problems with powerpoint 2003

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

helllo,
i've just started a new job is a computer store and we have a presentation
on our flatscreen in front of our window that containts all of our special
prises including new stuff we've got in the shop.now my boss noticed that
after a while powerpoint 2003 stops.all the settings are right like they
should be but it's kind a strange!it plays and then after maybe 7-8 hours the
screen stops.what must i do?
 
I'd suggest asking this in a newsgroup related to PowerPoint, or perhaps one
related to whatever operating system you're running.

This newsgroup is for questions about VBA coding in Access, the database
product that's part of Office Professional.
 
In the US, standard working hours are 8 hours. After 8 hours, an employer
must pay at an overtime rate which is usually 1.5 times standard rate. Many
times an employer faces a strike over this issue. Sounds like your
presentation is telling you it's done working its standard hours. Suggest
you do something quickly before your presentation goes on strike and quits
working at all.
 
None of the American employees with whom I work get paid overtime, just as I
don't, working in Canada. (I'd love to only put in 8 hour days!) We get paid
salaries, not hourly wages.
 
Hi,


If so, such company does not operate accordingly to the law, if the company
is in Quebec (http://www.cnt.gouv.qc.ca/en/normes/duree.asp), and, indeed,
any excess is considered to be paid 1.5 time the normal time (or more). That
applies to employee that can be syndicated, not to the personal member of
the "direction", as example (and definitively not to self-employed). Here an
extract:

==============================

The regular workweek, as fixed by the Act, makes it possible to determine
the time from which an employee is working overtime and must be paid
accordingly. A regular workweek is by no means a time limit beyond which the
employee may refuse to work.

For the purposes of computing overtime, the regular workweek is 40 hours.

However, for some employees the regular workweek is as follows:

employee in the clothing industry
39 hours

employee working in a forestry operation or a sawmill
47 hours

employee who works in an isolated area or in the James Bay territory
55 hours
watchman who does not work for an enterprise supplying
a surveillance service

60 hours



================================

I assume something similar exist for Ontario.


Vanderghast, Access MVP
 
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