alex wrote:
Jetson wrote:
I help develop highly-specialized software used by controllers, as well as processing map data and aviation systems data to produce the visual displays used by controllers. It pays the bills and then some!
That sounds like one of the coolest jobs. What did you do for college? What kind of training did you need?
When I was in my "little professor" stage (up to grade 9) my all-consuming obsession was aviation. I was convinced I would grow up and be an airline pilot, if not an astronaut.
When I discovered computers in grade 10 they displaced (but did not kill) my aviation obsession. Now I had two areas in which to allow my highly-focussed interests to roam.
Computers in 1980 were very simple and not very powerful, and for someone who had the time and desire it was quite easy to learn essentially everything worth knowing about them -- what each chip on the board did, how every program instruction affected the state of the microprocessor, etc. I started doing "fun" tasks like replacing sections of the operating system with stuff I designed myself. As time went by and more computers started to show up on the market I was eventually forced to de-specialize a bit, but knowing how simple computers work makes it much easier to deal with more complicated versions.
When I was in grade 12 ('82/83) I managed to talk an ex-schoolmate who was a year ahead of me into giving me the password to his computer account at university. On the weekends I would walk about 12km to the university, sneak past security at the computer science center and then pretend to be a student once inside. Over the space of a few months I taught myself how to write software for Unix.
By the time I graduated from high school I was emotionally incapable of further education in a classroom setting due to the bullying and social problems that persisted until the very last day of school. Even if I had wanted to go to university, my family couldn't afford it and my marks in school were a disaster.
I had a few non-computer jobs over the next few years, but lost them for social-deficit reasons.
One day I got a call from the ex-schoolmate asking if I'd like to write software for money. His boss didn't seem to mind that I had no formal education since I had more than adequate programming skills and had been personally reccommended for the position by an insider. I liked the fact that I wouldn't have to deal with the public any more. Unfortunately that company went bankrupt. A new owner bought the software rights and hired most of the staff except me.
By this time I had been out of school for a little more than 3 years and thought I could handle it again. I decided to apply to the government for assistance and enrolled in an adult vocational school electronics design and repair program, where I excelled. The instructor at the school reccommended me to a company that was building and repairing computers. I worked there for four years before again losing my job for social reasons.
{I don't want the rest to be indexed by Google. Suffice it to say I was hired by the government and then progressed/transferred to where I am today.}
Last edited by Jetson on 24 Jan 2006, 11:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.