increasing.
COE Dates Total Sales Distress Sales Percent
1/1/05-6/30/05 139 0 0.00%
7/1/05-12/31/05 128 0 0.00%
1/1/06-6/30/06 153 1 0.65%
7/1/06-12/31/06 164 0 0.00%
1/1/07-6/30/07 161 3 1.86%
7/1/07-12/31/07 173 18 10.40%
1/1/08-6/31/08 141 31 21.99%
7/1/08-12/31/08 153 39 25.49%UCGal
ParticipantAdding one more column to your data – distressed sales as percent of total sales – you can see that is dramatically increasing.
COE Dates Total Sales Distress Sales Percent
1/1/05-6/30/05 139 0 0.00%
7/1/05-12/31/05 128 0 0.00%
1/1/06-6/30/06 153 1 0.65%
7/1/06-12/31/06 164 0 0.00%
1/1/07-6/30/07 161 3 1.86%
7/1/07-12/31/07 173 18 10.40%
1/1/08-6/31/08 141 31 21.99%
7/1/08-12/31/08 153 39 25.49%UCGal
ParticipantAdding one more column to your data – distressed sales as percent of total sales – you can see that is dramatically increasing.
COE Dates Total Sales Distress Sales Percent
1/1/05-6/30/05 139 0 0.00%
7/1/05-12/31/05 128 0 0.00%
1/1/06-6/30/06 153 1 0.65%
7/1/06-12/31/06 164 0 0.00%
1/1/07-6/30/07 161 3 1.86%
7/1/07-12/31/07 173 18 10.40%
1/1/08-6/31/08 141 31 21.99%
7/1/08-12/31/08 153 39 25.49%UCGal
ParticipantAdding one more column to your data – distressed sales as percent of total sales – you can see that is dramatically increasing.
COE Dates Total Sales Distress Sales Percent
1/1/05-6/30/05 139 0 0.00%
7/1/05-12/31/05 128 0 0.00%
1/1/06-6/30/06 153 1 0.65%
7/1/06-12/31/06 164 0 0.00%
1/1/07-6/30/07 161 3 1.86%
7/1/07-12/31/07 173 18 10.40%
1/1/08-6/31/08 141 31 21.99%
7/1/08-12/31/08 153 39 25.49%UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount]UCGal your comments are only meant to stroke your own ego IMO. [/quote]
Not my intention. I wasn’t trying to brag… My niche skills are that – I couldn’t do database stuff without some training… I was trying to ask about definitions. Sorry you took it as ego stroking – it wasn’t intended that way.
As far as your definition of “engineer” – I guess I qualify since my very NON elite undergraduate degree (BSEE) came from ABET accredited SDSU. My graduate program was also public school (PSU) and qualified. Looking at ABET.org – UCSD would also qualify – they have 7 accredited engineering programs.
I guess that’s me stroking my ego… Woot woot – I went to public schools! Yay me.
It’s funny – my husband is a registered architect and gets really annoyed that software types call themselves architects. Legally, only registered architects are supposed to use the term… (It’s part of the california state business and practice laws that govern architects in CA.)
Again – I was only trying to understand a definiton. Sorry.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount]UCGal your comments are only meant to stroke your own ego IMO. [/quote]
Not my intention. I wasn’t trying to brag… My niche skills are that – I couldn’t do database stuff without some training… I was trying to ask about definitions. Sorry you took it as ego stroking – it wasn’t intended that way.
As far as your definition of “engineer” – I guess I qualify since my very NON elite undergraduate degree (BSEE) came from ABET accredited SDSU. My graduate program was also public school (PSU) and qualified. Looking at ABET.org – UCSD would also qualify – they have 7 accredited engineering programs.
I guess that’s me stroking my ego… Woot woot – I went to public schools! Yay me.
It’s funny – my husband is a registered architect and gets really annoyed that software types call themselves architects. Legally, only registered architects are supposed to use the term… (It’s part of the california state business and practice laws that govern architects in CA.)
Again – I was only trying to understand a definiton. Sorry.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount]UCGal your comments are only meant to stroke your own ego IMO. [/quote]
Not my intention. I wasn’t trying to brag… My niche skills are that – I couldn’t do database stuff without some training… I was trying to ask about definitions. Sorry you took it as ego stroking – it wasn’t intended that way.
As far as your definition of “engineer” – I guess I qualify since my very NON elite undergraduate degree (BSEE) came from ABET accredited SDSU. My graduate program was also public school (PSU) and qualified. Looking at ABET.org – UCSD would also qualify – they have 7 accredited engineering programs.
I guess that’s me stroking my ego… Woot woot – I went to public schools! Yay me.
It’s funny – my husband is a registered architect and gets really annoyed that software types call themselves architects. Legally, only registered architects are supposed to use the term… (It’s part of the california state business and practice laws that govern architects in CA.)
Again – I was only trying to understand a definiton. Sorry.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount]UCGal your comments are only meant to stroke your own ego IMO. [/quote]
Not my intention. I wasn’t trying to brag… My niche skills are that – I couldn’t do database stuff without some training… I was trying to ask about definitions. Sorry you took it as ego stroking – it wasn’t intended that way.
As far as your definition of “engineer” – I guess I qualify since my very NON elite undergraduate degree (BSEE) came from ABET accredited SDSU. My graduate program was also public school (PSU) and qualified. Looking at ABET.org – UCSD would also qualify – they have 7 accredited engineering programs.
I guess that’s me stroking my ego… Woot woot – I went to public schools! Yay me.
It’s funny – my husband is a registered architect and gets really annoyed that software types call themselves architects. Legally, only registered architects are supposed to use the term… (It’s part of the california state business and practice laws that govern architects in CA.)
Again – I was only trying to understand a definiton. Sorry.
UCGal
Participant[quote=paramount]UCGal your comments are only meant to stroke your own ego IMO. [/quote]
Not my intention. I wasn’t trying to brag… My niche skills are that – I couldn’t do database stuff without some training… I was trying to ask about definitions. Sorry you took it as ego stroking – it wasn’t intended that way.
As far as your definition of “engineer” – I guess I qualify since my very NON elite undergraduate degree (BSEE) came from ABET accredited SDSU. My graduate program was also public school (PSU) and qualified. Looking at ABET.org – UCSD would also qualify – they have 7 accredited engineering programs.
I guess that’s me stroking my ego… Woot woot – I went to public schools! Yay me.
It’s funny – my husband is a registered architect and gets really annoyed that software types call themselves architects. Legally, only registered architects are supposed to use the term… (It’s part of the california state business and practice laws that govern architects in CA.)
Again – I was only trying to understand a definiton. Sorry.
UCGal
ParticipantI’m a little curious – people seem to be using “programmer”, Engineer, and IT developer interchangeably. I guess that throws me for a loop since I’m a software programmer of the embedded type. (definitely not IT.)
My brother did IT in Colorado. Managed webfarms for the federal government, developed dba and enterprise apps for the state of Wyoming. Jobs were definitely tightening up when he exited the workforce due to terminal illness. What he did and what I do were so completely different. Even though we both called ourselves software engineers. He never had to write a device driver… never had to worry about stack overflows… memory management was a non-issue in his work.
UCGal
ParticipantI’m a little curious – people seem to be using “programmer”, Engineer, and IT developer interchangeably. I guess that throws me for a loop since I’m a software programmer of the embedded type. (definitely not IT.)
My brother did IT in Colorado. Managed webfarms for the federal government, developed dba and enterprise apps for the state of Wyoming. Jobs were definitely tightening up when he exited the workforce due to terminal illness. What he did and what I do were so completely different. Even though we both called ourselves software engineers. He never had to write a device driver… never had to worry about stack overflows… memory management was a non-issue in his work.
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