its_pizza

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 4 points 11 months ago (3 children)

In the Mojave? Mountain lions, coyotes, maybe a dog, and snakes (though that is more a matter of "avoid" than "defend").

[–] [email protected] 6 points 11 months ago

If the method does a long thing, the keep it long. I do a lot of data analysis and simulation, and so often people who came before had this urge to shorten methods, so we get:

def do_calculation(N, X, y, z, a, b, c):
    # Setup stuff
    for i in range(N):
        calclation(X[i], y, z, a, b, c)`

Sometimes there's a place for that, like if calculation could be swapped for a different function, or if calculation is used all over the program. It's a pretty good clue that something is up though when the signatures are almost identical. Of course, that has just led to people writing:

def do_calculation(big_struct):
    read_data(big_struct)
    calculate(big_struct)
    write_data(big_struct)
[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

I'm not sure of your country, but are you tied to it? (For example, do you have family, or are trying to attain citizenship?)

Opening up your search might be helpful. Look at a variety of universities in many countries to see what options there are.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

Yes and no. I would say for the field OP is in, a lot of jobs will have B.S. or M.S. as the "required" education, and then M.S. or Ph.D. as "preferred". The U.S. just dumped $280B into the CHIPS act, so now is a pretty good time to be in semiconductor R&D. The folks I work with seems to have little trouble popping back and forth between industry, academia, and government.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

Depends on the job, and how good your read is of the situation. My experience has been that managers guilt trip or do other emotional games when they're out of other options. In that case, it may be a safe bet to stand up to them.

Other places you're more replaceable, or the manager doesn't care and has an axe to grind. Then it's trickier.

[–] [email protected] 30 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Every (US) job description I've had save one had a line to the effect of "... and other duties as required by management." Not to follow would be considered insubordination and could lead to termination with cause. Job description in this case is just a broad-stroke outline of what the job is supposed to entail.

The "save one" was a job with a strong union presence. In that case, going outside my job description could lead to me and my manager being in trouble.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

Not ear buds, but have you tried any bone- conduction headphones?

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

The $1M salary is really typical of California tech job postings, and it is essentially meaningless. Under the new transparency law, employers have to list the salary range on job advertisements. For many of these speculative or open-application type roles, it's common to list $90k-$900k as the range.

It makes great headlines, but nobody in that job is actually going to make 900k.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 1 year ago

The 3 drug cocktail worked, but it was often a minimally-trained technician charged with placing the actual IV lines. I know most of us have had an IV sometime in our life with relatively little pain, but that seems not to be the case for some inmates. Anxiety, old age, obesity, dehydration, and myriad other reasons can make it more challenging to place a catheter.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

Look how many jobs in the private sector also require a security clearance. Most things in aerospace, but also a lot of enterprise/cloud/telecom computing will have a "federal" arm, and they need cleared workers for that. Amazon, Google, AT&T, Verizon, Microsoft and many other big names have divisions that do classified work. They pay a premium over regular positions because the clearance is a PITA for everyone involved.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago

No stores, markets, and services also translates to a low availability of jobs.

As a high schooler, you almost inevitably need some kind of "boost" to get out on your own. Maybe college, but at least a car or help signing for an apartment. Without at least some kind of help, it's easy to get literally "stuck" at age 18 or 19. No money for a car or apartment, but no close access to employment without one of those tools.

I see parents moving to the suburbs to give a safe life for their kids away from "bad things" in the city. Meanwhile, parents may not be home until 6 or 7 pm due to leaving the city in traffic, and bored suburban teens can get into just as much trouble as their urban counterparts. Unless the parents are also able to commit some serious money to other involvement for their teenagers, the suburban life may not play out well for them.

Something that really struck me, particularly in Northern Europe, was that the young adults seemed to be a lot more self assured. There are probably a lot of reasons for this that I do not notice, but I wonder how much results from having a practical path to an independent and productive life. This in turn opens up so many other doors socially.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

Putin took some steps to strategically wreck any semblance of politics in Russia. One of his advisors, Vladislav Surkov, secretly funded a variety of opposition parties, ranging from "green" environmental parties to openly Nazi groups. They let these groups grow in an organic way before "leaking" the information that they were all funded by the state/FSB.

This type of move, and similar actions, have made true political engagement very difficult. That march, protest, Facebook group, or underground newspaper? One has no idea whether it's legitimate grassroots movement, or purely astroturfed campaign. Unless you have significant time and resources to study the issue, it is impossible to tell.

This was the exact objective: to basically make politics inaccessible for 99% of people. Sure there will be 1% who do have a good picture of what's going on and who try to create movements, but their voices are drowned in the confusion. The average person may simply find that it's too difficult to participate in a meaningful way. Even someone with full intentions to learn and participate may find themselves sidelined into a fake movement and essentially neutralized from a political perspective.

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