@AnderBiguri Thanks! I'm quite safe - I live in a strategically unimportant part of the country, and we have no "problematic populations" nearby - so it's been quiet here (unless you count the increased traffic of fighter jets overhead). As I mentioned in one of my recent messages, I am now working fully-remotely, so I experience even less of the unrest/protests/amplified public transport inefficiencies/etc.
In some unrelated news... I got an email from Yair Altman a few days ago, asking if I happen to have some insights related to some undocumented features of MATLAB's new desktop, which is web-based instead of java-based. I'm thinking about investigating this just for kicks... Also, there's the new p-file format that needs reverse engineering.... So many things to do, so little time to do them x_x
@AnderBiguri If industry - will you try to find something related to your expertise?
And super cool about Yair! Admitedly I am slowly being more of a Pythong uy nowadays
@Dev-iL yeah possibly. Tomography, inverse problems in imaging, now that I've been doing a couple of years of machine learning, that also opens a lot of oportunities
Cambridge/London are also really good places for jobs like that
@AnderBiguri I've been doing python exclusively ever since I left academia, I still like MATLAB debugging and plotting better though I haven't really used it for the past few years
@AnderBiguri My unsolicited advice is... don't bother with following the expertise (unless it's a really well-paying job). It's good that you know all that stuff since it will help you no matter what you end up doing, but as one interviewer told me - he professionally respects individuals who tried doing a variety of things, because that means you're adaptable, which is one of the important qualities in the professional world (at least according to him)
and looking for a job tailored to you is impractical
I don't know what your pay arrangements are, or how it even works in the UK, but in IL, postdocs don't get any pension (and similar benefits), and this is really bad in the long term, since this money needs to be earned as soon as possible in life, due to the compound interest... So if you happen not to be getting that money - it's a very strong incentive for you to transition (unless ofc you're filthy rich, like one of the Indian postdocs we had in our lab, who practically had slaves back home)
Obviously - different people, different priorities. These are just things I haven't really thought about while in academia, and it's rather important in the "adult"/real world
Btw, have you been following the Factorio dev blogs in the past few months? They're talking about the massive upcoming expansions
@Dev-iL I have no idea right know actually. But its was fairly solid AFAIK, there were proper strikes in the last 5 years because they reduced it and we just got backpaid most of it. UK academic pension is considered one of the best in the country though
I know also that uni x2 our contribution, I think (its changed few times in the last months due to the strikes winning)
@AnderBiguri So what you're referring to is how much of your pay gets set aside as pension contributions. I'm asking about a different thing - given money X you have in your pension plan - what is it invested in?
my brain is a bit too tired now to read about financial stuff (a bit jet lagged from my trip to Korea still) but to be fair now I want to find out, so I will at some point this week XD
@Dev-iL yeah, and space exploration stuff etc. There was a big mod for that, right?