R
Rich S
Guest
On Wednesday, July 27, 2022 at 2:10:59 AM UTC, bitrex wrote:
Indeed, SW, and actually digital platforms are ginormous.
I can relate that finding data privacy & security folks is a challenge.
I agree with John, in a general way (but \"blowing things up\" without
further explanation can be misconstrued! - but i take his meaning).
Those early *but safe* shocks gave me courage to later build
more dangerous stuff. And with the willingness also
came the cautiousness.
Regards, Rich S
On 7/26/2022 10:06 PM, Rich S wrote:
On Tuesday, July 26, 2022 at 6:38:36 PM UTC, John Larkin wrote:
On Tue, 26 Jul 2022 14:11:00 -0400, bitrex <us...@example.net> wrote:
On 7/26/2022 1:43 PM, John Larkin wrote:
https://www.studyfinds.org/fear-for-safety-every-day/
What\'s wrong with kids these days? Most have been super-protected
children but are afraid of life.
Engineers have to THINK, blow things up, take calculated risks. Fear
warps prudent judgement.
I\'ve had interns that were afraid to touch a board powered from 5
volts, or handle a 12 volt battery. And wanted eye protection and
masks for everything. And who wouldn\'t crank up a power supply to see
how much an electrolytic cap would leak past abs max voltage rating.
I guess you get what you pay for
Interns are cheap and most don\'t last long.
Maybe during the interview, you ask them to
\"taste\" the top of an 9V battery. If they refuse,
or they do but get really upset then don\'t hire
them. :0)
I think getting shocked, blowing fuses, etc,
were a rite of passage for young experimenter.
Getting of visceral sense of energy, feel what is electricity.
But in today\'s highly safety-conscious society we mustn\'t
say such things :-X
Pretty sure I recall people here complaining more kids were going into
software than hardware these days.
Might have something to do with that nobody asks you to suck on a 9 volt
to get your first job in that field. And that first job usually pays way
better, too.
Indeed, SW, and actually digital platforms are ginormous.
I can relate that finding data privacy & security folks is a challenge.
I agree with John, in a general way (but \"blowing things up\" without
further explanation can be misconstrued! - but i take his meaning).
Those early *but safe* shocks gave me courage to later build
more dangerous stuff. And with the willingness also
came the cautiousness.
Regards, Rich S