What do you do for a living?
- whuppinboy
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Full time student, Pre-Law, tranferring to UT Austin next year for Law School. I'm also a waiter/trainer for the Olive Garden, until Law School is done.
I was one of the youngest Executive Chefs for Radisson Hotels, and I consulted for several health clubs that opened restaurants, on the side of course. I miss the consulting fees. Got burned out on all the bullsh!t from the health club restaurant owners.
I was one of the youngest Executive Chefs for Radisson Hotels, and I consulted for several health clubs that opened restaurants, on the side of course. I miss the consulting fees. Got burned out on all the bullsh!t from the health club restaurant owners.
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- Joined: Tue Mar 07, 2000 3:01 am
- Location: Shawnee, Kansas
I was a cold fusion web programmer working in software release and upper level support before getting tired of the crap from management.
Now I'm a financial coach dealing with mortgages, investments and life insurance as well as teaching and educating people on how finances and money works. Loving every bit of it.
Now I'm a financial coach dealing with mortgages, investments and life insurance as well as teaching and educating people on how finances and money works. Loving every bit of it.
- Sudanamaru
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- Joined: Mon Sep 20, 1999 2:01 am
- Location: Tumbolia
- El Ka Bong
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 497
- Joined: Sat Jun 16, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Vancouver, B.C. Canada
I work here now:
www.hnhybridnurseries.com
Was here for three years:
www.pelton.com
And nine years here:
www.silviculture.com
In this last link, find the photos-nursery tour; I'm the guy in the white lab coat, 12 years ago...
As a "professional grower", I grow trees for reforestation. I can boast about the 520 million seedlings I've grown since I started in 1989, after a BSc. from SFU. The companies I've worked for have clients ranging from Alaska to Guatemala.
On occasion there's an overlap in my work-life with Descvent 3: for example, my trip to Califest 2003 was partially funded by a work related sales trip to Oregon... And, on that trip a sales call in Roseburg Oregon earned me a contract for 360,000 fir seedlings !... I wonder if the boss will fund my trip to Califest 2004 ?...
www.hnhybridnurseries.com
Was here for three years:
www.pelton.com
And nine years here:
www.silviculture.com
In this last link, find the photos-nursery tour; I'm the guy in the white lab coat, 12 years ago...
As a "professional grower", I grow trees for reforestation. I can boast about the 520 million seedlings I've grown since I started in 1989, after a BSc. from SFU. The companies I've worked for have clients ranging from Alaska to Guatemala.
On occasion there's an overlap in my work-life with Descvent 3: for example, my trip to Califest 2003 was partially funded by a work related sales trip to Oregon... And, on that trip a sales call in Roseburg Oregon earned me a contract for 360,000 fir seedlings !... I wonder if the boss will fund my trip to Califest 2004 ?...
i live in Austin.Nexus_One wrote:... tranferring to UT Austin next year for Law School.
I'm a social worker for the State of Texas - officially: Protective Services Intake Specialist. The agency is The Department of Family and Protective Services.
I assess reports of abuse/neglect/exploitation of children, and elderly/disabled persons. Then, if the intake meets guidelines, I determine what the State's response should be .
Let me tell you, there is never a dull moment. It's the most challenging, rewarding job I've ever had. Even on a bad day i can go home and feel good about what i've done.
i could tell you stories that would make you laugh, stories that would make you cry, and stories that would make you say, "no f'ing way!"
seriously, never a dull moment. i look at this task pretty simply. whether i do this job or not, the abuse and neglect goes on. i consider myself lucky to be in a position to make a difference to protect those that can't protect themselves.
i made two promises to myself when i started here. 1. i won't become jaded 2. i won't let it break me down as a person. so far so good.
seriously, never a dull moment. i look at this task pretty simply. whether i do this job or not, the abuse and neglect goes on. i consider myself lucky to be in a position to make a difference to protect those that can't protect themselves.
i made two promises to myself when i started here. 1. i won't become jaded 2. i won't let it break me down as a person. so far so good.
- DarkShadow
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- Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA
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I'm currently not working been off for almost a year. It was getting too hard to take care of 3 kids and work overnight then stay awake all day with them and go back to work at night. Since my wife likes her job and has school we decided I should quit Wal-Mart. I had no problem with that since the new managers were a pain in the ass.
Now me and a friend are trying to start our own business.
Now me and a friend are trying to start our own business.
- DarkShadow
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- Viralphrame
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- Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2003 3:01 am
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- Bold Deceiver
- DBB Captain
- Posts: 541
- Joined: Thu Jun 07, 2001 2:01 am
- Location: Somewhere in SoCal
Tough duty, and very admirable. CPS is lucky to have you.Palzon wrote:Protective Services Intake Specialist.
I'm amazed, but not surprised, at the depth and breadth of talent that gravitates to this game. Lots of entrepreneurs too -- Hattrick, Woodchip, and Punisher, the owner and "Keeper of the Peace of a full service car wash". This board could give a jobs seminar.
I worked as a carpenter, building homes and theatrical scenery before, during, and after college (UT Austin, keeps popping up!). Supervised subdivision construction for a while in Houston, and built free-standing circular staircases for new homes (favorite gig). Moved to L.A. and finished a short-lived acting career with a "Milk Does a Body Good" commercial (strapped upside down to a chair in an inverted living room set -- I'll spare you the details). Built scenery and special effects for bunches of movies and commercials and some TV. Attended law school at night, and got my J.D.; moved back and practiced in Texas for a couple of years, then it was back to California (another bar exam, blech). Now I practice business litigation for banks and other lending institutions.
Hey BD, why did you get out the theater biz? I went to a performing arts high school in San Diego and loved it. Vocal Jazz, Orchestra, and grip/follow spot operator. I had a blast. A part of me always regretted not staying with it.
Oh, and roger that on the depth of talent on this board. I must admit it smashes some steriotypes. Well, except for all the CS majors but I guess that just can't be helped
Oh, and roger that on the depth of talent on this board. I must admit it smashes some steriotypes. Well, except for all the CS majors but I guess that just can't be helped
- Instig8
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If I told you, I'd have to kill you.
But seriously, I'm an avid PHP programmer and Internet marketeer. I also manage a server farm of about 50 web and database servers.
Basically, I take money from investors and turn it onto a 2000 to 3000 percent return per year. The investors are tickled pink when I feed them a couple hundred percent of their investment per year and I keep what's left.
No, I don't need any more investors. And no, I will not tell you how it's done (see my first statement above). (I hate those marketers selling fast-money schemes when, if it worked so well, why weren't they doing it themselves!)
All this after dropping outta college. Go figure.
But seriously, I'm an avid PHP programmer and Internet marketeer. I also manage a server farm of about 50 web and database servers.
Basically, I take money from investors and turn it onto a 2000 to 3000 percent return per year. The investors are tickled pink when I feed them a couple hundred percent of their investment per year and I keep what's left.
No, I don't need any more investors. And no, I will not tell you how it's done (see my first statement above). (I hate those marketers selling fast-money schemes when, if it worked so well, why weren't they doing it themselves!)
All this after dropping outta college. Go figure.
- Bold Deceiver
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Heh - small world, Dedman. Those schools are very competitive - sounds like a great education, especially Orchestra. I guess when I was young, theatre was very rewarding, but thin on pay and not too stable. Hollywood was much better on money. I met some lifelong friends and the biz makes for fun stories over drinks, but I when faced with the choice I decided I didn't want to stay in theatre or hollyweird forever. Sort of natural that we're always looking for another hill to climb.Dedman wrote:Hey BD, why did you get out the theater biz? I went to a performing arts high school in San Diego and loved it. Vocal Jazz, Orchestra, and grip/follow spot operator. I had a blast. A part of me always regretted not staying with it.
BD
I'm impressed with the variety here. I thought we might all be computer geeks and students.
I'm a computer geek. Most of my professional work has been Digital Signal Processing programming, and most of that was for audio applications. But about three years ago I quit my job and started trying to develop new products on my own, with the plan of starting up a company when I had something good. At this point I've got (1) a game that's almost done, and (2) a very innovative new programming language that works great as a prototype, but needs a lot more work. I'll probably try to finish up the game and market it this summer. And yes, I'll be looking for beta testers when the time comes.
At the moment I'm consulting for my old company because I need the money. I'll probably do that at least a few months a year until my other projects start bringing in cash.
Oh, and I've sometimes played the cello for money, but usually I leave the paying gigs for real professionals who are better than me and need the money more.
I'm a computer geek. Most of my professional work has been Digital Signal Processing programming, and most of that was for audio applications. But about three years ago I quit my job and started trying to develop new products on my own, with the plan of starting up a company when I had something good. At this point I've got (1) a game that's almost done, and (2) a very innovative new programming language that works great as a prototype, but needs a lot more work. I'll probably try to finish up the game and market it this summer. And yes, I'll be looking for beta testers when the time comes.
At the moment I'm consulting for my old company because I need the money. I'll probably do that at least a few months a year until my other projects start bringing in cash.
Oh, and I've sometimes played the cello for money, but usually I leave the paying gigs for real professionals who are better than me and need the money more.
- Bold Deceiver
- DBB Captain
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aldel wrote:It's a Heisenbug. That's the worst kind of bug.
aldel -- you are a funny guy.
heisenbug /hi:'zen-buhg/ n. [from Heisenberg's Uncertainty Principle in quantum physics] A bug that disappears or alters its behavior when one attempts to probe or isolate it. (This usage is not even particularly fanciful; the use of a debugger sometimes alters a program's operating environment significantly enough that buggy code, such as that which relies on the values of uninitialized memory, behaves quite differently.)
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I'm a cell site technician. To put it in simple terms, I build the infrastructure that makes cell phones work. Deal with foam coaxial cables ranging from 1/4" to 2 1/4"'s in diameter, antennas, whatever else too. Lots of tower work and RF exposure. I'm surprised big boy downstairs still even functions with all the radiation I soak up. It's an awesome job, and I get to travel all over the bay area getting in to restricted areas and stuff. Pays decent too