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Near the End of A PhD and Have No Job |
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| Jul16-11, 10:32 AM | #52 |
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Near the End of A PhD and Have No Job
Twofish-quant,
I am of the concerted opinion (I could be wrong, but likely not) that much of what is happening related to the debt-ceiling is just pure political theatre, and that by August 2 (or probably the day before) a deal will be reached between the Republicans and the Democrats in Congress. It will be a cliffhanger, but given the importance of the debt-ceiling and the consequences of the US being in a technical default, cooler and responsible heads will prevail, in spite of all the noises from the right-wing extremist Tea Partiers within the Republican party. |
| Jul16-11, 04:00 PM | #53 |
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As I've said, I know I gotta keep optimistic, not always easy though! Heck, last night, some friends of mine came up three physics/eng companies I hadn't thought of... and of course none of the three had anything that I qualify for. :( Must keep trying though! |
| Jul17-11, 12:15 AM | #54 |
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omg you are scarrrrring me,,,,,,,,,,,
I wanted to do physics and math major :( can't you try teaching high school? (my high school teacher has phd) Dude, i thought if you had phD you are like a professor or something |
| Jul17-11, 03:46 AM | #55 |
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The other thing is that there are some pretty interesting game theory elements as to what is going on. You have your finger on the button of a bomb that will blow everyone up. Now no rational person would press that button, but if you know that the other person is rational, you can bargain pretty hard knowing that they won't press that button. So part of convincing someone to do what you want is to make people think that you are nuts. Also even if they do come up with a budget deal, no one has any clue what it looks like which means that even in the best case scenario, no one that depends on government funding is hiring right now, because even in the absence of a default, no one knows who is going to get cut. |
| Jul17-11, 03:51 AM | #56 |
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Also, I don't want to dissuade you from doing a physics and math major. Part of the situation is that we have a lousy economy, but a lousy economy hits pretty much everyone, so even though you might be in a bad situation if you major in physics and math, what else are you going to do? Every other major is bad or worse. |
| Jul17-11, 05:12 AM | #57 |
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Cynicism and a taste for the absurd works better for me. Also, I found that looking for work left me profoundly angry, and a lot of the "how not to go too crazy" was to deal with the anger. It turns out that for me, anger was useful. The thing that I had to worry about most was getting so depressed that I couldn't get out of bed, but the nice thing about getting angry was that getting angry gets you out of bed. This is where networking comes in useful. If you know someone that works at company X, they can tell you whether company X is really hiring or if everyone there is working on their resumes and about to jump ship. I've had bad experiences with corporate websites to the point that I don't even bother looking at them for any sort of job search. In the markets I've been in, if a company has a real job opening, they are going to be going through headhunters and the standard job search sites. |
| Jul17-11, 11:02 PM | #58 |
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One other thing about geography is that there is something that causes Ph.D. jobs to cluster in a few cities. My guess is that part of it is the "space alien syndrome." If you give your resume to a company that has never seen a physics Ph.D., then they have no clue what to do with you. Whereas, it helps a lot if you are talking to another Ph.D.
I spent about two years trying not to end up in NYC before I gave up and drank the kool-aid. I ended up loving the culture of NYC, although I can see how some people might hate it. One of the things I like about NYC is that people in NYC think big, and they don't mind other people thinking big. In my last job search, I was talking to a company in DFW and I was telling them how I wanted to transform the entire world of finance, and they were looking at me like "well we just need someone to manage the computers." |
| Jul18-11, 12:46 AM | #59 |
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| Jul19-11, 01:03 AM | #60 |
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A lot of my professors have been coming to me and telling me that even they had months of waiting after graduation. It actually amazed me at which of them are telling me that they were out of school with no options, because a lot of them are staggeringly brilliant, and much better than I am at this! :)
It's vaguely calming to hear that this is apparently normal to be in this position. |
| Jul19-11, 06:03 AM | #61 |
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| Jul21-11, 03:52 PM | #62 |
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isn't that headwrecking!
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| Jul21-11, 07:48 PM | #63 |
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Not really. The sad thing that you eventually realize is that in the big scheme of things, engineering really isn't that important to the fate of a company. Sure, you need some engineers, and they need to make *something* that can be sold... but how good it is doesn't really matter that much.
The fate of a company usually turns on sales and marketing, not technology. |
| Jul21-11, 09:38 PM | #64 |
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| Jul25-11, 06:36 PM | #65 |
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| Jul26-11, 11:17 AM | #66 |
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| Jul26-11, 11:50 AM | #67 |
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| Jul26-11, 12:13 PM | #68 |
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