STEM dorks, gather around and give me some interesting topics to learn
I’m a mechanical engineer. well, by education anyways, and I’m unemployed at the moment. I’ve literally zero specialty and I pretty much don’t know shit and while I’ve got time to endlessly masturbate in my parent’s house and read, I might as well get some inspiration on what fields I should pursue.
Right now I’m reading this Molten Salt and Thorium reactor textbook
The RNA world! It's a theory that before there were proteins or DNA, there was what is commonly thought of as the intermediary stage between the two - RNA. It's a theory of abiogenisis by which life came about in a primordial soup animated by lightning strikes until an organic molecule occurred. Then, by time one molecule began to replicate itself, it was the most likely to occur over time and the rest is history. I'm always very thankful that I took a detour in my degree in MKUltra-ing to take a virology class. I learned about RNA in depth before I got exposed to people talking about mRNA in the context of being anti-vaxx like they know shit about fuck.
Unironically, they make for an incredible model of societies and their moving parts, even down to how they recruit one another for group tasks and how labor is divided up (most of them don't do shit most of the time and it's a good thing)
Hello fellow mechanical engineer. You can search jobs about power distribution equipment. Relatively niche job market but also comes with benefits of being a niche market. It's not petroleum product, it's not weapon so that is good. An interesting subject I can think of is super conductors. Did you know they have absolute 0 ohm resistance? Not 1/10000000000 ohm or something but perfect 0. Such examples of perfect 0 is quite rare in engineering.
I've figured out. Lie on your resume about having Power BI experience. Lie on your resume about having this certification.
When you have an interview, go on StackExchange and read through questions to come up with interview answers.
Once you're in you'll have like 2 weeks where you aren't doing anything. Learn everything Power BI you can in that time. Microsoft has their own tutorials and my work's online learn portal has 14 hour courses on Power BI.
You should know how to use it then before you're thrown an actual problem. In reality, you'll probably just be running reports the person before you set up.
It's coming tothe end of the month so get in touch with a bunch of recruiters.They'll want to maximise their commission so they'll put you up for any interview
Biological wastewater treatment is interesting, and not just cause I went to school for it. I remember reading and doing a report on this peer reviewed paper on methods of abbaitor waste treatment. Fascinating stuff.
Oh lord, civil engineering was what Inwanted to study insteadnof mechanical and biological wastewater treatment was exactly why. Thank you for reminding me.
Honestly, consult your city/state website. They tend to have snacky reads for people studying for their licenses (at least in Wisconsin). Otherwise a used book on introductory wastewater studies is more than sufficient. I know that sounds lazy, but I haven't found a bad book on the subject. Even some of the old and outdated ones are still reliable on most metrics.