Cafards, c’est commun ici ?
▲ 2 r/Lyon

Cafards, c’est commun ici ?

Je viens d’emmenager dans un petit studio 1er étage à Lyon vers Sans Souci. C’est une sous-loc de 2 mois seulement et heureusement. Ça fait même pas une semaine et je suis déjà tombée 2 fois sur ce genre de cafard... C’est normal ici à Lyon ? Jamais vu ça à Paris... Que faire ?

u/statusreset — 2 days ago

Partir à 17h : normal ou mal vu en entreprise ?

Je viens d’avoir mon premier vrai CDI après mon alternance dans une boîte internationale (secteur informatique avec un peu d’administratif). Contrat 35h, poste junior, pas de contact client. Salaire autour de 2000€ net.

J’arrive à 9h30 comme la plupart des gens de l’équipe. Je prends seulement 30 min de pause déjeuner (12h30-13h) pour pouvoir partir plus tôt. Du coup je fais pile mes 7h et je pars à 17h.

Techniquement c’est ce que je dois faire, mais je me sens hyper coupable : la plupart des gens restent plus tard, et même si personne ne me dit rien, j’ai parfois l’impression qu’on me regarde bizarrement.

Est-ce que 17h c’est vraiment tôt en France dans ce genre de poste ? Ou est-ce que je suis juste dans ma tête ?

En plus, on a parfois des meetings à 17h à cause du décalage horaire avec les équipes internationales, donc je suis obligée de rester jusqu’à 18h de temps en temps.

Deuxième point : j’ai dans mon contrat 2 jours de télétravail par semaine, mais on me dit que je n’y ai pas droit pendant ma période d’essai (3 mois) « parce que c’est la préférence de la boîte ». C’est courant ça ?

Bref, je me demande si je suis trop rigide avec mes horaires ou si c’est normal de se sentir comme ça en début de carrière. Merci d’avance pour vos retours d’expérience !

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u/statusreset — 3 days ago
▲ 3 r/polls

Could I lose some more weight?

pic

I am one on right with striped top. I live in a big european city where norm is super skinny. And this is the biggest I have been.

View Poll

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u/statusreset — 7 days ago

Punk/rock/blues events this weekend?

I am a 24F solo traveler that will be in Istanbul 13th to 16th June. This weekend basically. I am looking for places that play punk, rock, metal or even blues/rockabilly. I am open to concerts as well. Out of topic, but if you happen to know any coffee shops or pubs that stand out of the crowd, are old looking, vintage looking, alt, etc., let me know :).

Thanks!

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u/statusreset — 23 days ago

Is this normal in Georgia or am I getting special treatment?

I’m a 24F traveling solo in Georgia (Tbilisi for a week and now Kazbegi), and I’m a bit confused about something.

Literally everywhere I go (cafes, wine bars, even randomly in the street) people are extremely nice to me. Servers ask where I’m from, how long I’m staying, sometimes offer me extra wine for free, invite me to come back, or even ask for my number. This has happened pretty much every single day and in almost every place.

Even in Kazbegi, where it’s super quiet and there aren’t many tourists, I still got invited back for wine and told I’m beautiful despite a language barrier.

This never happens to me in France where Im from, and I don’t consider myself especially attractive, maybe slightly above average at most, so I’m a bit confused.

**Is this just normal Georgian hospitality and friendliness? Or is it more that people aren’t used to solo female travelers and get curious? Or is this more like flirting culture here?**

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u/statusreset — 27 days ago

Looking for scenic beautiful day trips from Tbilisi

Hey everyone!

I arrived yesterday in Tbilisi and already explored a bit around the Old Town, Mother of Georgia, Sololaki, and the treasure path area, it’s honestly soooo beautiful.

I’m here for a week and thinking of doing day trips almost every day. After that, I’ll be heading to Kazbegi for 5 days, so I’d prefer places that aren’t better saved for there or too close to that region. Mainly looking for nature, mountains, views, and hikes, distance doesn’t really matter.

So far I’ve found:

- Uplistsikhe

- Birtvisi Fortress

- Betania Monastery

- Kiketi - Azeula hike

- Asureti village

- Tbilisi National Park

- Sabaduri Forest

- Bochorma Fortress

- Ujarma Fortress

I was thinking of doing the Kiketi–Azeula hike today, but not sure if it’s worth it or if there are better options.

Would love any recommendations :)

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u/statusreset — 1 month ago

Nothing compares 2 U - cover critique request

Nothing compares 2 U by Chris Cornell. Here is my cover. I know the guitar is weak. But I would like feedback on the singing if possible :). No hard feelings.

u/statusreset — 1 month ago

I recently got hired for a junior role in data migration/onboarding. From what I understood, the job is mainly about working with client data, cleaning it, transforming it, and helping move it into a new system. The migration is from an older internal platform (“Classic”) into a CRM-style system used by the clients.

The interview process focused a lot on data quality and data cleaning. I was asked questions like:

  • how to handle missing or inconsistent data
  • how to detect duplicates and ensure data consistency
  • how to validate that data is correct after transformations
  • general logic around making messy data usable

There were also some basic technical questions:

  • SQL (joins, group by, simple queries)
  • a bit of Python/pandas (very light)

The technical test was done in Excel and included:

  • a lot of data cleaning
  • pivot tables
  • quite a bit of Power Query
  • transforming datasets and making them usable

So overall, everything was very focused on data cleaning, transformation, and data quality. Now to be honest, I did rely quite a lot on AI during the process. They seem to have high expectations and want me to start soon (in about a week), which is making me a bit stressed. I’m currently doing the free Datacamp "intro to data quality" course, but I want to be wasting time.

In your opinion, what are the key things I absolutely need to learn before coming into this role in a week?

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u/statusreset — 2 months ago

I’d really appreciate some advice. I (24F) just received an offer for a Junior Data Migration & Onboarding Assistant role in a biopharma tech company (they build platforms for partnerships between pharma companies). The job is in Lyon (France), so I’d have to relocate from Paris. Salary is 32k€ annual gross, 4-month trial period, start ASAP (they said I could start remotely until I find accomodation).

Role overview:

  • Configure CRM tools and handle data migrations from legacy systems
  • Perform data quality checks (mostly Excel-based)
  • Support project managers (client meetings, documentation, follow-ups)
  • Ensure data consistency / avoid data leakage issues

I went through an HR interview, a 1-hour Excel test, and a 1h technical interview with questions on data quality, validation, etc.

I hold a Bachelor’s in Data Science with 2y internship included, finished Sept 2025. I have been job hunting for ~1y with no success until now. Long-term, I would like to move towards a more technical path (data engineering or even backend development). I’m quite independent by nature, I enjoy technical/problem-solving work, and I’m also aiming for a good salary and remote/flexible work in the long run.

So I’m hesitating between:

  • Taking the job → gain experience, move on later
  • Doing a Master’s in Data Science → better prospects maybe, but 1–2 more years

Concerned the role isn’t very technical + low salary, but also don’t want to stay stuck. What would you do?

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u/statusreset — 2 months ago
▲ 4 r/emploi+1 crossposts

Bonjour à tous,

Je (24F) viens de recevoir une offre pour un poste de Junior Data Migration & Onboarding Assistant dans une boîte tech. Le poste est à Lyon, donc je devrais quitter Paris. Salaire : 32k€ brut annuel, période d’essai de 4 mois, début ASAP (possibilité de commencer en remote le temps de trouver un logement).

Missions :

  • Configuration d’outils CRM et migrations de données
  • Contrôles de qualité des données (beaucoup d’Excel)
  • Support aux chefs de projet (réunions, suivi, documentation)
  • Garantie de la cohérence des données

Process : entretien RH + test Excel (1h) + entretien technique (qualité des données, validation, etc.), assez technique par rapport au poste.

Mon profil : BUT Data Science (Bac+3) avec 2 ans d’alternance, fin en sept 2025. Je cherche un job depuis ~1 an sans succès jusqu’ici.

À long terme, j’aimerais évoluer vers un poste plus technique (data engineering ou même backend). Je suis plutôt quelqu’un d’indépendant, j’aime le travail technique et concentré, et j’aimerais aussi viser à terme un bon salaire et plus de flexibilité / remote.

J’hésite donc entre :

  • Accepter le job → acquérir de l’expérience et rebondir ensuite
  • Faire un Master → potentiellement de meilleures opportunités, mais 1–2 ans en plus

J’ai peur que le poste ne soit pas très technique et que le salaire soit bas, mais en même temps je ne veux pas rester bloquée. Qu’est-ce que vous feriez à ma place ?

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u/statusreset — 2 months ago

I’d really appreciate some advice. I (24F) just received an offer for a Junior Data Migration & Onboarding Assistant role in a biopharma tech company (they build platforms for partnerships between pharma companies). The job is in Lyon (France), so I’d have to relocate from Paris. Salary is 32k€ annual gross, 4-month trial period, start ASAP (they said I could start remotely until I find accomodation).

Role overview:

  • Configure CRM tools and handle data migrations from legacy systems
  • Perform data quality checks (mostly Excel-based)
  • Support project managers (client meetings, documentation, follow-ups)
  • Ensure data consistency / avoid data leakage issues

I went through an HR interview, a 1-hour Excel test, and a 1h technical interview with questions on data quality, validation, etc.

I hold a Bachelor’s in Data Science with 2y internship included, finished Sept 2025. I have been job hunting for ~1y with no success until now. Long-term, I would like to move towards a more technical path (data engineering or even backend development). I’m quite independent by nature, I enjoy technical/problem-solving work, and I’m also aiming for a good salary and remote/flexible work in the long run.

So I’m hesitating between:

  • Taking the job → gain experience, move on later
  • Doing a Master’s in Data Science → better prospects maybe, but 1–2 more years

Concerned the role isn’t very technical + low salary, but also don’t want to stay stuck. What would you do?

reddit.com
u/statusreset — 2 months ago

Hi everyone :)

I’m a 24F planning to spend the entire month of June in Georgia, traveling solo. I’m hesitating between staying in Tbilisi, Gudauri, or Bakuriani, and I’d love some advice from people who know the country well.

I want a mix of city life + hiking/nature. I also don’t have a car nor a driving's license, so I’ll rely 100% on public transportation, but I can walk a lot and don’t mind long/active days. I’m also traveling on a budget, so I’m looking at staying in one place for the full month (Airbnb is much cheaper that way).

Right now I’m thinking:

  • Stay in Tbilisi and do day/weekend trips to the mountains (Gudauri/Kazbegi/etc.) OR
  • Stay directly in Gudauri or Bakuriani to be closer to hiking

I’m a bit worried that:

  • Tbilisi might get “done” quickly if I stay a full month
  • Gudauri/Bakuriani might feel too quiet or isolating for that long

So I’d love your honest opinion!

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u/statusreset — 2 months ago