Yes, people do tip more for good service, but they don't tip that much more. Literally, the weather outside has as much of an influence on tipping as does the level of service.
His religious awakenings began after West Point. He began exploring Catholicism in Mexico. When he came back (to the U.S.) he almost immediately joined a church.
I think Jackson was a deeply religious man in a deeply religious time. When you look at him through present eyes, it shows his religious faith in much higher relief than when you viewed him amongst his contemporaries.
Extroverts are outgoing, dominating, social people -- and tipping is an incentive for the server to pay you attention. Neurotics are prone to guilt and generalized anxiety -- maybe they tip more because of guilt over status differences between themselves and the server.
We tend to think of America as a place where the voluntary tip is king. Today, that's not necessarily the case.
as a result of continued research related to the demonstration.
A chef has a rare skill that requires a great deal of effort and study. People may feel less guilt because of that. I don't feel bad that a chef cooked me a meal, but I do feel bad that a waiter had to serve it to me.
It seems to me there is a licence agreement dispute over that now, but the licence was with ISS, not me,
The vulnerability which I demonstrated -- but didn't give any information about -- was properly disclosed to Cisco months in advance,
That said, the disclosure debate is one that needs to happen. The idea of full disclosure is just about as dangerous as no disclosure at all. As with most things, we have to find the proper balance.