Dilbert_X wrote:
Projects which to you might seem to have come out of nowhere often have been years in the making, years to develop the science, years to develop the technological building blocks, years to develop working processes, years to scale everything, years to actually create and tool up a working product and presto the ipad came out of nowhere in the blink of an eye.
Govt project planning is typically too slow and disastrous.
i'm not talking about the ipad though, am i, or once in a decade paradigm-changing tech? the vast majority of young graduates in engineering-related disciplines today are doing compsci, EE, or programming. the generational mantra is 'learn to code', not 'learn to design naval radars'.
sorry if that makes you feel precious about your own career. i'm not denigrating anything about your own project lead times: i'm saying that it's not the NORM today.
i have a british friend who works in an industrial design company here in korea, which is obviously a hotbed for it (monitor panel tech and the like). i can guarantee you that the average project at his company and average work contract is 1/3rd what it is in your particular niche.
and this is excepting the entire discussion about the fact that permanent contracts, like generous pensions and retirement packages, are going the way of the dodo. hence, again, why i said it hasn't been the norm for the last couple generations of graduates. most companies' HR departments frankly prefer short-term and casualized workers. engineers or not.
And the bulk of my wealth creation has been outside work, so I don't care too much really.
yes, well done, live-at-home warren buffet. you should write a trading guru guide and self-publish it on the Amazon store. 'don't pay rent or have a mortgage for 25 years and graduate in a system where all education is free'. you're a trading superstar!
Last edited by uziq (2022-09-06 03:35:26)