I don’t know, I did it for a decade. It’s a different puzzle for sure. People can be hard. I like dogs better. Nobody frowns at you if you have to hit that button on the shock collar.
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Type: Posts; User: GreenfieldBison
I don’t know, I did it for a decade. It’s a different puzzle for sure. People can be hard. I like dogs better. Nobody frowns at you if you have to hit that button on the shock collar.
Sent...
Really? Would you say that any or all of those senior engineers are/were good at managing others expectations? At managing up? At communicating to business leaders and/or external partners? All of...
Not sure if you meant to reply to me or to Tailg8r but for the record I stepped off the treadmill nearly two years ago now. I’m not hiring anybody. I deleted my LinkedIn account. That was a freeing...
I wish you were right in your first paragraph but I disagree. Those who rise up as Sr. Engineers are those who are the most politically efficacious. It is always so in every vector. Unless...
I would say you are in a very good place then. Congrats.
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Yes the 2 yr tech school degree is exactly what business wants these days. Perhaps that is really the need as well. Back when I came out of the CS dept in the 80's in the business world we were...
Hmmm. You likely wouldn’t care for MIT graduates either then. They have much more theory and much less hands on work than NDSU grads in my personal experience. They can think damn quick though. ...
What do you think they need to do differently?
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I started out as a EE before switching to CS and if that is who I think it is he was my EE advisor. Also taught the intro EE class (basically FORTRAN programming). I was older than average and he...
Sounds like you were not far behind me in CS. John Martin was my advisor. An introvert to be sure. Bob Gammil was a gas and a dual appointment in CS and EEE at the time I was there. I also took that...