2006-08-10
How I got from roads to robots
"How did you move from Civil engineering to IT and robotics? The Civil Engineering has continuous needs while other fields are more unsettled."Well, back in 1996 I got somewhat disillusioned with the impacts of political decisions on public safety and decided to take the first reasonable opportunity to get out of state government. That first reasonable opportunity ended up being a job as a network admin for a small multi-media start-up in Bethesda, MD.
After eight months in what turned out to be a very different job from what was described in the interview process, I got on with a small minority owned government contractor as a database admin / software developer. Both of these jobs built on the inter-networking and software skills I acquired at Virginia Tech and at VDOT. Aside from a boss who was an idiot that managed to loose the contract we were working on, the government contractor gig was a good one. It payed well and the work was very interesting.
In the same time frame, Jen Williams got me really hooked on the sport of equestrian vaulting. Throughout the years I lived in the Baltimore / Washington area I helped out with her team first as longeur / groom and later as an assistant coach.
After a stint as an independent consultant through the dot-com crash, I moved to the Seattle area and got on with a company that had been recently acquired by {Employer’s Name Removed} building high end electronic toothbrushes. However, I was making less the half what I was before the bust, but the work was interesting and the pay was enough to live on.
I also hooked up with a vaulting club, the Redwing Vaulters in Redmond Wa., and continued as an assistant coach. While volunteering with the Redwing I traveled to the national vaulting championships in 2002, 2003 & 2004. When Redwing 's head coach decided to scaled back her club after nationals in 2004, I started up a new club with some of its former members.
In the past 18 to 24 months the work at the toothbrush factory has gotten less interesting and the overall compensation has diminished significantly as our benefits got harmonized with the global conglomerate. However in that same time frame my volunteer work, as Head Coach of the Cascade Vaulters, has intensified in an incredibly satisfying way and I find that I don't really have time or energy to look for a better job.
In what spare time I do have I've been messing around with open source software, especially Linux, and both blogging and podcasting and may try to spin these into a better paying and more flexible gig.
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