Military Policeman, United States Army. Was a lot more fun when i did it from 2004-2007, lots more bullshit these days.
well i am still in college.. i'm not sure what i want to do.. i want to get into management(maybe finance).. but the thing is that i'm not sure what that even means.. i read this thread and i see people saying stuff like auditor/analyst/CPA and i don't even know what all that means..
Another issue is that i made a massive mistake by opting for arts in college since i (felt like) getting in to the civil service.. Dont know.. I could do an MBA after finishing the BA but not sure whether anyone will hire me..
As of now i have two viable options infront of me- getting into the civil services, or becoming a teacher of political science(since i'll be majoring in it).
Controls Engineer for a small machine building/engineering company. We build (and repair/change) industrial machines. I design the electrical control system to run the machine and then write/debug the program for the controller/hmi/etc.
Stuff like this:![]()
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pv7vwSnTZjs
This is exactly why you shouldn't go directly to college because society or, your parents /teachers /friends think you should. Go to a trade or tech school and earn some money while you figure out a plan.
you all have these cool jobs and I'm here waiting for a college admission letter.
I had to support those kinds of machines, they are quite impressive but there needs to be better application support for them.
The problem is that many/most are one of a kind machines and application support for one of a kinds is very expensive. Of course, it depends on the programmer too. Far too often, you get a 'loose ends' type of programmer in which they get in and get out leaving much to be desired (i.e. leave out features, leave out faults, etc. in order to turn a profit). It drives my boss crazy that I spend time putting all of that stuff in because he never does and never allows money in the quote for it. I cannot stand a machine that doesn't tell you what's wrong with it and suggests ways to fix it.
As a child, you want to be an adult.
As an adult, you want to be a child.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DSeI7Imlj8oUnited States Marine Corps, Combat Engineer.
btw, it's the 238th birthday of the Corps today.
As a child, you want to be an adult.
As an adult, you want to be a child.
We have programmers that like to intentionally leave out stuff so they can come back as often as possible for service calls when something goes wrong.
I've wondered about that - doesn't that say something to the customer about your skill level & thoroughness when your crap breaks repeatedly? Embarrassment comes to mind too. Do the customers just sit and take it?