Personal Finance
23h
2936
Calculated my NW and now i can't sleep
Tech Industry
7h
2153
Crossed a line with my boss
Tech Industry
11h
840
Update: Trans Coworker Stealing Breast Milk
Personal Finance
9h
737
Is spending 12K per month normal or too much
Software Engineering Career
10h
1254
Cleared Amazon onsite, but lowballed.
I just started my career as a data scientist. Super safe job in this time of recession, above average pay for where I am (Canada) with other good benefits. I am very grateful for where I am. I've had the opportunity to work on some really cool projects using NLP and PySpark but every-time I see a cooler company doing some more "state of the art" stuff, I have this FOMO regarding working with the latest cool tech. I've come to realize that the inner working of a company is very messy and what people see on the outside is rarely the case of what is actually presented on the inside. With that being said, I was hoping people who have been more senior in the tech industry could share how they handled this experience of FOMO with job opportunities. Do you eventually stop caring where you work/is every company just full of shit and things aren't as cool as they seem? For instance, there's a post here (https://www.reddit.com/r/MachineLearning/comments/vbh2vx/d_ama_i_left_google_ai_after_3_years/) about an ex-google AI who said he left the place because he found it to be horribly organized along with other issues. I don't know if this is because I just started my career and I have that early adrenaline/rush desire (if that's even a thing). TC: 105k (CAD) #career advice #career #tech
It’s normal to chase the cool tech early on but remember that the older you get, the more entrants there will be against whom you will be competing. Stay longer at one place and prove that you can brings solutions or jump in order to take on bigger challenges vs new tech
I have yet to see a company that has really gotten the data science workflow correct. It's chaotic pretty much everywhere. I'd recommend to sticking it where you are for a bit and really develop your own problem solving framework. Your approach to solving data related problems is going to be far more valuable than having experience with the latest tech stack. You can get up to speed on any data stack pretty quickly, but your "data intuition" is what will generate true value and insight for a company.
Is TD Canada safe in recession?
Yeah it’s powered by Canadian/China money investing in Canadian real estate
I wonder how safe are Canadian banks are in this recession? Will they layoff?
Data Scientists are glorified data analysts in tech companies. The people who work on cool stuff at Google AI and Meta AI are research scientists and MLE. You wouldn’t have a good time if you jumped to tech if that’s your expectation.
How data scientist is super safe job in recession time?
Grass is greener on the other side. Stick to where you are. I am saying this with my own experience.
Lmao now Wipro dudes are giving career advice ?
stfu @ADP