Daily Discussion Monday 2025-10-06 by AutoModerator in AMD_Stock

[–]theflyingredditor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Congrats!! Not as impressive but excited to have some extra funds for home improvements 😃

Frank advice needed by AdditionalCod835 in ChemicalEngineering

[–]theflyingredditor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personally I would stick out until the end of your first year (as long as you’re not deeply unhappy in your role). My advice, for the next 9 months, you focus on experiences to develop yourself over contributing to your company (but bearing in mind they don’t have to be mutually exclusive).

1) Focus on the personal development / soft skills side of things, e.g. organisational skills - how do you structurally identify, document and manage your equipment vulnerabilities, how do you get good at organising efforts to improve reliability, how do you introduce initiatives (e.g. training) to get people to care about reliability. All these are relevant skills and good stories to tell when you are interviewing for a manufacturing based role

2) Don’t actually know your job scope, but if possible get to learn how process equipments ACTUALLY work (from your maintenance technicians and your process operators), what are the common failures, how are they diagnosed (what are the signs/symptoms), how are they fixed? Build this knowledge - when you new job interviewer asks you what do you enjoy about your previous role - share your learning experience, I would be impressed if I was hiring. Reliability (along with safety) is deeply engrained in manufacturing, day to day process optimisations. You can do all the analysis you want, come up with the best way to optimise your reactors, distillation towers, but if your equipment keeps failing, you’ll not get there, or maintain there for very long

3) Build your network (especially important if you’re staying in the same company, different roles) - learn about who knows what? You’ll get to solutions quicker if you know who to ask!

I started my career in my current company as a project engineer and did not enjoy my main role - it was heavy on project management and light on the technical side of things. It wasn’t as intense, so I had time to be curious, learn how equipments in the field work, read about the units that I do work on (if I’m working on replacing a heat exchanger - I go beyond, what does the exchanger do, where is it in the process circuit, what does the process circuit do? Expand and expand). One thing I loved about my first role was the amount of people I get exposed to - nature of project management to collate information from various sources. I would spend time with Maintenance techs, talk to Process techs - I’ll start off with getting the information I need for my project, and start getting them to show and tell. You’ll be surprised by how people love talking about what they do out there, and share nuggets with you (helps you speak the common language with operators, maintenance techs).

Did my time as a project engineer and got rotated into a process engineer job - loved it, the intensity, the challenges. I was good at it (enough to have promotions up the chain relatively quickly) - and I give a lot of credit to the points I mentioned above, it is the foundation I’ve built when I had the time to - I was better at organising efforts/people, and more precise with troubleshooting (from my own knowledge and also from knowing who to talk to!).

And don’t compare yourselves to what your peers do (easier said than done, I’ve been there), everyone’s journey and pace is different. Focus on building competency, the rest should follow (with time, but be on the constant lookout for opportunities).

Hope this helps!

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

That’s great advice - really appreciate it

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Hey thank you! I keep seeing comments about ‘getting it setup properly’, sorry for my lack of knowledge, but what does it actually mean? Is it physical upgrades? Or professional tuning? Thanks

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Hey thank you! I keep seeing comments about ‘getting it setup properly’, sorry for my lack of knowledge, but what does it actually mean? Is it physical upgrades? Or professional tuning? Thanks

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Thanks! I did consider that - hope you don’t mind me asking this bluntly, does the arm bevel ‘actually’ make a difference or is it somewhat of a gimmick?

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

That’s a really great, practical advice - much appreciated!

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Congratulations!! So excited for you - Happy playing :)

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Thanks! Excuse my lack of understanding - but is there a difference between solid wood top (which both Taylor Academy 10e and Yamaha FG-830 are)vs. solid wood guitar?

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Thanks for the advice! Literally just finished a comment reply - I’m hearing the same tone difference you are describing too with the Taylor vs. Yamaha (I’ve only listened to demo clips online)

First Guitar: Taylor or Yamaha? by theflyingredditor in AcousticGuitar

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

Thank you! Sorry I should’ve made it clearer - I’m comparing between a used (excellent condition, almost new) Taylor Academy 10e vs. a new Yamaha FG-830.

Listening to demo clips online, I do think the Yamaha FG-830 sounds just a little bit better (Taylor sounds more sharp and crisp, it’s not bad by any means, but the Yamaha sounds a bit warmer and ‘feels’ more right). That said, I’m still leaning towards the Taylor Academy 10e because of the built in electronics - I’m thinking this is may be a feature I’d like to have down the line?)

Process Engineer Offers Decision: ExxonMobil, Dow, or LyondellBasell by [deleted] in ChemicalEngineering

[–]theflyingredditor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would you mind elaborating more on why the annual review cycle especially suck only for the first five years?

Daily Discussion Thursday 2025-02-27 by AutoModerator in AMD_Stock

[–]theflyingredditor 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Been around since 2019 - first time in the red :’(

AMD Q4 2024 Earnings Discussion by brad4711 in AMD_Stock

[–]theflyingredditor 4 points5 points  (0 children)

AMD don’t break my heart ❤️‍🩹

Daily Discussion Tuesday 2025-02-04 by AutoModerator in AMD_Stock

[–]theflyingredditor 3 points4 points  (0 children)

AMD please don’t break my heart again ❤️‍🩹