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My current job, which I've held for 24 years, is working for a company that builds commercial ink-jet printers. I've also done a fair amount of work as an after-hours consultant. The common thread through all of it has been process control and real-time machine control. I enjoy what I do. I've worked at several layers in the product line, from device drivers to UI.
Software Zen: delete this;
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Lets see
Manufacturing - sewage pipes
Technology - Hitachi and Wang
Engineering
Mining Construction
Fruit Wholesaling
Tyre Retailing
Finance - Investments
Health Systems (NHS)
Back to Finance - Banking
Specialisation is for ants.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Developing the Instrument Software for medical diagnostic instruments, currently working as Sys Admin in Charge for the Swiss Air Force.
The console is a black place
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Hmmm...Let's see...
E-commerce (mostly backend, data processing, GUI front-end at times too )
These days, I work for a company that creates software for OTN management, planning and optimization. Pretty interesting, really
This isn't a signature
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Not really. My company is a consultancy so we have clients in a variety of sectors. I like variety and learning about domains so that's good for me. That said I've spent the last nearly 3 years working with oil and gas clients for the most part.
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Defense. Navy. US Gov't employee. Highlights: Navair, ES-3A, NavSea, Aegis 5" gun, Tomahawk Launch Control. Couple trips to Iraq to work counter-IED. Retired now, but it was more interesting than the manufacturing sector I started out in.
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Very nice. Sounds like it'd be a hectic job, since that sector is extremely critical. Not sure what kind of quality measures they have in place, but I'd think the slightest "off" code could cost more money than I know. Haha.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem
Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
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ES-3A had excellent quality control, Tomahawk very nearly as good as ES-3A, Aegis Gun quality sucked. The gun had an impossible development schedule and the people were just demoralized and didn't try very hard at quality, although I thought we could do better, and was glad to leave the project.
Yeah, it was hectic but rewarding. When your software works, it saves soldiers and sailors. If it doesn't, they may die, which was my concern with the gun. Don't know of any incidents where sailors were hurt, but the potential was there.
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Right, I understand. The rewarding aspect, I'm sure, was enjoyable.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem
Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
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I'm in the actuarial consulting business. I develop valuation software in FORTRAN and related utilities in C#. I know, I said the F word.
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Third Party Logistics for 12 years and am now in High Education at a major public university. I preform consulting services to the third party logistics company for triple my salary when i worked for them.
Eric
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Manufacturing/Food service - Pork (6 yrs)
Healthcare - Medicare (12 yrs)
Transportation - Barging (4 yrs)
David Williams
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Last 14 years in the industrial control biz, specifically industrial refrigeration. everything from windows computers with serial ports down to embedded devices, controlling: O2 & Co2 levels, pressures and temperatures, power shedding.....
Personally I love it; code that modifies a database record is boring , code that interacts with the real world is fun
If I ever decided to leave this industry, wearables or medical devices have a certain calling.
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I started out in Sub-marines and now I'm in aviation. Being certified software there are a lot of hoops to jump through and it can sometimes feel more like we've checked some boxes rather than add anything to the software quality. But overall, I enjoy the safety-critical real-time aspects to programming.
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I work in county government in the Pacific Northwest of USA.
I mostly write and support apps for law and justice type departments - Superior Court (case tracking, drug court, trial calendaring), Sheriff (applicant processing), Corrections (staff timesheet tracking), Prosecutor (civil case management), Medical Examiner (case tracking), Juvenile Detention (detainee tracking), etc.
I've been here for 14 years, and still enjoy it. I plan to work here until I retire.
AL
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Start out in USDA-ARS doing crop simulations research and records keeping system for 10 years. Move on to check printing (manufacture automated assembly line control), print checks, process orders. If you belong to a credit unions, chances are software I wrote prints your checks. Did that for 9 years. I'm back in the federal government in the nuclear research sector for 5 years now. Wrote software ranging from micro-controllers, hardware automations to client/servers, database and web developments. Lately I have the pleasure to write a 100% JavaScript client side web application. How technologies have turn on it head!!
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Great page I found there [^]
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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I'm sorry, I neither see the association with the original post nor do I think it appropriate.
The original post was a satire on a serious issue in Cricket and yours was about "hot girlfriends". If the association was sport, I think it pretty weak.
You should have at least given a warning as some might find the content of your link offensive. I would not have followed the link myself had I known its content. The context implied that it was about arm flexing (chucking); at the very least I would have expected something on sporting controversy.
There are ladies on CP too!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Sorry, but this link was at least Advertising in the link that was posted. Neither you nor me can be responsible for this.
Otherwhise before you post a link also you Need to watch the side for an unlimited tine to avoid something of this.
Therefor your downvoat is completely wrong!
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Bruno, I did not post any link it was posted by Nish Sivakumar.
Nor do I agree with your postulation. Links on pages that are linked to are not being recommended by the poster, just the original page. If we follow the logic, then a poster should follow every link on a page and links on those pages, forming a possibly infinite chain.
The truth is that I'm not particularly offended by your link, it has no interest to me, but it has the potential to offend others. My major point is that it was both off topic and potentially offensive (especially the word "Hot")and the link should at least have been covered with an appropriate caveat. Something like "there was a link on that page to girlfriends of sports starts (warning: might cause offense)".
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Phil, please, it was a link I "found" on the page the original link was!
"found" is is an understatement, he was obviously.
_I_ _am_ _not_ responsible for that!
Kind regards, Bruno
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Bruno, it's not a personal attack, just a reminder that some content is questionable. If HR had walked by my desk when I opened the link I would have expected a tongue lashing, if not a write-up.
Just please exercise more caution!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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Ok Phil, I understand this. I will avoid such things in future.
Regards, Bruno
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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Most sites show customized ads based on a user's browsing history, which is usually extracted via cookies. If you saw a slightly NSFW ad, then that's possibly because someone's been browsing that sort of site on that machine (not necessarily you). I did not see any NSFW ads on the page when I viewed it. FYI.
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