He also said that the parents give you a "calling name" - a first name that is actually used to "call" you and is (or "usually is", or "may be" - I do not exactly remember) different from the four official first names. That first name would then be the one you are known to people around you.

you register a child at school. He or she would then have the four first names in the documents, but somehow they would be called by the calling name at school by the teacher. How is this handled? Do the parents provide the extra calling name and it is that one that goes to the teachers' class list?


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Internal calls will show what is populated on the line for "Display (Caller ID)". External calls will show the name associated with that DID. The Caller ID Name for that DID is set at the Telco level, however you can change the "External Number Mask" on the phone's line which will change the DID you send to the Telco.

We were pleased to have NA calling. However, there is currently no way of setting up call display to the receiving person so they know who is calling. And there is no point of escalation at Hubspot (quote/unquote from tech support) I see that people have been requesting it for a few years, and since the target market for HubSpot is b-b, the request makes total sense to me. I want to send this up the ladder, but there is no clear path to doing that...can anyone help me with a solution or at least like this post, to show support for this idea. I plan to find a way to escalate it to the president, I'm so desperate for it. I hope to be able to copy this to 4 of the executive team at HUbspot, 2 CTO's, the chief Customer Officer, and exec vp of product via LinkedIn. If you agree with me

You might have found this post in our Ideas forum which we use to collect product feedback: Configure caller ID name. I have shared your feedback internally with the product team and requested a status update for this feature request.

You can assign calling names to the phone numbers in your inventory. This applies to toll-based numbers only, and excludes toll-free numbers. The names appear to recipients of outbound calls. You can update the names every seven days.

When you use an Amazon Chime SDK Voice Connector to place a call, that call is routed through a public switched telephone network to the telephone carrier of the called party. Some carriers don't support caller ID names, and some carriers don't use the Voice Connectors' CNAM database. As a result, a called party may not see calling names, or they might see a calling name different from the one you set.

I would recommend that, instead of relying on method names and branching (which will become brittle with any method name refactoring, is obviously more complex, etc.) that you simply break apart the methods more to abstract common logic into a shared method.

In other words, if you want to cultivate gentle, courteous speech, consider where you once were, and where you are now by the grace of God. Harsh speech, name-calling, and pejorative labeling reveal a heart deeply unaware of its own corruption.

If a professor in a North American country presents his- or herself by his/her first name in email messages, does this mean that students can refer to him/her by his/her first name? Or is this generally not a good idea, unless the professor has explicitly mentioned that he/she can be referred to by first name? I've noticed that most professors, who prefer to be referred to more formally, do not sign their emails with just their first names, but usually initials or first and last name.

It doesn't matter if you're a foreigner or a native, asking someone how they would like to be addressed is not rude or unusual. The answer will vary from person to person, some like having their title used, some like being addressed on a first name basis and (very rarely) some may prefer a nickname.

It is always safe to ask. Throughout my undergrad and grad career, all my professors have always asked their students to call them by their first name. Some professors say this is because they respect you and because they don't address you as "Mr/Miss Smith", then you shouldn't address them as "Prof. Smith". Other professors explain it's because everyone is an adult and you wouldn't call your boss "Mr/Miss Smith".

"Dear Prof. Smith - I noticed you signed your last e-mail to me, "Jim." Does that mean I should call you by your first name? Are there circumstances when that would be appropriate or inappropriate, such as with undergraduates or outside the lab?

Signing with his first name can happen by "incident" without thinking to much. Or because of other addressed people. It's a bad indication in general (but, of course, should be consistent with the addressing).

I am a professor at a Swiss university. I have a lab with >30 members (neurosciences) and my policy is to stay formal with my MSc/PhD students and postdocs for the first few weeks. This is because sometimes things do not work out, and I find it easier to address difficult topics (particularly the prospect of termination) if there is a certain amount of formal distance between me and my coworkers. Over time, however, I offer to everybody that we go first-names. Interestingly, I have two (Italian) postdocs who expect me to address them by first name, yet have always refused (since several years) to address me by first name. They feel uncomfortable with that, they explained to me.

A big mistake that Swiss and German students often do, however, is to address Prof Einstein in English as "Mister Einstein". Call me old-fashioned (or worse), but that really does get on my nerves. If you go formal, then please call me Dr. xy. Or else be informal and call me by first name. But if you do go formal, please address me with my academic title. Particularly if it is a title that you do not (yet) possess!

A graduate student addressing a non-advisor faculty member.

 

Similar to #1, but the 'familiarity' aspect starts to become more important, especially as the graduate student advances along the Ph.D. program. Graduate students are on their way to becoming members of the professional research community, so their status is coming loosely in range of that of professors. Familiarity thus becomes more important, and if a student has engaged that professor in extended conversation about, e.g., course material, a first-name basis may be appropriate. In this kind of situation, if such a professor signs an email addressed specifically to the graduate student (i.e., not a general class email, for example) with his/her first name, especially on a repeated basis, then I would feel comfortable addressing the professor by first name, at least in an email. I would still hesitate a bit to address them by first name in person, at least until it seemed that no negative reaction was forthcoming from first-name address in emails.


A graduate student addressing a faculty member in a direct advisory role.

 

Very similar to #2, with the exception that familiarity with most advisors ends up developing quite rapidly (in my experience, at least). Thus, for all except the newest of students to the research group, as long as the professor is okay with being addressed by first name in general, the students they are advising end up calling them by first name after a very short period of time. As well, by the end of their tenure, most graduate students end up more knowledgeable about their specific research area than their advisor(s), almost completely eliminating the 'status' element of the situation.


In all of these cases, such first-name address will probably make the professor aware that the question of the propriety and/or preference in mode of address has arisen in the student's mind. Therefore, pay attention to how they sign future correspondence. If they change to "Dr. X", then stop using their first name, promptly!

a) What to call the professor?As a rule, regardless of which country you are from or what a professor signs off on in his/her email, you should always continue addressing him/her as "Professor Lastname" in person, in email and in any other communications .... UNTIL that professor specifically asks you to do otherwise. The professor MAY ask you to call him/her something different. The professor MAY not correct you. As a default, call him/her Professor Lastname.

b) Can I ask the professor what he/she likes to be called?NO. Do not ask him/her about his/her preference. Why? Imagine that you are a medical doctor. You're been in school for many years, trained hard and despite all odds, succeeded in getting your medical degree. You of course will expect all patients, colleagues, interns, residents and others in the workplace to call you "Dr. Lastname." It would be odd for one of them to ask you if it's ok to call you something else. If you wanted to be called something else, you would probably say something.

c) Should I really call EVERY professor "Professor Lastname"? Students tend to more frequently call professors who are not white men by their first name while calling their male, white professors "Professor Lastname". Do not fall victim to implicit bias. See point a) above. You should call EVERY professor - regardless of gender, ethnicity, nationality, etc. Trust me. They will appreciate it.

I sporadically get an invalid_request_error for completion requests with one function definition. I always construct the request the same and works for thousands of requests, but every once in a while I get this error, or permutations of it. GPT4 seems to be garbling the function name appending additional stuff after it, which causes the regex not to match.

Now I work at a university, and we call each other by first names in the nursing school, but when I worked in arts and sciences, we addressed the professors and deans by their title. (Dean Smith, etc). I actually worked for a professor whose NAME was Dean, and he used that for good a lot! He is a great guy. ff782bc1db

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