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Monday, July 1st, 2002 01:10 pm
In my last post, I grumped a bit about what happened to the startup I joined years ago. Stock's dead, people gone. At least it's not the other way round. Okay. What next?

Software, the only thing I'm trained for, is just not going to create any breakthroughs any time soon. (Frankly, software sucks. People generally agree that the vast majority of software is bloated, buggy, unreliable, hard to use, etc etc. I have my own theories on why this is the case.) So anyhow. The paradigm shifts have shifted. We've come up with some good concepts over the history of computers. Operating systems, compilers, databases, computer games, graphical user interfaces, network protocols... the invention of each of these things has significantly changed the way computers are used. Java could have been, but wasn't. What's the next fundamental change coming from software? I don't see a lot.

If I want to do something interesting, new, different... if I want to help create something that will significantly help someone... if I want to make someone's job significantly easier or make it possible to do something a person basically couldn't do before, then I shouldn't be in software.

(Well, not completely true. There are still some jobs left undone in that arena.)

What, then? Where should I be?

I have the advantage of intelligence and willingness to learn. I have the disadvantage of laziness, though I have the occasional cleverness to turn laziness into a plus. I am a logical thinker saddled with ethics and with a caring nature. Where should I be?
Monday, July 1st, 2002 02:56 pm (UTC)
[Astronaut stuff]
How old must one be to apply?

There's no official age limit, but nobody over 39 has ever been selected. 32 or 33 seems optimal, but people have been selected at older ages in their 30's. Persistance seems to be rewarded, with many candidates being accepted on their 3rd or 4th or 5th year of trying.

Are they ok with imperfect eyesight

Yeah, up to 20/200 correctable is fine. Since you have your private pilots license you should be fine in that respect.

and the very beginnings of cartilage degeneration in the knee?

I don't know, but I know someone who could answer that. Give me a bit...

I vaguely remember imperfect eyesight might be okay for "Mission Specialist",

Yeah. The vision requirements for Mission Specialists and Payload Specialists (astronauts employed by contractors who fly with specific payloads such as Ron Paresce with the ASTRO package) are less stringent than for pilot astronauts. But you still have to fly T-38 trainers, which I just know you'd find so hard to bring yourself to do.

but for that, an applicant wants a few disparate PhDs.

While those would help, they're not necessary. I've known MS and BS level astronauts who happen to have useful on the job skills.

As far as the Operations Analysis gig teaching at the Top Gun school goes, my recollection is that Catherine McGrady is a physicist by education, not an aerospace engineer. Though I suspect that a lot of the other civilian instructors there are AE's.
Monday, July 1st, 2002 03:27 pm (UTC)
I will be 35 in October... just barely young enough to apply several years running. Not sure if I'm 20/200 these days, but it IS correctable, and with some exercises I could get back under 20/200 if I'm not. Cool. I would eat up the T-38 training.

've known MS and BS level astronauts who happen to have useful on the job skills.

Therein lies trouble. The one thing that seems to be absolutely, completely useless here is computer programming. Would need to acquire some new skills fast.
Monday, July 1st, 2002 03:40 pm (UTC)
I'd guess you could pull together a Masters in Applied Mathematics pretty quickly, given your software background. That would hit a wickett with the Astronaut office, and probably fill in some gaps in your knowledge that you've wondered about at times. Check with your local UC grad school for details. Comp Sci degrees used to be disallowed, but that changed while I was still an AssHo[1] back in the mid-90's. These days software savvy people are very welcome in the Astronaut office.

It used to be that the number one degree for Mission Specialists was MD, but that trend seems to have slacked off. If you have medical training, like an EMT certificate, it'd be a definite plus though.


[1] Astronaut Hopeful, aka a person who keeps applying every selection cycle.
Tuesday, July 2nd, 2002 02:35 pm (UTC)
Augh, I couldn't resist. If you're not yet familiar with my sense of humor... well...

Astronaut School
Tuesday, July 2nd, 2002 03:03 pm (UTC)
*laugh* Puts me in mind of some of the astronauts I've known.