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| Chit-Chat Relax for a bit and have a general conversation (off topic is allowed!) with other members. Please be polite and respect your fellow members. |
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| You don't have to be liked in general. I know so many idiots at the top. You only have to be liked by the managers to get to high places.
__________________ I also post at the following sites: http://www.stop-microsoft.org http://www.heated-debates.com Screen name: Aloone_Jonez And http://www.silicontronics.com, same screen name as here. | |
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However, I and my team are super careful and there is a mutual respect for one another. In fact I have told the higher ups and the BOD that if my group doesn't want me as their manager, I don't want to do the job anymore. So far nobody has complained and we have a couple years behind us (same team) already. And to answer another question, there are lots of reasons companies have to let people go and it isn't just a random agenda. Most often it is due to economic reasons and the reality is that in those time, if you've got people charged to overhead, they have to be carefully looked at. Office managers, junior techs, non-traveling field people, etc. Other times it is viewed as an opportunity to get rid of non-performers. A few years ago I was on vacation abroad and got a phone call that somebody in my group was going to let go because we needed to downsize. I successfully negotiated a trade to keep that person (who did cost more) and look elsewhere for somebody else if required. Just a point that at least with me, I'll go to bat for my guys for raises and everything else -- I won't chunk you under the bus though. IMO, if your manager isn't doing at least that last part, they are not well representing you to the overlords.
__________________ www.ps3toothfairy.com -- Full IR control for your PS3 | ||
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As DigiTan said the degree helps. But few students know how important letters of recommendation from their teachers are. A recommendation that stands out will get you interviews. To get a good recommendation you first need to excel. You also need to take the time to understand the instructors. The second will help with the first. It can be difficult when you are stuck in a class that is for the most part old hat. Try to look on it as an opportunity to polish what you know, impress the profs, and get a GPA boosting grade. Introductory English, literature, sociology, and anthropology can be death on you mind and on your GPA. If you already know how to write and communicate at decent level check to see if your university has a Honors Program like this one. It is as much or more work as the standard classes but the instructors are top notch and the content is more interesting. It is a broadening experience and not for the narrow minded. Quote:
__________________ search engine for electronic partsJunebug USB PIC programmer kit., USB Bit Wacker, 3v0's Homepage The 15 Minute Printed Circuit Board! (+drill time) | |||
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| Rather than spending expensive semesters taking english and other classes, you can also usually enroll at a community college in the neighborhood, for less money and get the credit out of the way. That is what I did for English, 2 History courses, Government, and maybe a sociology or something. If you are traveling to college, than finding one in the same state makes life easier, but it is not required.
__________________ www.ps3toothfairy.com -- Full IR control for your PS3 | |
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| Admins/Moderators, please delete the linkback to this thread for obvious reasons.
__________________ www.ps3toothfairy.com -- Full IR control for your PS3 | |
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| I've just noticed the linkbacks thing. What's the point of it? I agree it should be removed but how did it get created in the first place?
__________________ I also post at the following sites: http://www.stop-microsoft.org http://www.heated-debates.com Screen name: Aloone_Jonez And http://www.silicontronics.com, same screen name as here. | |
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__________________ search engine for electronic partsJunebug USB PIC programmer kit., USB Bit Wacker, 3v0's Homepage The 15 Minute Printed Circuit Board! (+drill time) | ||
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| They are created automatically when the other site creates an entry and wants to notify this thread about it. They are like blog pingbacks.
__________________ www.ps3toothfairy.com -- Full IR control for your PS3 | |
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| Two more rejection letters this week. (Same company, different positions) Quote:
I actually had a chance at these jobs too. A friend from the university vouched for me. But when you're blacklisted, you're blacklisted. I'll fix this. Last edited by DigiTan; 16th June 2008 at 05:45 AM. | ||
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| The only good to come out of this is I did find a few local reverse engineering assignments. It's no permanent position, but at least it'll put me on the path to getting some answers. | |
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| Hey, reverse engineering is what led to a) a grad school rec letter b) the advisor I did my phd with. Also, there is a huge challenge in taking something, finding out how it works, and making it better. In addition, you don't often get that experience in undergrad.
__________________ www.ps3toothfairy.com -- Full IR control for your PS3 | |
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| Yeah, with reverse engineering I'm already working with enough EE disciplines to avoid getting typecast to just one specific subset of electrical work. And I doubt there's many people who could cut it as an independent contractor straight out of college. The jobs still don't meet my $48k/year income threshold and I still don't have health insurance. It's an improvement over last month, but still nothing compared to where I should be right now. | |
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| Perhaps your resume and cover letter needs a makeover. You might consider looking into a high end resume service, one that makes your grand kids look good. In other words, a good reputible service, not a cheezy outfit. Let's face it, EE's are not always great writers or salesman. Your resume needs to be an advertisement of how great you are, so go with a pro. Last edited by Mikebits; 23rd June 2008 at 05:52 AM. | |
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| It's not the resume. I've had it reviewed by so many insiders it's unreal. Career advisers, Deans, supervisors past & present, even random recruiters at social events. People just hate my name. If I handed my resume to some guy off the street and changed the name, I guarantee you within 4 weeks their phone will be ringing like bell tower on Sunday. They said it's that good. I mean, I've only been a freelancer a couple weeks and I already finished two jobs weeks ahead of my own bids. And got my first recommendation. Could that happen if I weren't the engineer I were making myself out to be? Hell no! Yet the resume gets me nowhere. A career agency would be nice. At Score, they said there are free agencies that are basically commissioned to the point that no one gets paid unless their clients get placed. Whether or not I really actually that depends on what they can do for me. What I really need...more than a job itself...is my background information. I've got to know why everyone's afraid to hire me. | |
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| Title | Starter | Forum | Replies | Latest |
| Variable capacitor circuits | walters | General Electronics Chat | 83 | 11th March 2008 03:59 PM |
| College: Thinking of giving up | DigiTan | Chit-Chat | 44 | 17th May 2006 02:42 AM |
| Complete lack of Electronics courses (UK) | ThermalRunaway | General Electronics Chat | 8 | 27th May 2005 02:57 PM |