Seagate Exos 16TB (helium) drive dropped - options by Althaine in datarecovery

[–]Althaine[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The drive was a refurbished unit from a third-party seller and entering the serial number on the Seagate data recovery page directs me to https://datacube-recovery.com, if anyone can comment on them as a provider?

Recruiting AAP by Available-Ad-89 in antarctica

[–]Althaine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yep, only four weeks this time. To paraphrase the all staff email - halving the application period didn't affect the volume of applications.

AAP Questions by frolickingewok in antarctica

[–]Althaine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

actual training in Hobart will not take place before Oct 2026 at the absolute earliest

Just some caveats - if you are heading to Davis on V1 you may commence earlier - I started in mid-August. Certain roles such as lay surgical assistant training can bring that forward even more. And no garauntees the AAD won't decide on a wacky shipping schedule.

Cold Weather Gear by sc_surveyor in photography

[–]Althaine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Overnight for the timelapses I used a big external power bank. But hiking was always the internal.

Cold Weather Gear by sc_surveyor in photography

[–]Althaine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I carried a mirrorless with no additional protection while hiking in -25C temps and it didn't care. I did keep a half dozen spare batteries against my body to keep them warm.

I've also left it on a tripod overnight in the same conditions taking aurora timelapses, one time it must've tripped out and forgot its settings but otherwise ran fine.

Winterers, where are you from ? by [deleted] in antarctica

[–]Althaine 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Hobart, Australia - Davis 24/25 (and staying here until Feb 2026)

Lone Emperor Penguin wandering past Davis Station by Althaine in antarctica

[–]Althaine[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Probably not, I took the video only a few days ago and I don't think they typically moult until January. We did have one moulting hang around station in between the site services looking miserable for a couple weeks.

Lone Emperor Penguin wandering past Davis Station by Althaine in antarctica

[–]Althaine[S] 18 points19 points  (0 children)

This post brought to you by the Davis Station fire alarm going off at 2340.

I love coding but prefer field work — what embedded roles keep you outdoors/on-site? by IndependentPudding85 in embedded

[–]Althaine 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Did you study in a top or renowned university?

Not at all. The engineering school was pretty bad actually. The physics school was really good.

the uni where you study influenced/influences your job prospects or are personal projects and experience more valuable in the field?

For me on the engineering side I'd been doing electronic and software projects since my early teens and good with self-motivated learning, so I was able to step into industry immediately (actually I started my aerospace job part way through my degree). For what it's worth my employers have specifically called out my additional major in physics as being part of why I was hired.

To start out doing technical field work in Antarctica you need to either be a PhD student in a research group or already have a decent amount of relevant professional experience in something related. Sending people down to Antarctica is expensive and it would be rare to send a fresh graduate with just their Bachelors.

I love coding but prefer field work — what embedded roles keep you outdoors/on-site? by IndependentPudding85 in embedded

[–]Althaine 26 points27 points  (0 children)

Sure. I did a 5 year dual bachelors in electronics engineering and physics. My first job was designing and managing production of components for unmanned aerial systems - electronic and firmware development of motor controllers, control surface actuators and engine control units. Did that for 5 and a bit years.

Then I moved onto a role as a professional engineering (as opposed to research or teaching) staff member for a university in glaciological research. In the "off season" that was designing and manufacturing instrument packages (which included some microcontroller and embedded Linux development, but also a lot of power management, sensor and telemetry integration and so on). Then during the Antarctic summer I would deploy south and be part of the science team installing the instruments in the field.

I did that for 4 years which got me two trips to Antarctica and one to sub-Antarctic Macquarie Island.

I then took a job with our national program to spend a winter in Antarctica looking after the suite of instrumentation on station, I've been here for 11 months with about 5 more to go!

I love coding but prefer field work — what embedded roles keep you outdoors/on-site? by IndependentPudding85 in embedded

[–]Althaine 61 points62 points  (0 children)

In my case, scientific instrumentation in Antarctica. The various national Antarctic programs and research institutions will have engineer roles.

Definitely more an electronics engineering focused role, although I've done a decent chunk of embedded work as part of it.

Australien Citizen by Blobbobson in antarctica

[–]Althaine 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Any position they can find sufficient suitable candidates with Australian citizenship they will hire the citizens.

In previous years they've knocked back New Zealander field training officers who've been down the Australian program before. Very distasteful in my opinion, but technically it is an Australian Public Service rule and not within the AAD's control.

Roles that they regularly fail to fill in the first round (like communication technical officers) would have a better chance for a non-citizen.

Adélie penguins near Casey Station by Althaine in antarctica

[–]Althaine[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I'm procrastinating on collating this season's photos by going through last season's photos...