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Calgary25951 Posts
On October 29 2011 00:08 Titorelli wrote:Show nested quote +On October 27 2011 14:03 Chill wrote: I just recently got my P.Eng. I'm a project engineer for an oil company. Really like it now but I'm not sure how long I'll stay here.
Your thread is too general to give you any meaningful advice. Try to research as much as possible and make an informed decision, rather than "trying out some classes and figuring it out later." Not much is going to change in 4 years, so you should have some sort of gameplan when entering university. Wow I could never work for an oil company. They're - or rather you're - raping our mother earth pretty hard. I'd rather earn less money and be happy with myself. LOL
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On October 29 2011 00:23 Chill wrote:Show nested quote +On October 29 2011 00:08 Titorelli wrote:On October 27 2011 14:03 Chill wrote: I just recently got my P.Eng. I'm a project engineer for an oil company. Really like it now but I'm not sure how long I'll stay here.
Your thread is too general to give you any meaningful advice. Try to research as much as possible and make an informed decision, rather than "trying out some classes and figuring it out later." Not much is going to change in 4 years, so you should have some sort of gameplan when entering university. Wow I could never work for an oil company. They're - or rather you're - raping our mother earth pretty hard. I'd rather earn less money and be happy with myself. LOL I was serious
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On October 29 2011 00:38 Titorelli wrote:Show nested quote +On October 29 2011 00:23 Chill wrote:On October 29 2011 00:08 Titorelli wrote:On October 27 2011 14:03 Chill wrote: I just recently got my P.Eng. I'm a project engineer for an oil company. Really like it now but I'm not sure how long I'll stay here.
Your thread is too general to give you any meaningful advice. Try to research as much as possible and make an informed decision, rather than "trying out some classes and figuring it out later." Not much is going to change in 4 years, so you should have some sort of gameplan when entering university. Wow I could never work for an oil company. They're - or rather you're - raping our mother earth pretty hard. I'd rather earn less money and be happy with myself. LOL I was serious That makes it even more of an LOL then
Edit: Might as well answer the question of the thread
I am geologist working for an oil and gas company. It is a great job. The best part of it is where we drill wells and rape mother Earth. Nothin like slamming a drill bit in the ground, and then producing oil and gas, which are, I don't know, pretty essential for manufacturing a lot of products in this world.
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Calgary25951 Posts
On October 29 2011 00:38 Titorelli wrote:Show nested quote +On October 29 2011 00:23 Chill wrote:On October 29 2011 00:08 Titorelli wrote:On October 27 2011 14:03 Chill wrote: I just recently got my P.Eng. I'm a project engineer for an oil company. Really like it now but I'm not sure how long I'll stay here.
Your thread is too general to give you any meaningful advice. Try to research as much as possible and make an informed decision, rather than "trying out some classes and figuring it out later." Not much is going to change in 4 years, so you should have some sort of gameplan when entering university. Wow I could never work for an oil company. They're - or rather you're - raping our mother earth pretty hard. I'd rather earn less money and be happy with myself. LOL I was serious So am I you dummy. You have no idea where I work or what our practices are.
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I am not blaming you guys let alone accusing you of anything. I just said it wouldnt be something for _me_. No need to get insulting....
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@The majority? I think its interesting that so many people are against things that create the luxuries in their life. Oil isn't just gasoline in your car. Petroleum is used in EVERY modern manufacturing process known to man.
Maybe it is because I work as an engineer, but I don't think folks really know where things come from.
Anyway, you can live without it I'm sure. But when you do, be sure to write a 'Walden Pond' version of the experience.
@ The OP I graduated High school with a 2.0? I was super bored and paid no interest in my classes. Joined the military for 5 years working on aircraft. I decided I couldn't really start a family being deployed every 6 months so I got out after my 5th year. Afterward I went to college for mechanical engineering. Finding out how things work really interested me and I enjoy what I do.
I wanted to illustrate that I was "bottom of the barrel" in high school with those grades. Your grades and high school career do not show your intelligence or even what you are capable of so don't use it as a measure in your life for anything. My high school GPA was 2.0, I graduated with my associates Magna Cum Laude and finished my degree at university with a 3.6 GPA.
If you do go to college I would suggest going for something that is worth paying 50 grand for. Personally I would never go without knowing what I was going to do, but some folks go for the experience. I paid my own way (years in the military = GI bill) and I saved money/worked while gong). But I would never go in debt for it.
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Calgary25951 Posts
On October 29 2011 01:07 Titorelli wrote: I am not blaming you guys let alone accusing you of anything. I just said it wouldnt be something for _me_. No need to get insulting.... You just said I'm personally raping the Earth, while not knowing what products I'm shipping, whether I'm upstream, midstream or downstream, or even what part of the world I'm doing it in you dummy. That was an hour ago.
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Studying in college or uni (dunno whats the difference) is so much different from high school that I don't think it's even possible to know what you want to study before you try something. The difference is that you can drop everything (well, most) that doesn't interest you and go deep in the areas the you like. Pick something that you truly enjoy and don't do it just because it is considered sexy. Ask older students, maybe go to a lecture (ever attended one?) to see what it's like to sit there and don't believe any ads, they just try to bring out all good things about their study programs.
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I'm a chemical engineer (one more year to graduate) but i plan on going straight into the oil and gas business, personally im doing it for the big pay, but over the past 3 years you learn alot about whats going on in the industry and your being completely naive to just make a statement like;
"They're - or rather you're - raping our mother earth pretty hard."
Your reflecting a very personal opinion on alot of people in a industry with no idea of the reality of the situation.
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Fak it, i rly dont know what to do, atm im making science computer sh1t, and im a stagiarie at a software company ... so, not rly sure what to do ... I rly enjoin programming, but i feel its not it i want to do for life, but infortunally , here in my country is rly hard to get in good university if you dont have enough money/time. So screw me, i dont rly know what to do ... so i keep going and hope in the future i can make some changes.
If you have enough support and dont need to work and study at same time, look arround, seach a LOT visit places, its important know what kinda of place you ll work, and if you ll like it or not, there is a lot of sh1t that you need to get information about to make a rly good decision!
GL!
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I'm in Accounting primarily doing receivables and collections... so I'm handling macro in our company. People I call are mostly companies and corporations, rarely individuals.
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Love the diversity here, I'm getting my bachelors in culinary arts.
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On October 28 2011 23:04 SolidGasPro wrote:"Rich Dad Poor Dad" and "The Secret" are works that I don't like even the slightest. While I don't even have to defend my hate for "The Secret" (if you believe positive brain energy turns into matter, you're not in my league of intelligence :D ), let me give more reasoning for "Rich Dad Poor Dad": My roommate is a big Kiyosaki fan, he even bought the game "Cash Flow" that should teach you how to be a millionaire. It's somewhat like monopoly, and there are like 3 ways to make money: 1. Take a loan to buy property and repay loan from the rent of that property (Inapplicable in my country, loan payments are twice the amount of monthly rent.) 2. Own a business that repays your investment in 1-2 years and never goes bankrupt with steady income (Who would sell you such a business? Market will stay the same? You spend no time to manage it ? Or you gonna build it? Game doesn't teach you that!) 3. Buy stocks for price X, and in game you know that price will be rotating to X/2, X, 2X, 4X (that's 0 risk and you'll always win on that if you aren't retarded, that's not how real stock market works ) "Rich Dad Poor Dad" has one clear message - "Don't be afraid of failure in business." My roommate took a 20K euros loan and boldly invested in some food retail idea and lost everything and now owes a lot of money. We're no longer roommates as he can't pay rent, he moved back with his parents! He can't take a second loan, failures can be fatal, you know P.S. As for me, I'm a flash game developer, soon switching to iPhone as well, here are some of my works http://ozdy.newgrounds.com/flash/ He is implying that you build the business. The business model he is promoting creates businesses that replicate and reproduce by making it possible for a new hire to promote out in a year or less. Usually they work in direct sales. But anyways if you promote out enough new owners you can have enough income to step away from your promoting office. Then do the other two.
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I, for one, think the school system in America is broken. I gave up on it the second I realized it gave up on me. In high school, I read a lot (never fiction) and learned a lot, but the classes did nothing for me. I got a 30 on the ACT with no preparation and dropped out. I decided to try college, so I took the state GED test. I entered college, after dropping out of high school with a 1.0ish GPA, with a 3.9 GPA. I'm not giving these numbers to show off or toot my own horn or anything of the sort; this shouldn't be able to happen. One of the questions on the math portion of the GED was "100% of 7.5 is ____." I wish I was joking.
College turned out to be a repeat of high school, save for the fact that few professors cared whether or not you were in class and the school was determined to squeeze every last penny out of you. Between the pathetic education methods and standards and the money-grabbing nature of modern college, I VERY sadly determined it wasn't for me. Everyone's heard the old saying "Soon you're going to need a degree to work at McDonalds." Sure, it's slightly hyperbolic, but there's a truth to it. What people fail to do, once they've reached this conclusion, is make the obvious next step: This means your degree is becoming worthless. Imagine the process of some kid fresh out of high school putting himself in debt for the next 20 years so he can place himself firmly in the same economic position he was before he entered!
Long story short, I dropped out, decided to go full time playing music. I make a decent living now, and I've never been happier.
A (rough draft) sample of my stuff.
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Everyone in this thread is a Doctor, Lawyer, Engineer, or Technician. hmmm I think I hate my life
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Final year of law school. I know that's some sort of running joke around here, but yeah, that's what I'm doing. Unfortunately, all the classes have gone from "very hard" to "fuck me, studying is not enough, I need to start praying". It doesn't help that I also hate the subject matter with passion. I just want to get it over with, get a job doing trivial stuff at someone else's office for mediocre pay and start writing, which is my real wish and only talent. It was a relatively safe choice in an unsafe world and it nearly destroyed my soul in the process, but at least it will be over soon.
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On October 29 2011 05:24 Carnagath wrote: Final year of law school. I know that's some sort of running joke around here, but yeah, that's what I'm doing. Unfortunately, all the classes have gone from "very hard" to "fuck me, studying is not enough, I need to start praying". It doesn't help that I also hate the subject matter with passion. I just want to get it over with, get a job doing trivial stuff at someone else's office for mediocre pay and start writing, which is my real wish and only talent. It was a relatively safe choice in an unsafe world and it nearly destroyed my soul in the process, but at least it will be over soon.
Did you have to take out loan for Law school? If your passion is writing might as well do anything while you write. You didn't have to go through Law school for that.
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Make and design video games.
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Always thought chill was the rapist kind.
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