Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England
I was doing electrical systems for high-rises, but I'm switching over to designing HVAC systems.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Winston_Churchill
Bazinga!
+521|6947|Toronto | Canada

Jay wrote:

Besides, reports of Asian dominance in STEM are horribly overblown. See: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/in … maths.html
Does anyone actually like probability? Its the worst kind of math
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6924

Winston_Churchill wrote:

Jay wrote:

Besides, reports of Asian dominance in STEM are horribly overblown. See: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/in … maths.html
Does anyone actually like probability? Its the worst kind of math
I wouldn't call the daily mail an accurate news source...
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England

Cybargs wrote:

Jay wrote:

Macbeth wrote:


You don't think you are replaceable?
Not really, no. Any monkey can do CAD drawings, sure, hell, most of the work is done by design programs already. Draftsmen went the way of the dinosaur unless they are protected by a strong union like electrical workers are. You could hire a roomful of Chinese introverts and they'll produce flawless drawings for much less than I would work for, but that's the thing, they're introverts. You'd probably be surprised based on the type of students that normally walk the halls in engineering schools, but the companies that hire engineers go out of their way to hire the ones that can actually talk to people without wetting themselves. They're the ones that become project managers and interact with customers, you wouldn't want a Chinese kid doing that.

Besides, I'm in a protected industry firewalled behind licensure requirements. Only a licensed engineer can sign off on drawings, and only signed drawings can be used for construction. The project I've been working on with my current company is coming to a close so I tossed out my resume last week and I've already had four interviews and two job offers. I'm not worried
You're pretty spot on about chinese kids being introverts. I blame the parents pushing their kids k-12 who go to school from 7am-5pm EVERY DAY, come home with a ton of homework and prepping for the weekly exams. They wonder why their kids end up being burned out and producing shitty results in uni.
It's totally a culture thing, yeah. It's not an indictment of Chinese at all, but they're much more docile and afraid of being seen as foolish than white people are, so they're afraid to speak up. They used to absolutely rape the curve in all my hard engineering classes, but everything they learned was done very methodically and they learned specifically for the test. If you asked them to think about the 'why' of something rather than the 'how' they would be completely and utterly lost. It's just a completely different mentality than western people grow up with.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England

Winston_Churchill wrote:

Jay wrote:

Besides, reports of Asian dominance in STEM are horribly overblown. See: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/indiahome/in … maths.html
Does anyone actually like probability? Its the worst kind of math
I actually love it. I'm a total stats nerd. Probability leads to forecasting, and forecasting is cool as fuck imo.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Cybargs
Moderated
+2,285|6924

Jay wrote:

Cybargs wrote:

Jay wrote:


Not really, no. Any monkey can do CAD drawings, sure, hell, most of the work is done by design programs already. Draftsmen went the way of the dinosaur unless they are protected by a strong union like electrical workers are. You could hire a roomful of Chinese introverts and they'll produce flawless drawings for much less than I would work for, but that's the thing, they're introverts. You'd probably be surprised based on the type of students that normally walk the halls in engineering schools, but the companies that hire engineers go out of their way to hire the ones that can actually talk to people without wetting themselves. They're the ones that become project managers and interact with customers, you wouldn't want a Chinese kid doing that.

Besides, I'm in a protected industry firewalled behind licensure requirements. Only a licensed engineer can sign off on drawings, and only signed drawings can be used for construction. The project I've been working on with my current company is coming to a close so I tossed out my resume last week and I've already had four interviews and two job offers. I'm not worried
You're pretty spot on about chinese kids being introverts. I blame the parents pushing their kids k-12 who go to school from 7am-5pm EVERY DAY, come home with a ton of homework and prepping for the weekly exams. They wonder why their kids end up being burned out and producing shitty results in uni.
It's totally a culture thing, yeah. It's not an indictment of Chinese at all, but they're much more docile and afraid of being seen as foolish than white people are, so they're afraid to speak up. They used to absolutely rape the curve in all my hard engineering classes, but everything they learned was done very methodically and they learned specifically for the test. If you asked them to think about the 'why' of something rather than the 'how' they would be completely and utterly lost. It's just a completely different mentality than western people grow up with.
Has a lot to do with Confucianism and face...  students don't want to "disrespect" the teacher by challenging ideas, and they don't want to ask questions or they think they'll be A. wasting the teachers time or B. appear stupid in front of the class and/or teacher.

it's just more important to know the right answer than to understand why it's the right answer.
https://cache.www.gametracker.com/server_info/203.46.105.23:21300/b_350_20_692108_381007_FFFFFF_000000.png
Winston_Churchill
Bazinga!
+521|6947|Toronto | Canada

I suppose I havent taken any advanced probability, but it just never appealed to me.  Probability to math is like what social science is to science.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England
I get that, it just doesn't work  well in business here.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5793

Winston_Churchill wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Liberal art majors subsidize all the other majors. All you need for a history class is a lecturer and a projector. No labs or machines needed.
Really? Books and libraries cost a fortune.  Also, most engineering programs pay significantly higher tuition.  Plus science departments have industry contracts and build equipment for other departments at universities.  That's total nonsense.  Most of the equipment you use at university has been there for years and years and cost next to nothing compared to salaries. 

Other than massive machines like particle accelerators and the like, but those actually serve a purpose and aren't used by undergrads.  So its irrelevant to your argument
Ah how can I forget books and libraries. The budget busters of every university.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England

Winston_Churchill wrote:

I suppose I havent taken any advanced probability, but it just never appealed to me.  Probability to math is like what social science is to science.
I guess, yeah. Engineering is all applied maths. Like, for instance, instead of solving a differential equation for a complex system, we use superposition to break it into smaller parts that can be solved statically, if possible. Only when you get into stuff like vibration analysis do you start using anything much more complex than algebra and trig. Stats is very useful for calculating things like service life of a part, so you can in turn set up a preventative maintenance system. Things like that.

For something more complicated like stress analysis, most people just build a model in SolidWorks or similar programs and use the built in tools there.

Last edited by Jay (2013-03-22 14:21:56)

"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Winston_Churchill
Bazinga!
+521|6947|Toronto | Canada

Macbeth wrote:

Winston_Churchill wrote:

Macbeth wrote:

Liberal art majors subsidize all the other majors. All you need for a history class is a lecturer and a projector. No labs or machines needed.
Really? Books and libraries cost a fortune.  Also, most engineering programs pay significantly higher tuition.  Plus science departments have industry contracts and build equipment for other departments at universities.  That's total nonsense.  Most of the equipment you use at university has been there for years and years and cost next to nothing compared to salaries. 

Other than massive machines like particle accelerators and the like, but those actually serve a purpose and aren't used by undergrads.  So its irrelevant to your argument
Ah how can I forget books and libraries. The budget busters of every university.
Looking at the fees breakdown for my university, I can see that ~85% of their budget goes to salaries and building maintenance (most of which is salaries obviously). But yeah, if you really think you're subsidizing anyone its on the order of a few dollars a year.
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,978|6840|949

Jay wrote:

Cybargs wrote:

Jay wrote:


Not really, no. Any monkey can do CAD drawings, sure, hell, most of the work is done by design programs already. Draftsmen went the way of the dinosaur unless they are protected by a strong union like electrical workers are. You could hire a roomful of Chinese introverts and they'll produce flawless drawings for much less than I would work for, but that's the thing, they're introverts. You'd probably be surprised based on the type of students that normally walk the halls in engineering schools, but the companies that hire engineers go out of their way to hire the ones that can actually talk to people without wetting themselves. They're the ones that become project managers and interact with customers, you wouldn't want a Chinese kid doing that.

Besides, I'm in a protected industry firewalled behind licensure requirements. Only a licensed engineer can sign off on drawings, and only signed drawings can be used for construction. The project I've been working on with my current company is coming to a close so I tossed out my resume last week and I've already had four interviews and two job offers. I'm not worried
You're pretty spot on about chinese kids being introverts. I blame the parents pushing their kids k-12 who go to school from 7am-5pm EVERY DAY, come home with a ton of homework and prepping for the weekly exams. They wonder why their kids end up being burned out and producing shitty results in uni.
It's totally a culture thing, yeah. It's not an indictment of Chinese at all, but they're much more docile and afraid of being seen as foolish than white people are, so they're afraid to speak up. They used to absolutely rape the curve in all my hard engineering classes, but everything they learned was done very methodically and they learned specifically for the test. If you asked them to think about the 'why' of something rather than the 'how' they would be completely and utterly lost. It's just a completely different mentality than western people grow up with.
You guys are stupid.
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6875

^^^--- This.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England
We were both talking about first generation people, not people who grew up here in America. There's a vast cultural difference between the two, although I see plenty of first gen parents dropping their kids off at all of the academies around here every night.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6875

Jay wrote:

We were both talking about first generation people, not people who grew up here in America. There's a vast cultural difference between the two, although I see plenty of first gen parents dropping their kids off at all of the academies around here every night.
When was the last time you were in Hong Kong, Singapore, or Malaysia working with an Asian Engineer PM?  Building skyscrapers and underground railways?   Yeah,  my brother in law.  Introvert my ass.
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4462

Jay wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

it is kind of structural, on the level of a society's development. america's big push for STEM degrees was obviously in the post-ww2 boom years, when everything was go, and new technology and invention was helping to power the american technological gap over the rest of the (pretty much obliterated) developing world. when a country reaches a certain level of comfort, though, you tend to get people studying the more reflective and cultural degrees. it's definitely a luxury. i doubt there are many people growing up in india who can genuinely aspire, with any pragmatic sense, to go and study philosophy or ancient history at an american university. it just isn't the way up the ladder. with that said, western countries like the US and the UK do talk a lot nowadays about 'knowledge' and 'cultural' capital being just as operative parts of a nation's running/success as pure capital itself. the UK still stays afloat on the world level because it is essentially a place of educational and cultural prestige. so it's not as if the maturation into the luxuries of 'liberal arts reflection' are all bad and decadent.
No, you're afloat because you are the banking and investment hub of Europe. All those MBA's you denigrate are putting food on your table.
a pretty respectable proportion of the uk's higher education funding (it is all state run) comes from international appeal. the reason the UK and US universities are considered top worldwide isn't because of their domestic prestige/excellence. in fact most of the UK/US's native best colleges are not worldwide top50. the best 'super universities' are the ones that attract a worldwide mix of scholars. i would say that cultural capital/knowledge economy is a fairly big part of the western countries who no longer 'produce' or 'export' anything material, per se.

and, as poschy said, you massively over-state how important the business class are to any one nation. corporations and multi-nationals are just that: multinational. they bank in london because the conditions and regulations in the City are favourable to them. it's not really an asset to the country. in fact, with all the recent tax evasion and fraud, it's more like a liability. we are shackled to our financial sector; we need it more than it needs us. not really a national asset.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-03-22 15:12:50)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England

Ilocano wrote:

Jay wrote:

We were both talking about first generation people, not people who grew up here in America. There's a vast cultural difference between the two, although I see plenty of first gen parents dropping their kids off at all of the academies around here every night.
When was the last time you were in Hong Kong, Singapore, or Malaysia working with an Asian Engineer PM?  Building skyscrapers and underground railways?   Yeah,  my brother in law.  Introvert my ass.
Is he extroverted around white people, or just Asians? In my experience, Asians are perfectly social around people that share their culture, and become next to impossible to get a word out of when confronted with people from other cultures.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6875

Jay wrote:

Ilocano wrote:

Jay wrote:

We were both talking about first generation people, not people who grew up here in America. There's a vast cultural difference between the two, although I see plenty of first gen parents dropping their kids off at all of the academies around here every night.
When was the last time you were in Hong Kong, Singapore, or Malaysia working with an Asian Engineer PM?  Building skyscrapers and underground railways?   Yeah,  my brother in law.  Introvert my ass.
Is he extroverted around white people, or just Asians? In my experience, Asians are perfectly social around people that share their culture, and become next to impossible to get a word out of when confronted with people from other cultures.
Most of the companies he worked for are British subsidiaries. :p
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6875

But yeah social culture.   Like putting an American engineer in  Japan.
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4462

Jay wrote:

They don't put food on the table? Are they stuffing all that money in a vault behind padlock and key? No, the money is taxed, and the rest goes to paying rent, and buying expensive suits and all the other crap they like. That money then works it's way around, gets taxed some more, and then the government turns around and subsidizes educations for people like uzi. The money they don't spend ends up in bank accounts, where it is loaned out to people wanting to buy homes, who give their money to construction workers, who in turn buy goods from grocers etc. Frankly, your view on economics is very similar to Ayn Rand, who made the stupid assumption that every person is their own island and that we're not all linked together by economic transactions we make on a daily basis. We're all in the web, and we all feel the pain to some extent when shit goes bad. It's why a banking crisis can cause a world-wide depression instead of just affecting bankers.
subsidizes educations for people like uzi? LOL DUDE YOU ARE FUCKING HILARIOUS. first in that ee chats thread you call me "textbook learned", after people call you that here for 2 weeks. now people have been ragging on your subsidized education hypocrisy for the last 2 weeks, you try to imply i have a 'subsidized education'. lol. hahahaha. i took a bank loan for my education, in my own name. i didn't take a government hand-out. i won an excellence scholarship that is maintained privately by the university, and most of the funds for it come from alum donations. 'subsidized education' no, jay, that's you taking grants and purposefully calculating military career paths to get discounts. you say i "deflect", but you are fucking psychotic when it comes to recycling criticisms that have been levelled at you. it's amazing, in a way. the mental gymnastics you flex.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

Jay wrote:

They don't put food on the table? Are they stuffing all that money in a vault behind padlock and key? No, the money is taxed, and the rest goes to paying rent, and buying expensive suits and all the other crap they like. That money then works it's way around, gets taxed some more, and then the government turns around and subsidizes educations for people like uzi. The money they don't spend ends up in bank accounts, where it is loaned out to people wanting to buy homes, who give their money to construction workers, who in turn buy goods from grocers etc. Frankly, your view on economics is very similar to Ayn Rand, who made the stupid assumption that every person is their own island and that we're not all linked together by economic transactions we make on a daily basis. We're all in the web, and we all feel the pain to some extent when shit goes bad. It's why a banking crisis can cause a world-wide depression instead of just affecting bankers.
subsidizes educations for people like uzi? LOL DUDE YOU ARE FUCKING HILARIOUS. first in that ee chats thread you call me "textbook learned", after people call you that here for 2 weeks. now people have been ragging on your subsidized education hypocrisy for the last 2 weeks, you try to imply i have a 'subsidized education'. lol. hahahaha. i took a bank loan for my education, in my own name. i didn't take a government hand-out. i won an excellence scholarship that is maintained privately by the university, and most of the funds for it come from alum donations. 'subsidized education' no, jay, that's you taking grants and purposefully calculating military career paths to get discounts. you say i "deflect", but you are fucking psychotic when it comes to recycling criticisms that have been levelled at you. it's amazing, in a way. the mental gymnastics you flex.
We all have subsidized educations Uzi. I went to a State College that receives ~25% of its funding from the general tax fund. Yours is even more heavily subsidized if 9k a year seemed outrageous to you. It's just the way the system works.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4462
all education in the UK is state-run, but all that means is that each university has its budget and research funding allocated to it by a central body. yes, taxpayers contribute towards our universities, but most of it is from tuition fees now (the reason it is £9k a year now instead of £3.5k a year as it used to be is because universities have now essentially been shifted off the national balance sheet). so yeah, inescapably, every single university education in the UK is 'subsidized', if that's the way you want to put it. however i'm not the one ever talking out about university education. i've taken on more financial responsibility for my uni education than you have, which is funny, considering you're the one that spouts evil free-market bullshit about "cutting subsidies because of competition". i'm not the one having a perpetual identity crisis, jay. so stop sniping me in your posts like it means shit.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,813|6314|eXtreme to the maX

Jay wrote:

No, you're afloat because you are the banking and investment hub of Europe. All those MBA's you denigrate are putting food on your table.
Since when did MBAs have anything to do with banking?
I'm fairly sure very few city types - in Europe - have MBAs. They're an American fad.
Fuck Israel
Ilocano
buuuurrrrrrppppp.......
+341|6875

Oh,  and that culture thing.   In Asia, for big projects,  you work with an international team.  Chinese, Indians, English, Australians, Germans, and the locals.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5566|London, England
Ilocano, your previous post got cut off.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat

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