On Sun, Jan 06, 2008 at 11:04:27PM -0800, SJS wrote:
Well, if they prepared the food, they'd be a cafeteria. And I've paid the flat-rate for minimally-metered access to a cafeteria. It worked pretty well. If the cafeteria at work offered a flat-rate plan, I might well take advantage of it.
A certain famous search engine company is kind of known for having a free-to-employees cafeteria that serves fairly good food. I know that if I worked at a place like that it would be very hard to not become quite large. My work has working dinners but it would be hard to consider it good food. They also are fairly restrictive of portions, so it doesn't really work like a cafeteria. Also, technically it counts as income from the IRS's perspective. For some reason, working lunches don't. Dave -- [email protected] http://www.kernel-panic.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/kplug-list
