Jobs/Colleges
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Jobs/Colleges
I was wondering what jobs/colleges you all do/have been to. I would greatly appreciate responses as it is I believe they might help open my eyes a bit to the career field.
fuzzball27 >>-->
Re: Jobs/Colleges
What about Universities or other Post-Graduate programs I may not have heard of?
(...I still have a few more years till I go to 'uni', of course.)
(...I still have a few more years till I go to 'uni', of course.)
Commit to LEGO Mindstorms Robotics Stack Exchange:
bit.ly/MindstormsSE
Commit to LEGO Stack Exchange: bit.ly/Area51LEGOcommit
Re: Jobs/Colleges
I studied electronic engineering for about 1 year and then did computer science for about 2.5 years. I never did finish either degree. Lucky for me this was during the big boom before 2000, so getting a job was easy. Looking back, it probably wasn't the smartest move.
I started with some low level system admin work and programming for a little while but quickly went on to doing IT project engineering work, developing new solutions for customers in the telecom and also oil and gas industry. I have a little more than 17 years experience now with Linux, 15 of which in a professional context. I am now an IT infrastructure architect and I design (and sometimes implement) Linux-based infrastructure solutions. My current project involves designing and implementing a DNS solution for a large Telco.
Linux started off as my hobby and has now become the basis of my income. Be mindful of turning your hobby into your job, though. Linux is no longer something I play with at home, it hasn't for for years. After a while it becomes just your job thing and you need to get away from it at home. This will also be true of programming, etc. So while turning a hobby into your job sounds like a dream thing to do, make sure you find another hobby once that happens
- Xander
I started with some low level system admin work and programming for a little while but quickly went on to doing IT project engineering work, developing new solutions for customers in the telecom and also oil and gas industry. I have a little more than 17 years experience now with Linux, 15 of which in a professional context. I am now an IT infrastructure architect and I design (and sometimes implement) Linux-based infrastructure solutions. My current project involves designing and implementing a DNS solution for a large Telco.
Linux started off as my hobby and has now become the basis of my income. Be mindful of turning your hobby into your job, though. Linux is no longer something I play with at home, it hasn't for for years. After a while it becomes just your job thing and you need to get away from it at home. This will also be true of programming, etc. So while turning a hobby into your job sounds like a dream thing to do, make sure you find another hobby once that happens
- Xander
| My Blog: I'd Rather Be Building Robots (http://botbench.com)
| RobotC 3rd Party Driver Suite: (http://rdpartyrobotcdr.sourceforge.net)
| Some people, when confronted with a problem, think, "I know, I'll use threads,"
| and then two they hav erpoblesms. (@nedbat)
| RobotC 3rd Party Driver Suite: (http://rdpartyrobotcdr.sourceforge.net)
| Some people, when confronted with a problem, think, "I know, I'll use threads,"
| and then two they hav erpoblesms. (@nedbat)
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
After high school, I goofed off for a few years. When I turned 30, I finally decided to go to college and make something of my life. As a 'non-traditional' student, it took me three years to get my BS degree in Computer Technology. (normally a four year program)
I get a lot of people ask me when LEGO is going to hire me. I'm not sure I want to trade in my 'want-to-do' hobby for a 'have-to-do' job.
However, I do enjoy programming at home and at work.
Steve
I get a lot of people ask me when LEGO is going to hire me. I'm not sure I want to trade in my 'want-to-do' hobby for a 'have-to-do' job.
However, I do enjoy programming at home and at work.
Steve
---> Link to lots of MINDSTORMS stuff under my picture --->
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
What is your current job?hassenplug wrote:I get a lot of people ask me when LEGO is going to hire me.
Where did you guys go to college?
fuzzball27 >>-->
Re: Jobs/Colleges
7 years ago I started my studies in Physics, and I'm very close to getting my diploma (very similar to an MSc).
My minor subject was digital imaging (which was the closest subject to "programming" for physics students at that time), and the institute of digital imaging and computer vision one day offered a job to "get LEGO robots working from MATLAB". You know how that turned out . I had a job to develop the toolbox for roughly 10 hours a week, for a period of over 2 years, and then sometimes a week / month extra...
For my diploma thesis I chose to do something I really enjoyed and went to the electrical engineering faculty (which is the same faculty as my "lego institute" etc. belongs to). I ended up at the institute for man-machine-interaction, where I spent one year developing software for cameras to get a marker-based optical tracking system (to track objects with 6 degrees of freedom) as my final thesis. The idea was/is to track a quadcopter, and other (flying) robots. I enjoyed this so much that I'm going to start there as an assistant / grad student / PhD student, doing projects with a lot of software, simulations, 3d computer graphics, and hopefully a kinect camera and what not (I'll have to find a field to focus though and so some serious research).
So after all, I'm slowly changing from physics to electrical engineering with a strong focus on computer science / software design and development.
Even though Xander is right about the hobby thing, I can only advise you to DO EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT. Find out what you LOVE to do, and do it. I always knew at heart I wanted to do something with "programming and creating creative solutions" and all that, and I realized that I am "the happiest when I code". Never the less I started physics for "rational reasons". Even though it's a great subject, especially when you TALK about it and don't have to do the MATH, it wasn't my first choice. I always knew it, but I didn't realize it. Today it's a great help to me and I don't regret my choice. But if you know what I mean by this "gut feeling", and you have that too, then try to follow it.
Wow, great you talk about this. That was EXACTLY one of the main reasons I chose Physics to study, and not computer science. I always wanted "prgramming, software design etc." to be my hobby. It turns out I'm too passionate about that. I always did projects and stuff at home, drawing attention away from physics (which is why it took me 7 years to complete and not the usual 5 years).mightor wrote:
...
So while turning a hobby into your job sounds like a dream thing to do, make sure you find another hobby once that happens
My minor subject was digital imaging (which was the closest subject to "programming" for physics students at that time), and the institute of digital imaging and computer vision one day offered a job to "get LEGO robots working from MATLAB". You know how that turned out . I had a job to develop the toolbox for roughly 10 hours a week, for a period of over 2 years, and then sometimes a week / month extra...
For my diploma thesis I chose to do something I really enjoyed and went to the electrical engineering faculty (which is the same faculty as my "lego institute" etc. belongs to). I ended up at the institute for man-machine-interaction, where I spent one year developing software for cameras to get a marker-based optical tracking system (to track objects with 6 degrees of freedom) as my final thesis. The idea was/is to track a quadcopter, and other (flying) robots. I enjoyed this so much that I'm going to start there as an assistant / grad student / PhD student, doing projects with a lot of software, simulations, 3d computer graphics, and hopefully a kinect camera and what not (I'll have to find a field to focus though and so some serious research).
So after all, I'm slowly changing from physics to electrical engineering with a strong focus on computer science / software design and development.
Even though Xander is right about the hobby thing, I can only advise you to DO EXACTLY WHAT YOU WANT. Find out what you LOVE to do, and do it. I always knew at heart I wanted to do something with "programming and creating creative solutions" and all that, and I realized that I am "the happiest when I code". Never the less I started physics for "rational reasons". Even though it's a great subject, especially when you TALK about it and don't have to do the MATH, it wasn't my first choice. I always knew it, but I didn't realize it. Today it's a great help to me and I don't regret my choice. But if you know what I mean by this "gut feeling", and you have that too, then try to follow it.
RWTH - Mindstorms NXT Toolbox for MATLAB
state of the art in nxt remote control programming
http://www.mindstorms.rwth-aachen.de
MotorControl now also in Python, .net, and Mathematica
state of the art in nxt remote control programming
http://www.mindstorms.rwth-aachen.de
MotorControl now also in Python, .net, and Mathematica
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
I'm a software engineer for a company that makes smart meters, and I went to Purdue University.fuzzball27 wrote:What is your current job? Where did you guys go to college?
Steve
---> Link to lots of MINDSTORMS stuff under my picture --->
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
As primary education I went to a missionary school. Afterwards I went to a technical secondary education with a focus on mathematics and computer science. I just started in University this month studying either "Informatics" or "Computer Science". (Not even the teachers are sure which it is.)
I have no idea what I want to work with so I didn't know what kind of education I should take either. So I just choose something which I found interesting. You can go to university for free where I live so I can always just change my study if I need to.
I have no idea what I want to work with so I didn't know what kind of education I should take either. So I just choose something which I found interesting. You can go to university for free where I live so I can always just change my study if I need to.
My blog: http://spillerrec.dk/category/lego/
RICcreator, an alternative to nxtRICeditV2: http://riccreator.sourceforge.net/
RICcreator, an alternative to nxtRICeditV2: http://riccreator.sourceforge.net/
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
I'm studying technical informatics (not sure if that's the correct term in english, in german it's called Ingenieurinformatik) at the Technical University Ilmenau in Germany. I've just finished the Bachelor Degree but will also go for the Masters Degree that will take another three semesters.
link to my youtube channel under my avatar!
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Re: Jobs/Colleges
At 18 I studied Computational Science (Computer Science with extra maths) at University and got a BSc after 3 years. I've now been working in the software (and hardware) industry for nearly 30 years. A small group of us have been together for most of that time, moving from company to company (including a startup that I was a co-founder of), usually as a result of the existing company being taken over/bought. Until two years ago I worked for Sun Microsystems and now I work for Oracle.
Over the years I've done lots of different things, from application programming, programming language systems (compilers and run time systems), low level system programming (linux and Windows device drivers), even some embedded systems, but mainly I've been involved with networking, remote access and virtualization of one sort or another, usually at a pretty technical level. These days I don't program so much, as I'm the development director for a small team creating software for Linux/Mac/Windows/tablet systems, but I do get very involved in the design and architecture of the work we do.
Through all of this time I've had a huge interest in small computers and in particular ones that control hardware devices, but this work has almost always been a hobby not my day job. These days I work mainly on the low level aspects of leJOS, and when not messing around with computers I climb, and ride bikes...
I'd say you can make your hobby your job, but you had better be really, really sure that you have a very deep interest in it, or as others have said you may find that you lose interest. Oh and it's also good to have something to get you away from a computer screen!
Andy
Over the years I've done lots of different things, from application programming, programming language systems (compilers and run time systems), low level system programming (linux and Windows device drivers), even some embedded systems, but mainly I've been involved with networking, remote access and virtualization of one sort or another, usually at a pretty technical level. These days I don't program so much, as I'm the development director for a small team creating software for Linux/Mac/Windows/tablet systems, but I do get very involved in the design and architecture of the work we do.
Through all of this time I've had a huge interest in small computers and in particular ones that control hardware devices, but this work has almost always been a hobby not my day job. These days I work mainly on the low level aspects of leJOS, and when not messing around with computers I climb, and ride bikes...
I'd say you can make your hobby your job, but you had better be really, really sure that you have a very deep interest in it, or as others have said you may find that you lose interest. Oh and it's also good to have something to get you away from a computer screen!
Andy
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