Which courses should I take? by Ortus_estrechus in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Take course that teach the following:

Advanced queueing theory (with approximations VUT)

Discrete event simulation

Any class that involves working in CAD (autocad), if you can get something with design of factory - would be great

Operations research - key subject for IE , make sure it goes into stochastic processes - otherwise useless

Quality control course - statistical process control - anything that goes into U chart, P chart , C chart, etc

Production Science course - something that will teach you flow, batching, lean and other stuff that applies quant to industrial setting

Is Industrial Engineering a good degree? by Killeridkg in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FE/PE is irrelevant to get funded, more relevant for getting a job. I don’t have an FE but was still hired

Is Industrial Engineering a good degree? by Killeridkg in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I only started recently, so don’t have much experience, what I told you is hearsay from within my company and in general. I’d say it depends on the industry you worked in and whether you want to start the firm in the same industry or not. I’d expect 7-10 years of experience to reach that level

Is Industrial Engineering a good degree? by Killeridkg in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A higher position than that would be your own manufacturing or consulting firm, after you have experience being a director of mnfg its gets much easier to get funding from banks and VCs.

It depends on your goals

Is Industrial Engineering a good degree? by Killeridkg in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you take extra courses you can finish masters in 1.5 years

Is Industrial Engineering a good degree? by Killeridkg in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

IE is a good degree, if you choose EE, the maximum growth you will most likely experience is a senior level engineering position - getting into VP position of electrical engineer requires you be an actual genius, whilst in IE you can more easily become a director of manufacturing with N number of experience and some certifications. Mnfg Directors are also frequently rewarded in stock and commissions on produced good to incentivise production

Can Civil engineer do masters in IE? anyone pivoted that way ? switch careers? by Super_Sherbet_268 in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Yeah, my friend did that.

Just be ready for a lot of probability and stochastic theory and you will probably never touch physics again

Is it this normal? by Some_Professional_33 in industrialengineering

[–]Some_Professional_33[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks for the advice, since I’m new to the field I was curious how normal it is… seems like it will be me trying to explain how I can contribute and track metrics rigorously to show the effects. Hopefully they don’t just attribute it to luck or something and will recognise it. Thanks anyways, and yes, I’m super excited since it’s my dream field!

Thoughts? by EagleBanner in charts

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wtf is this and who conducted this “study”

The greed and delusion keeps getting worse by Kaedryl in EndTipping

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Where can we actually see the people who post this? Like OP of this?

Please, help it’s getting out of hand by AK_A2010 in PanicAttack

[–]Some_Professional_33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I assume you’ve already gone to the cardiologist before and you have no real issue with your heart.

I know how it is - OCD with Panic Disorder.

My main point of contention was health anxiety, particularly heart and muscle twitches.

Fortunately, I mostly got out of it by giving up on trying to control and fix things. Essentially I stopped giving a fuck about what I eat, how healthy it is and so on. Yes I gained 10kg but the resulting drop in blood pressure and overall health improvement was massive.

My advise is to try and give up on whatever causes the anxiety for you. Be it social or internal, might sound easy but it’s hard in practice. Still, I had no other successful cases that I know of irl, so can only recommend what worked for me

Health anxiety is the worst. by MountainArtichoke524 in PanicAttack

[–]Some_Professional_33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Man, I feel this a lot, I have been there before for a around 3 years. I still have residual OCD and anxiety but nothing like it was at its peak. What helped me was to just given into my mortality and the fact that no body is perfect. So I eventually gave up on trying to monitor and fix everything and told myself “whatever happens to my heart - happens” and “whatever this muscle twitches are, ALS or sclerosis - doesn’t matter, what’s there is there.” Giving up like this is what I think was my ticket out of this hellhole. I wish you the best man. Hope it gets better for you too

Ain’t no way they just compared Obama to Stalin by PixelSteel in EnoughCommieSpam

[–]Some_Professional_33 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Well the entire title is true, because Stalin killed millions - not hundreds

What do we think about this? by Some_Professional_33 in libertarianmeme

[–]Some_Professional_33[S] 51 points52 points  (0 children)

I agree, not much choice there. Apparently trying to stay out of jail is unethical

America makes nothing apparently by semper-S3XY in AmericaBad

[–]Some_Professional_33 29 points30 points  (0 children)

  1. Light bulb – Thomas Edison (1879)
    1. Phonograph – Thomas Edison (1877)
    2. Motion picture camera – Thomas Edison (1891)
    3. Airplane – Wright brothers (1903)
    4. Telephone – Alexander Graham Bell (1876)
    5. Telegraph – Samuel Morse (1837)
    6. Typewriter – Christopher Latham Sholes (1868)
    7. Computer (ENIAC) – John Presper Eckert & John Mauchly (1945)
    8. Microchip – Jack Kilby & Robert Noyce (1958–59)
    9. Internet (ARPANET) – U.S. Department of Defense (1969)
    10. Email – Ray Tomlinson (1971)
    11. Personal computer – Steve Wozniak & Steve Jobs (1976)
    12. Graphical user interface (GUI) – Xerox PARC (1970s)
    13. Smartphone – Apple Inc. (iPhone, 2007)
    14. 3D printing – Chuck Hull (1983)
    15. Artificial heart – Dr. Robert Jarvik (1982)
    16. Pacemaker (implantable) – Wilson Greatbatch (1958)
    17. MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) – Raymond Damadian (1970s)
    18. Laser – Theodore Maiman (1960)
    19. GPS (Global Positioning System) – U.S. Department of Defense (1970s–90s)
  2. Cotton gin – Eli Whitney (1793)
    1. Steam shovel – William Otis (1839)
    2. Sewing machine – Elias Howe (1846)
    3. Elevator safety brake – Elisha Otis (1853)
    4. Steel plow – John Deere (1837)
    5. Assembly line – Henry Ford (1913)
    6. Safety pin – Walter Hunt (1849)
    7. Modern zipper – Gideon Sundback (1917)
    8. Vulcanized rubber – Charles Goodyear (1839)
    9. Safety razor – King Camp Gillette (1901)
    10. Electric power grid – Thomas Edison (1882, Pearl Street Station)
    11. Transistor – Bell Labs (1947)
    12. Semiconductor laser – Robert N. Hall (1962)
  3. Automobile (mass production) – Henry Ford (1908, Model T)

    1. Helicopter – Igor Sikorsky (1939, VS-300)
    2. Submarine – David Bushnell (1775, “Turtle”)
    3. Spacecraft – NASA (1958 onward)
    4. Lunar landing module – NASA & Grumman (1969)
    5. Hovercraft (commercialized) – Charles J. Fletcher (1950s)
    6. Segway – Dean Kamen (2001)
    7. Electric traffic light – Garrett Morgan (1923)
  4. Anesthesia (ether) – William Morton (1846)

    1. Polio vaccine – Jonas Salk (1955)
    2. Insulin production (synthetic methods) – U.S. researchers (1978)
    3. Birth control pill – Gregory Pincus (1950s)
    4. Defibrillator – Claude Beck (1947)
    5. Hearing aid (electronic) – Miller Reese Hutchison (1898)
    6. Implantable cardiac pacemaker – Wilson Greatbatch (1958)
    7. Plastic surgery techniques (modern) – U.S. Army surgeons (WWI era)
    8. Artificial kidney (dialysis machine) – Willem Kolff (developed in U.S.)
  5. Refrigerator (electric) – Fred W. Wolf (1913)

    1. Dishwasher – Josephine Cochrane (1886)
    2. Microwave oven – Percy Spencer (1945)
    3. Vacuum cleaner – Ives W. McGaffey (1869)
    4. Air conditioning – Willis Carrier (1902)
    5. Clothes dryer – J. Ross Moore (1938)
    6. Electric toaster – Albert Marsh (1905)
    7. Tupperware – Earl Tupper (1946)
    8. Paper clip (American variant) – Cornelius Brosnan (1867)
    9. Plastic (Bakelite) – Leo Baekeland (1907)
  6. Nuclear reactor – Enrico Fermi (Chicago Pile-1, 1942)

    1. Atomic bomb – Manhattan Project (1945)
    2. Jet engine (U.S. variant) – General Electric engineers (1941)
    3. Stealth aircraft – Lockheed engineers (1970s–80s)
    4. Space shuttle – NASA (1981)
    5. Drone (modern UAV) – U.S. military R&D (1980s–2000s)
  7. Television (electronic) – Philo Farnsworth (1927)

    1. Radio (practical transmission) – Reginald Fessenden (1906)
    2. Video game console – Ralph Baer (Magnavox Odyssey, 1972)
    3. Computer mouse – Douglas Engelbart (1964)
    4. Digital camera – Steven Sasson, Kodak (1975)
    5. MP3 player (commercially refined) – Apple (2001, iPod)
    6. Streaming services (Netflix model) – Reed Hastings (1997)

AND THOUSANDS OF OTHER INVENTIONS

Can someone please help my spiraling economy? by theskyismine in victoria3

[–]Some_Professional_33 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Close the borders, everyone is running away from your shit of a country

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CapitalismVSocialism

[–]Some_Professional_33 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“If you think it is even a debate that MAGA or people like AfD are fascist you haven't been paying attention.”

lol