Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
We have a ton of engineers at our research-driven tech company (Fortune 100). Our engineers make no where near that. Top ones maybe make in the 300's. Most make around the upper 100s. Now, they start off high - no less than 80 right out of school.
Anonymous wrote:Haha that dude is on something that i like. It must be very strong like something they smoke in Colorado.
Dude i work in hr for northrop grumman for a large defense project. There are some genious engineers here with top secret tsi and they barely scrape 200k. Even some of our top subs make $110 per hour bill rate. You are truly delusional if you think that most engineers make 300k. Now those that own businesses do but not individual engineers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
We have a ton of engineers at our research-driven tech company (Fortune 100). Our engineers make no where near that. Top ones maybe make in the 300's. Most make around the upper 100s. Now, they start off high - no less than 80 right out of school.
I don't know a single engineer making 300k. I know many engineers that make 120-180k.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
We have a ton of engineers at our research-driven tech company (Fortune 100). Our engineers make no where near that. Top ones maybe make in the 300's. Most make around the upper 100s. Now, they start off high - no less than 80 right out of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
We have a ton of engineers at our research-driven tech company (Fortune 100). Our engineers make no where near that. Top ones maybe make in the 300's. Most make around the upper 100s. Now, they start off high - no less than 80 right out of school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I thought doctors made more?!
Two attorneys, one government and one Biglaw, 485.
really depends on the specialty. a pediatrician can make 100k. obgyn 250k. anesthesiologist may earn 300k. radiologist 400k. neurosurgeon 800k. spine surgeons can make 1+ million.
Not always. Especially if you are a staff dr at a hospital. My friend is a neurosurgeon at Children's and makes 150k. Big busck only for business owners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?
Well no clue what you make now, but standard packages for engineers are in the $300s, more for those with relevant experience of course. Absent any real data on what you do, what level you are etc, id share that most of my friends there are in mid $500s between cash and equity.
Anonymous wrote:working for Amazon for drones? Yeah that would be in my wheelhouse. Would the lay be THAT much better?!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:(Siriism-- I was saying I had a "dream jobs" -- I work as NASA.)Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Artificial intelligence. $600K
Spouse in more mundane job $110K
AI? Google?
Not google, but they pay quite well too.
Do you have a PhD in computer science, or something like that? I want to try and find a way to make something more lucrative to help out my family. I quote a quote for the dream and I'm doing a job my 12-year-old self would love but at the end the day there have been compromises to doing that and I'm trying to leverage up now and get the lowdown another tech I might be able to transition to. Though AI takes so much brainpower I'm probably out of my league here![]()
I dropped out of phd to do it, but yea I was on my way.
If you work for NASA - is it in an engineering role? - why not perhaps parlay that to camera optics, drone hardware, etc?