she aced it and as soon as she could leave, she did
@ton.yeung Masters' fees vary depending on subject and institution but it's a few thousand
undergraduate degrees in the UK are subject to regulation w.r.t fees, I don't think postgrads are
Always printed as B/MSc here
or MEng, or MPhys, or whatever
an MPhys is what I have, and it's a bastard hybrid of an undergrad degree and a MSc
I guess at some point there was an effort to make science degrees more rigorous by default, so I did an extra year with a 50/50 mixture of theoretical classes and thesis
well, it's interesting. That's why I took it as a degree in the first place
but the money stinks and the work culture sounds like waiting to die
but it seems basically impossible to do anything useful, certainly in physics, probably in science in general, without being an academic staff member
it sucks up a ton of time, more than anybody who has a job can spare I think
My work ethic wasn't well-formed when I was a student, I didn't really have the drive to figure out real-world research problems, possibly because the teaching material is so contrived that it doesn't really prepare you for how the work is actually done
found it too frustrating to dredge through papers and books to tease out the meaning. Software makes much more sense to me, someone somewhere WANTS you to understand it
I know the financial industry is really into physics grads
Cosmology and so on gets a lot of press, most of the work that goes on is a lot more mundane
I like that part. It's all abstract, so it doesn't contain critical dependencies that can just fall over and invalidate all your work
whereas anything that happens in a lab is so vulnerable to bugs and oversights you spend most of your time re-doing work that went wrong
experiments don't contain bugs, they're MADE of bugs. Your job is to search through the bugs to find the one factor that was correct
Well, basically my position is, I'd like to understand more. I don't have any great desire to work in the field though, because the reality is a lot uglier than most people realise
@ton.yeung not so much, I don't have experience of that side of it. More in the sense that the work environment is dreadful and it sucks the life out of you to achieve something nobody cares about
I was at an informal class reunion a few weeks ago that was about 50% PhDs
so I have a good idea of what my life would have been like if I'd stayed on. No thanks.
I ought to start trying to bridge the gap between physics and CS
that's a handy side effect
if someone can work out how to make money out of it, a share of it is yours if you make it happen
First, claim you can predict the market.
even better if you CAN predict the market. You won't be rumbled so fast then
parallelising lab work would be nice
My university bought/built one of the top supercomputers in the UK, I think it might still be the 3rd most powerful or thereabouts, on the assumption that compute jobs would be in demand
last I heard it was usually idle
now it's not in the top 500
yeah, IBM kicked up a stink about the standard used to measure
as soon as they weren't top
I think they might actually have scrapped it :(
doesn't show up on the site or on google anymore, except as past news stories