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Tl;dr.
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Tl;dr.
Tl;dr.
Being succinct was never a strength of mine. I'll try to increase the brevity of my posts in future.
Tl;dr.
Being succinct was never a strength of mine. I'll try to increase the brevity of my posts in future.
No, this wasn't directed at you at all. It was directed at a post that bribrius wrote and then deleted. And I would not have directed this at you anyway; I like to read your posts, short or long.
geez, thanks. Yeh, this thread went way off topic. Decided not to add to it anymore. Mod, cleanup on aisle 9......Tl;dr.
Being succinct was never a strength of mine. I'll try to increase the brevity of my posts in future.
No, this wasn't directed at you at all. It was directed at a post that bribrius wrote and then deleted. And I would not have directed this at you anyway; I like to read your posts, short or long.
In other words, this thread made me more indecisive
In other words, this thread made me more indecisive
Heather, sometimes you can plan for a career. But given how things change, and how we as people evolve in our thinking and focus, it would not be unusual to change one's career anywhere 3-8 times during one's life. Serendipity and circumstance play a much more important role than many of us care to admit. The key appears to be to be open to opportunities and to be unafraid to try something. So many people never achieve anything because they are afraid to start "just in case that wasn't what I wanted to do anyways". You just don't know what will "click" with you, until you try and by that I mean really try. It takes time to acquire enough knowledge of any field to understand what you're doing in it. If, after getting that expertise, you find that the field is not for you, then it's not a "failure" but a learning opportunity that allows you to have a better insight into yourself and the world around you.
I agree completely. Its sad how 12-18 years of school, prepares a child little to NONE for the real world...Heather; try not to get too worked up over it. It really is a shame how college kids are expected to decide a career path. Sure, some do, but I think most are simply thrashing about like a fish out of water.
Oh I wasn't saying a business degree is wasteful at all. I find that most people these days do nothing that has to do with their degree.A business degree is not wasted if it allows you to analyse and apply your knowledge to new fields. I originally did a degree in biochemistry. However, my first real job was in an engineering firm. I applied my knowledge of how to do research, how to look for interconnected processes, how to test and verify my hypotheses to develop what started as an essentially clerical job into one where we built a computer department essentially from scratch. In THAT job, I learned about the imprecision of known data, of the human foibles that torpedo well-laid plans, in the way management often lives in a different reality from that of the company they "manage". That knowledge was applied in a different field (software design) where we had to learn how to parse design ideas dreamed up by the marketing and design teams into something that was actually useful to the marketplace. And so it does.
In fact, the most powerful ideas are often those which are taken from one field and applied to a completely different one. Agility of imagination is often much more powerful than ability to memorize data and processes.