• LexamM
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    2713 days ago

    It’s what makes me good at my job.

    • @[email protected]
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      1213 days ago

      I thought going into engineering would be a better environment for this kind of questioning. It turns out my toddler-level frequency of “Why?” transcends bachelor level expectations, thus I must pursue even higher education.

      Walking into a contract with uncurious junior engineers was frustrating to say the least.

      • @[email protected]
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        112 days ago

        Engineering, in general (not talking about programming) is a super conservative field. It’s crazy how many people I run into that are clearly intelligent, but have just been so silo’d into one field that they have no understanding of anything practical outside of their field.

    • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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      213 days ago

      Few things have benefited my career more than my obsessive desire to figure out what went wrong in as quick a time as possible

      And few things exercise my mind more wonderfully than emergency mode high stakes troubleshooting

      My grandfather was right, I should have been an electrician.

      • LexamM
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        212 days ago

        I think electrician is still too mundane for us.

        • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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          212 days ago

          Not when you get to the level of ‘The guy they call when the grid goes down’ level like my grandpa. The kind of intricate and expansive knowledge needed to address those issues is just the kind of mind fire I desire

          He was deeper on the spectrum than me by a wide margin, honestly I have no idea how he managed to be so successful going diagnosed and unassisted his whole life. I bet his wives had a lot to do with it.

          • LexamM
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            212 days ago

            At this point he would probably be considered an electrical engineer.

            • Angry_Autist (he/him)
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              212 days ago

              Considering his work for Pratt & Whitney I’d guess he had the certs for engineer but he was also ridiculously proud of the fact he ‘came up through the ranks’ so identified more as a Master Electrician.

              When he heard I went to college for CS he considered it a waste, I guess he grew up in a world where competence was enough. Not like that anymore

              • LexamM
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                212 days ago

                Nothing wrong with being a hedge engineer. I have a GED and associates in liberal arts.