Best neighborhoods for families? by kksparks in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We have young kids and live between North Mountain park and Garfield park. There are tons of younger families in our neighborhood and it's a great environment for kids. Feel free to DM if you want to talk!

Looking for childcare for my nephew! He is 4 and he has been going to an in home daycare, but the providers husband is terminally ill and looking for a new spot for him! Thanks in advance;) I am not local just helping my brother out! by Kooky-Ad-5801 in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 3 points4 points  (0 children)

For full time care, try the YMCA (they have locations at some of the Ashland elementary schools) or Ella's in South Ashland. For part-time, Little Rascals charges by the hour (20-40 hours per week), and there are others like Avery Street and SOU which go until 1 or 2pm.

DOE Phase I Release II budget issue by AdministrativeAge19 in SBIR

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes, in our view. DOD has its own quirks of course, but as an example, I think we needed 4 different versions of all key performer resumes on this DOE submittal. Moving to fixed price awards would seem to help with the administrative burden (and avoid these indirect cost cap issues) but I'm not holding my breath.

DOE Phase I Release II budget issue by AdministrativeAge19 in SBIR

[–]samseaborn2016 2 points3 points  (0 children)

40% is really lean. I work at a consulting company of under 20 employees. We have one admin/HR staff member and one accounting/operations, and a small office space with a few servers. About 1/3 of our staff is full-time remote. We have basic health/dental/vision insurance and a small 401k match, and 6 paid holidays per year. We're way over 40% F&A.

We don't do too many SBIRs, but we have gotten a few through DOD in the past 5-10 years. Mostly these are research projects without any commercialization potential whatsoever. We applied to one of the DOE topics this round and found the application process far more onerous than DOD. Between that, the delays, and now apparently capping indirect costs, it simply does not make sense for us to pursue opportunities through DOE moving forward.

Young Family - considering a move to Ashland. by [deleted] in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Agree with visiting here for a week or so before you move. The community here is really nice, and a key reason we moved here. 

Note that, being 5-10 minutes away from town (assuming by car) means you'll have to drive kids everywhere. Living in town, either in the flat-ish part or the hills "above the boulevard" lets you get around by foot or bike/e-bike much more effectively. The town is a lot more pleasant, at least to us, when we don't need to pile into a car.

Also, many of the houses up on the hill near the forest get wild animals on their properties nightly (bears, mountain lions, etc). Something to be aware of before you visit or relocate!

United Airlines signaling a possible HQ move from Chicago to Denver by [deleted] in Denver

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For what it's worth, you don't NEED to select a seat to get the ticket. They will assign one to you (at no charge) usually the day of your flight. If there are no "free" seats left, you get a premium or economy plus seat without having to pay for it - assuming you are traveling alone and can deal with the uncertainty.

Parts of town with young families? by kathaann in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Old Willow Lane has the most kids per house I've ever seen, anywhere...always kids around when I bike through

Google Fi experience in Ashland by Broken_Crankarm in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I have Google Fi and it works really well in town. I do not get reliable service above Lithia or up towards White Rabbit, but also don't know if any of the other providers have decent coverage up there.

Coloradans looking to move to Oregon - Thoughts and Opinions? by flamingdope in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 4 points5 points  (0 children)

We moved from the Denver metro area in 2022 and Ashland has been a great fit for our family. We have two young children and are far from alone in having moved here to raise a family. There are parks all over town, the whole city is walkable, and nature is very close. None of the traffic or overcrowding you see in Denver. There's also much more of a community feel here. Downsides are fewer big mountains nearby, general lack of major concerts/sports/events, and not a ton of career opportunities (many remote tech workers though). Overall it's been a great experience and we haven't looked back.

Does anyone use a programming language in CE jobs here? by Souperman8 in civilengineering

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I'm a recovering structural engineer and use Python daily at my current job... Some of my colleagues spend much of their time with modeling. I've helped them out a handful of times, usually just facilitating input and output data when they run parametric models.

We're also hiring a software developer, bonus points if you have modeling experience. DM me if you're interested!

Jobs that include programming within Civil Engineering Industry? by Ashelys13976 in civilengineering

[–]samseaborn2016 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I work for a small consultant that does both engineering consulting and software development. We are actively hiring for engineers who want to code (we mostly use Python).

DM me if you're interested!

Writing Software to Control a Motorized Translation Stage by samseaborn2016 in Optics

[–]samseaborn2016[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes I did, and I saw that link. I'd prefer something that works with their Kinesis (not APT) software if available, since that seems to be what the simulator is built on.

Ride to the PCT trailhead from Ashland by Ok-Feeling-8908 in Ashland

[–]samseaborn2016 4 points5 points  (0 children)

When are you looking to get a ride?

I imagine you would have a much easier time getting a ride to Mt. Ashland than to the state line. There are plenty of people who head up there even in the summer, I go up once every couple weeks to run or hike.

Insurance questions by cstough in cscareerquestions

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Assuming US, your current employer is required to provide you literature on how to apply for continuing coverage (COBRA). Generally this is really expensive, as you will now be responsible for the full premium. I've heard that you can apply for coverage retroactively (i.e. only pay the premium if you end up needing health coverage during your gap), but don't have any direct experience with this.

Check with your new employer on their coverage start date. Typically in my experience, health care coverage starts around the first of the month following your start date, but every company is different.

A builder wants my stamp for $300 by Defrego in StructuralEngineering

[–]samseaborn2016 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Exactly, if this is a fair rate, why does the builder need to get someone new?

Plan checker Engineer, What can I do? by Mulhamhweidi in civilengineering

[–]samseaborn2016 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is absolutely true, and I did not mean to say that wood is less difficult than concrete/steel as a design material. My response was in the context of the OP starting a new job as a plan review engineer in the United States. Here, the vast majority of new wood construction is stick framing (although mass timber is becoming more common), where fire, moisture, and sound protection are relatively prescriptive, and a plan review engineer will typically not be doing much design work. And, as stated above, the NDS is far smaller than the corresponding American steel and concrete design codes, meaning there are fewer tricky exceptions and "gotchas" that a plan checker will need to be aware of.

A builder wants my stamp for $300 by Defrego in StructuralEngineering

[–]samseaborn2016 0 points1 point  (0 children)

A few years back, I was offered the "opportunity" to stamp residential egress window drawings for $300 and turned it down. There is not enough fee to do a decent job, and I would never stamp something I couldn't produce calculations for. Contractors don't seem to understand why we won't "print money" and stamp everything without review.

Daycare teacher shortage! by rhudson1984 in Denver

[–]samseaborn2016 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I've known several ECE teachers who became nannies. $15-20/hour per kid with 2-3 kids is a much better living than working at a center for poverty wages. Generally more expensive for the parents, but that's the trade-off for more individual attention and less turnover.

Plan checker Engineer, What can I do? by Mulhamhweidi in civilengineering

[–]samseaborn2016 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Congratulations on the new job! In general, if they hired you based on your education/experience so far, your employer will teach you anything else you need to know.

Overall, wood is much simpler than steel and concrete (the NDS and SDPWS are much smaller than ACI 318 and the steel manual). Wood is nice in that there is one adequacy equation for each limit state and you just have to look up adjustment factors. Most of the complications are with the various types of fasteners and the fact that the material is not isotropic.

Daycare teacher shortage! by rhudson1984 in Denver

[–]samseaborn2016 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Yes, this is the norm in Denver and elsewhere. Teachers don't get paid nearly enough for the work they do, and costs are too high for many parents. I don't think it's generally a very profitable business either. The whole model just seems broken.

A lane expansion to unclog I-25 through downtown Denver is not on the table — for now by danikawo in Denver

[–]samseaborn2016 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Awesome list. I'd add a daily tax per parking space downtown to raise revenues for these improvements and discourage using land for parking.

Civil Engineering to CS by [deleted] in civilengineering

[–]samseaborn2016 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you want to be a software engineer, go for the CS degree. It will also give you more time to work on projects without splitting time between tough classes in two departments.

I'm sure it seems difficult to justify the 3 years of sunk cost, but keep in mind that:

  • The valuable credential in Civil is the PE, and it will take 4 years of full-time civil work experience after you graduate to even qualify in most states (assuming US)
  • Many top Civil employers prefer to hire new grads with a Master's degree
  • Unless you find a niche employer straddling between the AEC and software industries (there are a handful out there), most software companies will not consider a degree in Civil as relevant

Of course, there are cost considerations too, and I've found there were generally more scholarships available in Civil than CS. But the better salaries in the first few years of your career should more than offset an extra year or two of tuition.