i have to get up at like literally 7:30 tomorrow to drive to gatwick
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Last edited by FatherTed (2011-12-07 16:32:43)
Not to mention BP being one of the worlds largest oil companies requiring a constant influx of new engineering/science talent.FatherTed wrote:
not as big as we used to be sure, but until recently BAE tied up looooads of jobs in high-tier engineering, and Astra Zeneca is still one of the worlds top pharma companies
a bunch of jerks i need to meetMutantbear wrote:
whats in gatwick
Having let industry decline, tertiary education expand to everyone, and millions of worthless imiigrants in the UK is in a fix.Uzique wrote:
come on though... i'd take a free thatcher-era university education over a fancy £600 iphone, anyday
it's not as if you missed technology and conveniences that weren't even invented yet
we however are dealing with huge loans and a lack of opportunity, knowing that our own PARENTS had a much better deal
pretty easy to be bitter
/fwp to the max
I have a week long Business Intelligence webinar that starts at 5:30am in January. I'm bearing it because it's damn well important for my projects.Dauntless wrote:
a bunch of jerks i need to meetMutantbear wrote:
whats in gatwick
for a meeting
actually they aren't jerks they're pretty nice but i don't like mornings
Physics and Chemistry are pretty useless, and have been for decades really.Uzique wrote:
physics and chem grads in the uk at the moment suffer some of the highest unemployment rate. and something like 9% end up getting a job in their field, which says a lot. it alson has the highest instance of undergraduates taking MSc's or further study, because it's either too hard to find a graduate job or because seemingly the only way forward is to gain an extra level of qualification. sure the companies are there but the competition must be fierce, cause the statistics are pretty dire.
Yeah, I suspect his science friends are in it for the theory rather than the application side. Books over jobs. I have a nephew, albeit super smart, that was offered a six figure pharmaceutical job over a year before he graduated.Dilbert_X wrote:
Physics and Chemistry are pretty useless, and have been for decades really.Uzique wrote:
physics and chem grads in the uk at the moment suffer some of the highest unemployment rate. and something like 9% end up getting a job in their field, which says a lot. it alson has the highest instance of undergraduates taking MSc's or further study, because it's either too hard to find a graduate job or because seemingly the only way forward is to gain an extra level of qualification. sure the companies are there but the competition must be fierce, cause the statistics are pretty dire.
Chemical Engineering is pretty handy.
Maybe it's because you browse through the "mature" category?Dilbert_X wrote:
On my new 1900x1200 24" Ultrasharp monitor I can now see that most pornstars have quite bad skin.
I don't whether to cry for them or take off my glasses.
all fair criticisms, but not our generation's fault! i wholly condemn the upgrading of half-rate profession polytechnics to universities, too... but what can you do about it really? other than try to play a flawed system as best as you can.Dilbert_X wrote:
Having let industry decline, tertiary education expand to everyone, and millions of worthless imiigrants in the UK is in a fix.Uzique wrote:
come on though... i'd take a free thatcher-era university education over a fancy £600 iphone, anyday
it's not as if you missed technology and conveniences that weren't even invented yet
we however are dealing with huge loans and a lack of opportunity, knowing that our own PARENTS had a much better deal
pretty easy to be bitter
/fwp to the max
Being reliant on a fickle services 'industry', which has no industry to service, the fix is unfixable.
No wonder young Irish are emigrating like crazy.
Seems to be across all categories, I can see they're covering it with makeup when before I couldn'tAR wrote:
Maybe it's because you browse through the "mature" category?
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2011-12-07 17:03:10)
The bane of IPS panels.Dilbert_X wrote:
Seems to be across all categories, I can see they're covering it with makeup when before I couldn'tAR wrote:
Maybe it's because you browse through the "mature" category?
yeah but where are you talking about, though? sounds like a drastically different job market to here in the UK. super competitive here and a 'starting' six-figure salary is pretty much unheard of in any profession. you talk as if the sciences are a global goldmine, but it really isn't.Ilocano wrote:
Yeah, I suspect his science friends are in it for the theory rather than the application side. Books over jobs. I have a nephew, albeit super smart, that was offered a six figure pharmaceutical job over a year before he graduated.Dilbert_X wrote:
Physics and Chemistry are pretty useless, and have been for decades really.Uzique wrote:
physics and chem grads in the uk at the moment suffer some of the highest unemployment rate. and something like 9% end up getting a job in their field, which says a lot. it alson has the highest instance of undergraduates taking MSc's or further study, because it's either too hard to find a graduate job or because seemingly the only way forward is to gain an extra level of qualification. sure the companies are there but the competition must be fierce, cause the statistics are pretty dire.
Chemical Engineering is pretty handy.
Last edited by Uzique (2011-12-07 17:05:19)