How To Become A Software Engineer/Programmer
Posted on June 9, 2009 Comments (9)
How To Become A Software Engineer/Programmer
1) Know that you love software before you commit to it. You’ll know when you take your first pseudocode class: a clear division forms between the people who get it and the people who don’t. If you’re in the “don’t” section, choose another career.
2) If you don’t like teaching yourself new things, the skills you learn today will be irrelevant in less than a decade. Accept the commitment to learn throughout your career as a coder, or accept your eventual fate as a has-been.
3) College degrees matter less than hands-on knowledge and time spent at the keyboard. I outpaced my entire class in college because I bought my own programming books that deviated from the coursework, and as a result I learned things they were not teaching in school.
…
5) Early on, decide if you want to focus on application development or software engineering. Application development deals with making user interfaces, interfacing different systems together, solving business process problems, and exposing applications to the outside world (i.e. web services and other remoting techniques). Software engineering deals with creation of utilities and processes that support information processing, tends to be more math intensive, requires a lower-level understanding of the trade, and rarely deals with the systems that expose the software to an end user. There are core differences in these two disciplines and 100 shades in between, so figure out what you like.
Good blog post; those thinking of a career in software development should read the whole thing. By the way if you are a programmer already that loves it and looking for a new position: my work is hiring a Ruby on Rails developer.
Related: Joy in Work, Software Development – The Software Developer Labor Market – A Career in Computer Programming – The Manager FAQ – IT Talent Shortage, or Management Failure?
Tags: Career,jobs,programming,software engineering,undergraduate education,undergraduate students
Rutgers Initiative to Help Disadvantaged Children
Posted on June 8, 2009 Comments (0)
Praise for ambitious Rutgers initiative to help disadvantaged youths
…
Adolescents, their parents and public school administrators uniformly praise the Future Scholars Program. Last June, the initiative started 200 disadvantaged seventh-graders along a five-year path of summer workshops, tutoring, social support and cultural outings. Their reward if they keep a B average and meet other requirements: a full ride to Rutgers.
The Rutgers Future Scholars Program is not targeting science, it focuses on all academic areas.
By improving educational opportunities, in general, more disadvantaged children will have the opportunity to become scientists and engineers. They are highlighting what recent high school graduates from the Camden school are doing, such as Aspiring Physician, Stem Cell Researcher, Rutgers-Camden Student
After earning his undergraduate degree in biology from Rutgers-Camden in 2007, Tej is on track to earn his graduate degree in biology this May, thanks to the five-year combined bachelor and master degree program in biology at Rutgers-Camden.
…
For the past two years the 2003 graduate of Highland High School has been working with Daniel Shain, an associate professor of biology at Rutgers-Camden and one of the nation’s leading experts on leech research. Nuthulaganti has furthered Shain’s research on identifying key genes that are pivotal in the stem cell formation in the leech, which gives a simple model system for more complicated research. Their research could be beneficial in the early detection of cancerous cells.
In addition to presenting his research at major conferences, including one at the University of California-Berkeley, Nuthulaganti has also made sure that his fellow students who are considering careers in medicine also have a forum to ask questions and think deeply about what kinds of doctors they’d like to be.
There are many great programs underway that are aimed at improving education performance. And this seems like another good effort.
Related: Fund Teacher’s Science Projects – Middle School Engineers – Engineer Your Life – Project Lead The Way – Beloit College: Girls and Women in Science – Germany Looking to Kindergarten for Engineering Future
Tags: Funding,K-12,scholarships
Agricultural Irrigation with Salt Water
Posted on June 7, 2009 Comments (6)
Irrigation system can grow crops with salt water
The pipes are made from a plastic that retains virtually all contaminants while letting clean water through to the plants’ roots.
…
The dRHS system, which has been in development for ten years, was initially trialled in the UK using tomato plants, and has since been tried out in the US. The next trials will take place in Chile, Libya, Tanzania, Mauritius and Spain. Tonkin says 20,000 metres of pipe are on their way to the Middle East, where it will be tested with water that’s more saline than sea water.
…
It has also won international recognition for its work, most recently at the international Water Technology Idol event in Switzerland, organised by Global Water Intelligence magazine and the International Desalination Association.
Christopher Gasson from Global Water Intelligence magazine says that the competition was a three-way tie last year but this year, the winner stood out. “The dRHS irrigation system addressed a bigger problem than the other technology that it was competing against,” he said. “Agriculture water is where 70 per cent of water goes. By 2025 two thirds of the world’s population will experience water shortages and so farming will be badly hit.
This is good news. I am still skeptical that this is as good as the article makes it sound. Just as simple as “flushing out the pipes.” But I am hopeful we will find desalination-type solutions. Clean water is a huge problem facing the world now, basically I just figure with enough engineers focused on finding workable solutions we will find several that have a huge impact. If not, we are in real trouble.
Related: Cheap Drinking Water From Seawater (2006) – Water From Air – Nearly Waterless Washing Machine – Water and Electricity for All
Tags: Awards,Engineering,food,green,plants,Products,water
Buy Your Own Electron Microscope
Posted on June 5, 2009 Comments (1)
Buy your own electron microscope from the state of South Carolina, USA.
You will be bidding on a Hitachi Electron Microscope and Accessories Lot (detailed info below). The agency is reporting the basic scope worked when last operated about two years ago. The x-ray detector computer is broken but that is an add-on accessory feature that does not affect operation as an electron microscope. Also, the forepumps and air compressor are missing. These two items will need to be replaced before someone attempts to use it. This is an old electron microscope but is good for basic microscopy. The electron microscope has been disassembled and palletized by the Medical University of South Carolina. This equipment was used by the Medical University of South Carolina and is located in North Charleston, South Carolina. The overall condition of this property is unknown to the Surplus Property Office.
Detailed Lot Info:
- Hitachi H7000 Electron Microscope
- Kevex Computer (model Delta)
- Kevex Monitor
- Okidata Printer (model 320)
- Hitachi KS55 Camera
Current bid: $460. Auction expires 5 June 2009 at 3 PM USA Eastern Time. Getting the equipment to your location will likely cost much more than that.
This item is for pickup only at the Medical University of South Carolina in North Charleston, South Carolina. The winning bidder is responsible for the loading and removal of this property. MUSC will try to assist if employees are available during the loading.
Related: Scanning Electron Microscope Rose Art – Build Your Own Tabletop Interactive Multi-touch Computer – Snowflake photography – The Glove, Engineering Coolness
Extremophile Hunter
Posted on June 3, 2009 Comments (2)
NSF has begun publishing a new web magazine: Science Nation. The inaugural article is Extremophile Hunter
…
“It may be that when we ultimately get a chance to bring back samples of ice from the polar caps of Mars, we might find biology that looks just like Earth life and it might be that it originated on Earth and was carried to Mars,” said Hoover. “Of course, if it can happen that way, it could have happened the other way. So we may never know the ultimate answer to how did life originate.”
…
Some of the structures he has imaged from these meteorites are intriguing, bearing striking similarities to bacteria here on Earth. Could these be the fossilized remains of extraterrestial life?
“I am convinced that what I am finding in the carbonaceous meteorites are in many cases biological in nature, and I think they are indigenous and not terrestrial contaminants,” said Hoover.
It is a highly controversial interpretation. “We have for a long time thought that all life, as we know it, originated on Earth. And there isn’t any life anywhere else,” he said. “That’s an idea, it’s a hypothesis, it’s a totally unproven hypothesis.”
Related: Tardigrades – What is an Extremophile? – Light-harvesting Bacterium Discovered in Yellowstone
EngineerGirl Essay: The Cure to Vitamin D Deficiency
Posted on June 2, 2009 Comments (2)
Kate Yuhas, an eighth-grader at Brighton’s Scranton Middle School, Michigan. Photo courtesy Kate Yuhas.Brighton eighth-grader rewarded for her love for science
…
Yuhas received an honorable mention certificate from the National Academy of Engineering’s EngineerGirl! Web site Imagine That! Engineering Innovation Essay Contest for her essay on a tanning booth that helps people produce vitamin D. “My whole life I’ve been interested in science,” Yuhas said. “I really like helping the environment and eating organic.”
“Kate has a talent for science and math, and she’s won medals at Science Olympiad,” said her mom, Johanna, who coaches the team. “Kate has always had science-themed parties. My husband and I are both engineers, and we talk a lot about science at home.”
The essay contest asked participants to consider one of three images on the EngineerGirl! site and to discuss its potential purposes and functions using engineering creativity.
…
Read Kate’s essay: The Cure to Vitamin D Deficiency
…
The Engineer Girl website has done a smart thing and posted all the essays online. It is a simple act but one so often other organizations fail to do in similar circumstances.
Related: Students Create “Disappearing” Nail Polish – Tinker School: Engineering Camp – Science for Kids – Building minds by building robots – Kids on Scientists: Before and After

RSS Feed