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Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 286 total)
  • What do you do?
  • dannybgoode
    Full Member

    Rocket surgeon…

    Dickyboy
    Full Member

    I design/project engineer commercial, industrial & high end residential boiler, chp & generator exhausts and the last thing I want to talk about at parties is why your poxy wood burner doesn’t draw properly.

    a11y
    Full Member

    my job in Strategic Network Design for Sewers. I am a hit at dinner parties.

    I’ll bet that gets the waters flowing.

    Boring here. Reviewing performance of LA services to give an indication of how poorly they’re performing, while pretending to know a few things about spreadsheets.

    desperatebicycle
    Full Member

    Gusset inspector

    Kryton57
    Full Member

    I just say “IT Sales” and the conversation quickly moves on.

    TheWrongTrousers
    Full Member

    Brain Scientist. Test pilot at the weekend.

    scud
    Free Member

    I used to wear a lot of green and lob artillery shells about, then ran around with an odd shaped ball being a big man trying to fit through a small gap… now i investigate road traffic accident insurance fraud, which sounds like it could be vaguely exciting… but isn’t.

    Scapegoat
    Full Member

    I’m retired from what I once did.

    I have a life-long skill in a specialist area that means I’m occasionally asked to train or mentor novices needing to gain experience in that skill/specialism/hobby.

    Every so often that skill can mean I’m called on to do a bit of contract work which makes it a paying hobby I suppose.

    I spend most of my ordinary day either recording song parts for members of a choir who don’t read music to rehearse/learn their parts, or learning my parts for that and another couple of choirs, or learning the bass and guitar.

    desperatebicycle
    Full Member

    sounds like it could be vaguely exciting

    Nope! 😀

    oldmanmtb2
    Free Member

    I don’t know..but money arrives in my account each month.

    towzer
    Full Member

    I’m a ‘repetitive artist’, I keep drawing my pension.

    northernmatt
    Full Member

    Professional Services Consultant – which looking at it in isolation means absolutely nothing. I implement ERP software for a company that sells ERP software among other things.

    phil5556
    Full Member

    I encourage people to jump off cliffs.

    Base jumping / paragliding instructor?

    Coasteering?

    marcus
    Free Member

    I used to mess around with mud and rocks (and water). I know sit behind a computer describing what is likely to happen when other people mess with mud and rocks, (and water). Great !

    phil5556
    Full Member

    I tell pilots where to fly their planes whilst not letting them get too close to each other. And let them use my airport.

    I actually quite enjoy it, I’d rather not have to work but I can’t think of anything (realistically) that I’d rather be doing 🙂

    stcolin
    Free Member

    Technical sales for a global sensor company.

    perchypanther
    Free Member

    My name is Ethel and I’m an Aardvark

    tlr
    Free Member

    Read and write about bikes on the internet.

    No really.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    his thread demonstrates the opening point of the other thread. Most people have incredibly boring jobs!

    Isn’t pretty much everyone else’s job boring to people who are doing different jobs?

    The problem I have is that it’s challenging to explain technical roles in a bite-sized manner to non-technical people. My stock answer for the last three decades has been “I work with computers” and then either the person asking is a programmer or something so asks a follow-up question, or they’re a plumber and they either change the subject or tell me theirs is really slow. Over the years that catch-all has covered everything from front-line technical support to IT consultant to infrastructure engineer to technical manager to a few others.

    Today I work in Cyber Security (which is a hateful bloody term). I’ve experimented answering the question with “hacker” but that rarely garners a positive reaction 😁. My official job title is Subject Matter Expert, which is meaningless to anyone outside of SecOps.

    STW seemingly has an expert on everything and any question asked usually gets an answer from someone who works in that specific field, however obscure.

    Is this referencing the extractor fan thread?

    bigdaddy
    Full Member

    I’m a regional manager for a group of Children’s homes looking after children with severe trauma and behaviour issues. That gets exciting sometimes, but a lot of my job is behind a computer, as most are! The higher you go the further away from what you wanted to do and were good at you get!

    giant_scum
    Free Member

    Time served electrician mostly industrial and commercial installs initially.

    Then moved into the exciting world of mobile telecoms, mainly installs. Was also trained up to do some climbing and rigging work

    Got headhunted for my electrical skills by the nations’ favourite landline provider, to work on a mobile contract they had ‘won’.

    Still work for them but I’m now a switch engineer sub-contracted to Branson’s telecoms company!

    Looking forward to them eventually removing the TDM switches and see what awaits me after that.

    desperatebicycle
    Full Member

    My official job title is Subject Matter Expert, which is meaningless to anyone outside of SecOps

    I would’ve thought it would be meaningless to anyone who doesn’t know what the subject matter is.

    porter_jamie
    Full Member

    Stcolin do you do pressure sensors for hydrogen?

    scruffythefirst
    Free Member

    I try to tell people how to make more robots. This should involve robots making robots, but it’s not actually that exciting.

    I used to make big bubbles in the ocean and listen to their echoes.

    I also used to see how much the water companies had diluted the poo before pumping it into a river near you.

    stanley
    Full Member

    Senior occupational therapist with the NHS; specialised in rehabilitation within forensic mental health (My patients are detained under the Mental Health Act and also by the Ministry of Justice.

    Currently signed off with burnout/work-related stress/depression… make of that what you will!

    phil5556
    Full Member

    I also used to see how much the water companies had diluted the poo before pumping it into a river near you.

    I used to fill up bottles of diluted poo from sewage works, for the EA.

    Then I used to fix databases showing what was in the bottles.

    IdleJon
    Free Member

    I tell pilots where to fly their planes whilst not letting them get too close to each other. And let them use my airport.

    I got as far as an assessment day for that, probably failed when too many of the arrows on my screen flew into each other. It was possibly a job I wasn’t suited for.

    stcolin
    Free Member

    Stcolin do you do pressure sensors for hydrogen?

    Unfortunately not. We do have process automation products, but not pressure. I’m involved in factory automation, so inductive, photoelectric, ultrasonic etc.

    Been doing this over 20 years now, and often found wondering if I can get away from sales and more involved in something more technical.

    Klunk
    Free Member

    semi-retired freelance technical artist, I knock out shit in c++ to do shit like this…

    scruffythefirst
    Free Member

    I used to fill up bottles of diluted poo from sewage works, for the EA.

    Yup

    Then I used to fix databases showing what was in the bottles.

    Above my paygrade at the time

    eddiebaby
    Free Member

    Freelance magazine editor / designer.

    Ad designer and production manager for a group of 3 local newspapers in which I have share. Plus researching areas for new titles.

    SERCO zero hour contractee working in fringe roles relating to COVID. I could tell you more but then I’d have to cough on you.

    Oh, and technically I’m retired.

    johndrummer
    Free Member

    Software developer for a company that makes doors.

    And part-time drummer

    10
    Full Member

    I teach people to do things in building automation which is dull. I also teach people how to ski, which is ace.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    TMy official job title is Subject Matter Expert, which is meaningless to anyone outside of SecOps

    I would’ve thought it would be meaningless to anyone who doesn’t know what the subject matter is.

    It’s “Systems.”

    Cougar
    Full Member

    I used to fill up bottles of diluted poo from sewage works, for the EA.

    They’ll sell anything for micropayments.

    lister
    Full Member

    Coasteering?

    That. And canoe and bike guiding and instructing. But the cliff bit is the most fun!

    WorldClassAccident
    Free Member

    Business Consultant (mostly IT)

    I work for a building society that is, in many ways, nationwide.
    IT, specifically Open Banking, FTW

    I have been on your site, I may have even met you.

    I met IHN when working on his site. I started a thread on STW to see if anyone was in the area who could lead me on a ride and it turned out he was sat on the desk behind me. Hi There 🙂 !

    I also worked at GSK R&D so might have seen/been seen by TIRed if based in Stevenage

    mahowlett
    Free Member

    Software engineer and AWS architect/support for the research and statistics department at Liverpool Football Club…. we decide who to buy, who to sell, and analyse football matches in ridiculous detail 🙂

    idiotdogbrain
    Free Member

    Test & Validation Engineer on automotive in-wheel electric motors.

    Previously worldwide Service & Calibration tech on large-scale ultrasonic C-scan systems, mostly within the aviation industry.

    jimmy
    Full Member

    I’m a Delivery Relationship Lead.

    You work it out (and let me know).

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 286 total)

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