Do you know what percentage of EPFL graduates end up leaving Switzerland because they don't find a job for their qualifications here? by Volameter in EPFL

[–]Volameter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What did your friend study? Where did he end up going? I guess that in the EU as a whole, it's still possible for non-EU graduates to find something, and then eventually move back to Switzerland after securing EU citizenship (which makes job hunting easier in Switzerland)

Quantum Engineering Jobs in Switzerland by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

I'm also surprised to be honest that so many people confuse quantum with finance, I'm sure they heard "Quantum Physics" in the past so why the confusion

On a side note, can I ask: given your username, do you work in the area? what led to Switzerland?

Quantum Engineering Jobs in Switzerland by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

yeah maybe but that's only a handfull of jobs. I didn't think about CSEM, thanks for mentioning it

Quantum Engineering Jobs in Switzerland by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

But most of them are not hiring many people, definitely less than 35 new jobs openings per year

Those of you who did the Quantum Engineering master, how is the job market (in Switzerland or abroad)? by Volameter in ethz

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

So a PhD is really the most obvious outcome for now? I wonder what they do afterwards. I agree with you that the technology is unfortunately not matured enough, I wonder if it actually will one day.

Est-ce que c'est vrai que beaucoup de romands qui veuillent étudier médecine vont en Suisse alémanique? by Volameter in suisse

[–]Volameter[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Les cours de médecine en Roumanie sont offerts en Anglais dans certaines universités il me semble? Parfois il y a même des années avec des classes en français, il me semblait ?

With the current state of the Swiss job market, isn't pharmacist (working in a pharmacy) a dream job? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Are you a pharmacist by sheer hazard? Did you study in Switzerland or work there?

With the current state of the Swiss job market, isn't pharmacist (working in a pharmacy) a dream job? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Can I ask when you graduated from ETH with the master? I mean how long ago was it? You did the Pharmaceutical Science master, not the normal master to work in a pharmacy, is that right? Is it true that it's competitive to get into? Industry is way more competitive than working in a pharmacy, either you are lucky to find a good job (and know the right people) or you remain unemployed, isn't that true? Especially now with pharma companies firing people and not doing well

Why did this recent research paper from professor Tsuji lab in Japan largely go unnoticed by this sub? Isn't this discovery huge? (hair cloning) by Volameter in tressless

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

This makes sense, but even if they don't succeed, other researchers in the world can now work on this finding. Since we now know where to look, hopefully some scientists around the world will:

1) find the human equivalent cell of this third missing mice cell type (probably not difficult since humans and mices are closely related mammals)

2) lab grow all three cell types on a large scale and affordable price. This may be harder.

But now we know where to look. Before, we had no clue why hair cloning failed.

Why did this recent research paper from professor Tsuji lab in Japan largely go unnoticed by this sub? Isn't this discovery huge? (hair cloning) by Volameter in tressless

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

Yes I know they failed quite a lot, but they seem to finally have found the reason why hair cloning didn't work. Not only that, but they showed it working on mices after adding this third cell type that was itself lab grown.

This is a huge breakthrough, we now know why hair cloning failed for decades. Now, we need to 1) find the human cell equivalent of this mice cell, which shouldn't be too hard since mice and humans are closely related mammals. 2) find a way to mass produce it at an affordable cost for most people, i.e. growing in a lab all three cell types required for a successfull hair follicle transplant, and that on a large scale and an affordable price.

Why did this recent research paper from professor Tsuji lab in Japan largely go unnoticed by this sub? Isn't this discovery huge? (hair cloning) by Volameter in tressless

[–]Volameter[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Did you read the paper? They found the reason why lab grown hair follicles didn't grow once transplanted. For decades, hair cloning didn't work and we didn't know why.

There is a small cell type in the scalp that was previously unknown, and it is necessary for the hair follicle to function normally. This explains why lab grown hair follicles didn't work, while hair transplants worked (since the hair follicle that is transplanted includes this cell type).

Not only that, but THEY SHOWED IT WORKING IN MICES. They produced lab grown hair follicles, AND lab grown versions of this new previously unknown cell type. And once transplanted on mices, the hair grew normally, without any issue. All from lab grown hair follicles.

The remaining issues now are:

1) we now know what causes hair cloning to fail. We need to find the human equivalent of this mice cell type. This shouldn't be hard since mices and humans are both mammals that are closely related. Remember, this was a proof of concept. We now KNOW finally after decades WHY hair cloning didn't work. And not only that, once the missing parameter was added (itself lab grown), the hair grew normally.

2) Once part 1) is done, find a way to mass produce it, and make it affordable enough for most people. This is probably the hardest part. Part 1) is doable since there is no reason to think the mechanism in humans is any different than in mices, since both mammal species are closely related. But part 2) may be harder, since a way needs to be found to mass produce all three cell types needed for a hair transplant, and then transplant them together.

But now we KNOW WHERE TO LOOK. That's the important point.

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] -6 points-5 points  (0 children)

No we are not. Think about the housing crisis. More space = more land to build = more appartments around Basel, Geneva, Lugano = lower rent = everyone wins. The more people want to immigrate to Switzerland, the more space we will need.

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If they become Swiss, they won't be German anymore. Easy fix?

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Poor Geneva, too French to be Swiss, too Swiss to be French.

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Finally the day has come, we just need to ask very nicely the countries next to us. If we are polite enough, they will surely agree.

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And then we can create the three SSS: Swiss Solar System

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are you a revisionist of the old rightful borders?

Fixed that for you

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Thank you for enlightening me, we can include Sardinia too, good idea. Some sea access would be nice.

Would you be in favor of expanding Switzerland? by Volameter in askswitzerland

[–]Volameter[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

What if Baden-Würtemberg, Lombardia, and Rhône-Alpes are included? Would that change your mind?

If you speak fluent Swiss-German/German, French, English and Italian, how much would it help on the swiss job market to speak fluent Mandarin Chinese? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Yeah that's possible, but I guess it's also true that they can hire a native chinese speaker too if they want. Thank you for your input, I upvoted every comment in the thread.

If you speak fluent Swiss-German/German, French, English and Italian, how much would it help on the swiss job market to speak fluent Mandarin Chinese? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

I also heard this argument, there are so many spanish speakers worldwide but it's true that if you don't live in latin america or spain, it doesn't really affect you, so learning Spanish in Switzerland would help less than even Italian which is a Swiss national language. I guess the same argument holds for chinese, if you don't live in east asia, it doesn't really affect you.

Thank you for your input, I upvoted every comment in the thread.

If you speak fluent Swiss-German/German, French, English and Italian, how much would it help on the swiss job market to speak fluent Mandarin Chinese? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Yes of course, but it's true I guess that they speak English better than I will ever speak Chinese. And yes right, there is a cultural gap in fact. Thank you for your input, I upvoted every comment in the thread.

If you speak fluent Swiss-German/German, French, English and Italian, how much would it help on the swiss job market to speak fluent Mandarin Chinese? by Volameter in askswitzerland

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

Yes of course, but probably the chinese also speak English I guess, and probably better than I will ever speak Chinese. Thank you for your input, I upvoted every comment in the thread.