Your pre-Gulch job? Your job in the Gulch?
One of the most entertaining parts of the book is the part at the beginning of the chapter on Atlantis where everyone talks about their jobs outside the Gulch vs. within the Gulch.
Before I read AS, I was both a professor of chemical engineering and materials science, particularly nanotechnology, as well as the co-founder of small biosensors and biofuels companies. After reading AS, I sold the businesses to not feed the looters. I kept the professorship because I was not doing things contradictory to Galtish values. Recently I just got an appointment as a biomedical engineering professor, too.
Within the Gulch it appears my job is to be discussion facilitator.
Welcome to Atlantis,
jbrenner
Before I read AS, I was both a professor of chemical engineering and materials science, particularly nanotechnology, as well as the co-founder of small biosensors and biofuels companies. After reading AS, I sold the businesses to not feed the looters. I kept the professorship because I was not doing things contradictory to Galtish values. Recently I just got an appointment as a biomedical engineering professor, too.
Within the Gulch it appears my job is to be discussion facilitator.
Welcome to Atlantis,
jbrenner
One of my first jobs was a 'maintenance man' (or janitor) at a community pool I'd belonged to as a member previously. Great education on how people perceive you based on your job.
Spent a few summers as a technician at Lockheed Electronics in NJ, helping test circuits and implement solutions in a massive test system they were building for the US Navy. Pissed off more than a few engineers by solving problems they'd been beating their heads against the wall, pretty much by observing them and asking a few questions.
Quality Control inspector at what might have been the birthplace of Gavin Electronics. After a short time, I proposed to management that I could/should TEACH some of the assemblers 'how to solder' so that I wouldn't have to send so many parts back for rework. Almost taught myself out of that job before returning to college.
Semiconductor Applications engineer on power transistor components and circuits. Envisioned and helped build several pieces of test equipment which became 'lab standards' for our group so people would stop arguing over which test method gave the most accurate and 'true' readings. Mine. Collaborated with a team to build a multiple-testing unit which, interestingly enough, we called "The Galt 1 Test Set." We had several AR fans in the department, including the guy who introduced me to AS.
Then, marketing engineer for a power semiconductor line starting up at a company in Silicon Valley. Manufacturing couldn't fab a stable product and I came close to being fired when the field sales teams criticized me for 'writing bad specifications' for the product.
Moved to another division back when an entire division could be focused on computer terminals. In a few months I helped write several parts of a service manual for a forthcoming terminal as well help the design guys change some innards to make servicing faster and easier. Final coup was to discover, on my own, the root cause of a problem which had been costing millions of dollars in repairs and service calls on one particular model of our terminals. Unfortunately, for my solution, the product was being obsoleted by then. Should have started earlier.
Moved into Sales Support and product training for a minicomputer division and participated in the evolution from 16-bit computing to 32-bit architecture as well as RISC. Got lots of plaques and awards for being 'best teacher' over several years.
Was morphed into Product Manager on the sales side in 'the factory' for most of the RISC sub-product lines. Gave wonderful product overviews for major customers and sales reps. Something about being honest about what I knew and didn't know and trusting customers to understand that 'our plans may change, but this is what they are now...' , unlike most of the marketing folks creating the new products. Had lots of battles with management over that.
Offered a 'too good' retirement package and went home in 2002. Designed and had several home remodeling things built... a custom deck, kitchen layout and family room design. Then, of course, sold the house and moved to NC.
Designed my woodturning workshop for the crawl space under the house and helped solve some construction problems during the build, and for the past 3-4 years have been doing wood turning. When i'm not doing small maintenance and repairs around the house.
My forte's have tended to be Pattern Recognition suitable for problem identification and solution and good Visualization Skills for picturing the solution and helping implement it.
Virtually nobody seeks me out for such help, though I've become a sort of guru/consultant over the years for friends and neighbors.
Living off investment income and savings and Social Security now, doing anything I damned well please and not depending on anyone (else) for anything.
I love brainstorming and helping find solutions to problems, though I also have a poor record for 'implementation.' Good part of a team if you can stand occasional impatience and bluntness.
Owned a website I called "Blunt Consulting" for a while, as a lark.
Oh, and I like blogging and participating in conversations online. Particularly where I can ask questions other folks don't ask or downright don't WANT to be asked!
The key to electrical soldering is to cut your wire on a 30 degree angle to get the wire tip sharp. Interestingly, something very similar to that is important in "cutting" Pt/Ir wire for scanning tunneling microscope (STM) tips for my nanotech minor that I will have the webinar for next Thursday. However, instead of cutting the wire for STM, you need to actually pull the wire at the 30 degree angle.
At Gavin, all I had to do was teach 'the girls' that the solder joint should be shiny-bright and not tug on it too quickly. And those were single-strand wires and discrete components soldered to lug-type terminal strips! Just a short time after the dinosaurs died out...
Though the actual moment was when having shrugged from that role and actually taking a week of holiday with the children, i took them to a poor suburb in our major city and our spending money was stolen on day one. What did it for me was the accom receptionist telling me the poor people would make good use of it.
I made a deliberate plan in shrugging to reinvent manager-me into an administrator.
Now i am a low level admin.
In the gulch i would be with Susanne producing the food in the garden. Not mucking about with pretty flowers. Growing food. we need her bees.
And if you kill the meat i will gut and dress and cook it.
If you want to compete - race me. I do a mean 5km and 10km by foot and a not-bad orienteer. On the day of the worst of our earthquakes i did a shit load of running. Then i ran home. Cars and buses sure werent going anywhere. I did.
I know lots of us are into engines, but, y'know.... Feet.
BTW thanks for reminding me, have to sew the clover for this years crop of deer. Bees love it, you would think it was Deer-nip, and it helps lock the nutrients into the soil to make it more productive next year! Win win win!
So, to keep me from that "folly", my folks applied some pull, called in a few favors and got for me a civil service career position, where, of course, I started as labor - yes, the poor downtrodden abused union member - started making friends and applying my own pull from favors, and mooched my way to Supervisor.
Then... thank God... I found a copy of a book I'd been "forbidden" to read as "subversive" in High School. Overnight (almost literally - I'm a fast reader!) , it absolutely shook me to my core, changed me in ways I had forgotten over the previous decades... it was my mirror, and I saw within it what I had become, and what had to change, much as meeting Hank Rearden changed Tony.
Fast forward to Now. I *do* still work in Civil Service, tho as a producer, not a moocher (something I'm *very* proud of, BTW.) We (my other half and I) took our "retirement savings" and bought an 1870's forge (and 1970's cabin) and using skills I learned decades ago working for other people, I started a small side business repairing (and making) custom machinery. It is slowly but steadily growing, and in the meanwhile, we've taken up Beekeeping for fun and the sweet gold of Honey, with the intent of a meadery later this season... We're expanding the "forge" to take on new projects (most recently, pre-war car and machinery repairs - fun stuff!) and the dollars are growing.
Some look forward to retirement as a time to sit back, collect the free money, and spend their waning years in relaxation and idleness... I look forward to it as it will give more time to plunge our business ahead, at light speed, into a prosperous and profitable future. ;-)
In the Gulch I could help Dr. Hendrix run a laboratory for clinical diagnosis and research. Failing that, I would sign on as a rough carpenter, or maybe as a militiaman, assigned to guard the perimeter.
I'd love to set up a new studio in the valley's art district.
I really hope someone creates a micronation like the Gulch BUT not cut off from the world. My wife could attend a legal conference on the seastead and my kids could go to a one-day hackerspace classes on UAVs or Python. They could also have a waterpark for kids in the evening, and rooftop bar with Indian developers drinking tea, some Israeli program managers who license software from a firm on the seastead, a bunch of attorneys there for the conference, and a few rich kids from Germany sipping drinks with Ketamine talking about Herman Hesse.
The type of Gulch you're talking about, though, is about a thousand miles northeast of Irkutsk. In that kind of place, you have to learn to be jack of all trades and enjoy borscht and cucumbers-- no indulgent tourists with the vacation/conferences.
I am doing 3D printing of tissue scaffolding, and soon I am going to be 3D printing metals, too. Python is actually the language of 3D printers. My daughter took a course in Python as part of the Florida Virtual School (online).
I have two printers from http://www.3dstuffmaker.com. Interested in working collaboratively?
Re: Didn't the Gulch do almost no trade with the outside world?
I actually questioned myself about my previous ethics of taking money to convert plant and animal waste into biofuels, energy, and chemicals from environmentalists. It was a fair trade, and I took a peculiar joy in looting the looters, but it felt odd dealing with people outside the Gulch.
A major part of my purpose in this thread is to have everyone find out who does what so that we can do commerce with our Gulch colleagues.
I'm always interested if there's something to do with technology. I'm happy to be fully busy right now, but I'm always looking for a way to do more stuff with technology.
http://www.element14.com/community/group...
for yesterday's newsletter. I'll have you on the list for next weekend's issue.
Chemical engineering, biomedical engineering, and non ChE/BME jobs are in section 3.
The beginning of the newsletter delineates sections for the newsletter. You were interested in 3D printing. That is section 25.
There's nothing wrong with doing work for money. I don't know if biofuels will ever scale up, but supposedly they're carbon neutral. There's an off chance the technology will lead to some way to harness energy that doesn't destroy our environment. That would be a huge creation of value, solving one of the biggest problems of our time. Even if it doesn't scale up, you've tried something new and done something to reduce the costs of damage to the environment.
In the Gulch I perform home and landscape maintenance, tend my garden, cook for myself and friends, and work on a "script" (for a stage play) about "Going Galt" in Argentina
My idea of "Going Galt" was to blend into a very small community and become relatively invisible. My neighbors know I'm a foreigner but I don't look or act wealthy (my 20 year old Peugeot reinforces this image).
I wrote more about this in this topic:
http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/2f...
What is really surprising is the number of Renault 12s still on the road here...as well as Citroen 3CVs...which are no longer legal to drive in France (for safety reasons).
There is very little to compare Argentina and Venezuela. Both are in South America, but there is no civil unrest in Argentina.
No one is rioting or being killed in the streets.
There is no shortages of goods in general with the exception of some imports, but the grocery stores are well stocked and there is no panic buying.
There has not been a government takeover of the wonderful (and affordable) private health care system and no agency like the EPA interfering with individuals like me (living in a semi rural area).
And there is no agency like the NSA storing my phone records or emails.
Many Argentines are unhappy with the level of corruption in their government and recent inflation, but there are very few homes with mortgages and very few homes without bars or serious shutters on the windows...something that might be desirable in America in the not too distant future.
At least, that you know of...
When TSHYF in America there will no doubt be a lot of folks who wish they had them, too.
Fruit tree tender, grafter and pruner. Would be willing to teach the new generation.
My dad always said "Don't own anything you can't work on." Well, cars have moved beyond the days I changed my old Vette's breather element, but the philosophy is a good one. The more we can and are willing to tackle, the more we are free. I also am the toilet fixer. I sew also.
In a the Gulch, I would be known as one who spreads the word about history repeating itself if one fails to remember it, while doing anything that needs done. My husband is the same way. Need it done, he is there to give it a try.
I used to sing the national anthem at minor league baseball games, but since I've shrugged, I just can't have the same enthusiasm for America that I once did. It is hard to perform at a sufficiently high level once you have lost some of that passion. I still have passion for singing some rock-n-roll, but not music prior to baseball games anymore.
We did have a pretty good band. Our saxophonist could pick up a new instrument and within a week be better than anyone I knew. Truly gifted!
Baby, you and I (sic) ...
I still love singing songs by Styx.
I can go into a very lengthy discussion about Styx, but this is not the appropriate forum for it. If someone would like to discuss this privately, please send me a private message.
Galt's Gulch needs creative people like me.
I can create revenue generating software.....
I also love gardening and have tried to use natural remedies to combat pests. .I think a garden should be a work of art. I am very interested in soil restoration and building very economical greenhouses. I am also an artist and a gourmet cook. It's all about blending your components to make something elegant, balanced and beautiful.
There's an idea. Go back to being a line cook. Worked my way through school doing kitchen work, everything from potwasher to sous chef. Fun, tho at times exhausting, work. always figured... People Gotta Eat. Or get a cuppa coffee brewed for them. Breakfast anyone?
(Hope that put a smile on some people's faces!)
Because my university has increased its enrollment so much in recent years, our career placement within 6 months has gone down from 98% to 95%. This isn't bad considering how bad the economy is, but to prevent it from going down further, both of my departments concluded we should do more to help our students get jobs. Consequently, I now put together a newsletter with chemical, biomedical, and materials engineering jobs, news, seminars, etc. Info on 3D printing and nanotech are also featured in the newsletter. Today's sample is at
http://my.fit.edu/~jbrenner/aiche033114....
If you want added to the list, e-mail me at jbrenner@fit.edu
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