Engineering Studies, Careers, and Transitions

Category: Middle Game (Page 2 of 2)

Minimising Interfaces

Let’s talk about Parking.

Parking is difficult. Ideally one would walk or bike to a grocery store, get some sun, get exercise, save on fuel. But when we do drive to a store, parking lots are a mixed hell of crowded stalls, uncertain pedestrian/vehicle interactions, stray shopping carts, and other threats to one’s peace of mind. They always drive me crazy, and I for one would rather park far away and walk, rather than be the person that makes a few laps around the aisles looking for a closer spot.

There’s something else I prefer to do at any sort of parking structure, and it puzzles me that in general people make other choices and leave this opportunity available. That is to park at a location where the number of car-neighbors is minimised. These spots are often free at the end of the lot, even though there are cars in the middle sections.

Hassle-free disembarkation

Finding an island or pillar to park next to reduces the chance of door dings or getting side scraped, being parked in, and just all the other hassles in dealing with the Sartrean hell that is asphalt and other people.  It’s well worth an extra couple meters to decrease that stress.

How is this generalizable to other issues engineers face?

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Badger Football and Your Engineering Career

How are these related?

This post has a few tips on how to view engineering careers, avoid setbacks, and moderate the pain you feel as a sports fan when your team goes through punishing defeats or losing streaks. If we change the way we view progress and teams – using Badger Football at a metaphor – we can all get ahead and along better.

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95 yards: “just more room to work” (Wikimedia)

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Can An Engineer Be Worth $40,000 a Day?

In some of my classes, the students are presented with a pretty appealing proposition. Can you make $40,000 per day? While students usually react with some incredulity, some will naturally express interest in the offer. The follow-up question is a little tougher – can you be worth $40,000 per day? Most everyone would be willing to receive that much, but justifying that value honestly, well that can be more of a challenge. Let’s illustrate how that magnitude is something we need to assess and appreciate.

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Life would be all roses and rabbits on $40k a day (Goya’s Spring)

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