Tuesday, December 3, 2013

how old do you have to be to get a job as a bag boy at publix?

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mr.hasse


Im looking to get a job somewhere, and I heard the age for being a bag boy is 14. Can this be confirmed?


Answer
Federal law grants the right to work to minors who are as young as 14 years of age, as long as their jobs are not considered "hazardous," but they can not work more than three hours long during a school night and no longer than eight hours as long as there is no school on the following day (most cases only Saturday).

The rules for 16 and 17 years old also differ. Here is the link to the State of Florida underage worker outline: http://bit.ly/ibKUOi

I worked at Publix one summer and there were kids ages 16 working as bag boys and the managers were pretty good about keeping an eye on them in regards to breaks, etc.

Good luck!

Where can I find the best netbook for school?




injuried


I want to get a netbook that is useful in a school setting. I want to mostly be able to browse the web, be light to carry in a school bag and have access to wireless most of the time. Can a net book also be used to write word document as well?


Answer
The netbook is a modern curiosity, a new class of notebook barely a year old and still going through its growing pains as manufacturers try to balance their designs properly. A netbook is characterized by low-end, power-efficient hardware, an exceptionally small and light chassis with a screen size topping out at around ten inches, and just enough horsepower for word processing and Internet usage. By paring down features and performance, manufacturers have been able to produce these small computers cheaply, pricing them well below their ultraportable forebears like Sony's T series. In fact, netbooks often cost less than full-sized "budget" notebooks. It's this blend of form, function, and value that has made netbooks so popular.
5
votesBuzz up!

The functionality and practicality of modern netbooks like Asus' seminal and ultimately class-defining Eee PC makes them attractive options in this back-to-school season. As a college student at UC San Diego, I've seen students carrying around notebooks of all sizes, including one person struggling to fit a massive Alienware notebook onto a tiny lecture hall desk. Students need computers for school, of course, and a portable machine that can be brought to class is extremely useful. But students also don't tend to have a lot of money, and as a result, they often settle for seven- or eight-pound laptops. With the advent of the netbook, however, a student's load can easily and cheaply be lightened. Using an inexpensive netbook for class and a more powerful desktop at homeâeven a small-form-factor machine in a dorm roomâsuddenly becomes both a practical and viable option, especially when you consider that many netbooks manage at least three hours of battery life, which is exactly the length of a single, long lecture.

Of course, the runaway success of the Eee PC has led to a flood of new models from players both large and small. Here, big boys like HP, Dell, and Lenovo pit their wares against smaller players like Everex, MSI, and Gigabyte. The number of netbook flavors available is simply staggering, and although the underlying hardware of many of these units is similar, key differences distinguish each one from its peers. We've summed up those differences in a comprehensive guide to the netbook market, complete with our recommendations based on hands-on experience with the models you can buy today.

The common netbook platform
Early entries into the netbook market had to make do with underclocked Celeron M processors and the occasional Via C7-M, with the vast majority of manufacturers biding their time until Intel released its Atom processor. The Atom was designed to offer the bare minimum of performance in a small, power-efficient package that's cheap to produce. The result, at least so far, is the Atom N270, a 1.6GHz chip with a maximum TDP (thermal design power) of just 2.5 watts. This chip generates so little heat that it can operate without a fan. And the Atom is cheap, too, or at least cheap enough for Intel to sell it mounted on a Mini-ITX motherboard for less than $70.

<<read on for much more info>>




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