Funny that everyone says its slashdotted... I can still get to it (then again, I live about 10 miles from the server...).
So you want to be a marine biologist? Well sonny, or sonnette, as the case may be, why don't you just sit down and let a real marine biologist give you some damn good advice. And wipe that smirk off your face, sit up straight and for goodness sakes stop fidgeting! You'd think you had lice the way you are carrying on. You do? Oh well, never mind.
First of all there are three really, really bad reasons to want to be a marine biologist. If you have even an inkling that these are yours, please run away as fast as possible, 'cause neither you nor we will be happy.
Three Really, Really Bad Reasons to Want to Be a Marine Biologist
Reason Number One: "I want to be a marine biologist so that I can talk to dolphins."
Believing this is simply the Kiss of Death. This is the verbal equivalent of reaching down your throat, pulling out your own intestines, wrapping them around your neck and choking yourself. When we hear this our impulse is to thwack you a good one on your keester with the frozen haddock we keep within arm's reach just for this occasion.
And why is that? It is because, and please listen carefully, while you may want to talk to dolphins, dolphins do not want to talk to you. That's right. Mostly, dolphins want to eat fishes and have sex with other dolphins. And that pretty much cuts you out of the loop, doesn't it? Oh, I know that there are the occasional dolphins that hang around beaches, swim with humans and seem to be chummy, but these are the exceptions. You don't judge the whole human race by the people who attend monster car rallies, do you?
Just be honest with yourself. If you want to talk to dolphins you don't want to be a biologist. What you really want to do is explore your past lives, get in touch with the Cosmic Oneness and conduct similar-minded individuals on tours to Central America looking for evidence that We Are Not Alone. Our experience is that people who feel this way last about 6.5 minutes in any biology program.
Reason Number Two: "I want to be a marine biologist because I really like Jacques Cousteau."
That's nice. We really like Jacques Cousteau, too. But, drinking thousands of gallons of red wine while scuba diving around the world does not make you a marine biologist. It makes you a wonderful and effective spokesperson for the sea, and gives you a liver with the consistency of a chocolate necco wafer, but it does not make you a marine biologist.
Reason Number Three: "I want to be a marine biologist because I want to make big bucks."
Okay, here's the bottom line. By Federal law, marine biologists have to take a vow of poverty and chastity. Poverty, because you are not going to make squat-j-doodly in this job. Just how squat is the doodly we are talking about? Well, five years after finishing my PhD I was making slightly less than a beginning manager at McDonalds. Ooh, a 36 year old guy with 13 years of college and 5 years of post-doctoral experience making just about as much as a semi-literate 19 year old with pimples the size of Bolivia, who can speak perhaps 3 words at a time before the term "you know" enters the conversation.
And chastity because, well, who's going to date a marine biologist? The smell alone tends to dissuade a large proportion of the opposite sex.
Two Really, Really Good Reasons to Want to Be a Marine Biologist
Reason Number One: "You can dress and act almost any way you want."
This is true. Marine biologists are almost entirely free of any of those silly restrictions that blight the professional landscape of our fellow proletarians. This is because no one really cares about what we do or what we say. You want to come to work dressed in scabrous khaki shorts and a torn black Sandman shirt? Fine. You want to grow a scruffy beard, get a tattoo of a gooseneck barnacle on your arm or burp at inopportune moments? No problem, just do good work.
Reason Number Two: "If you like it, just do it."
Look, the reality is that you only go around once in life and if, by chance, you do come back, knowing how you have behaved in this life, you will undoubtedly come back as a slime mold. And most slime molds cannot be marine biologists. So just go out there and do what you enjoy. Marine biology is a wonderful profession. You want to find cancer cures by grinding up sponges? How about figuring out why hammerhead sharks always come back to the same seamount? Or where is the missing carbon dioxide that industries are producing; could the ocean be soaking it up? All neat projects. But pay attention here. None of this involves drinking copious quantities of fermented grape juice, while intoning "The ocean, she is strange and wondrous, filled with animals that disturb even a Frenchman."
The ocean is an exciting, never-dull place that is perfect for piddling away your existence. And just think, you actually get paid to think cool thoughts and do cool things.
You do not want to be a zoologist, however.
by
Alien54
·
· Score: 4, Funny
Just in case you missed this story on another site.
England's Student Magazine has a article each week telling students about different jobs, so that readers can get an idea about what different jobs are like. The most recently featured job has to be in the running for the Worst Job Ever award. Zoo worker Mohd. Binatang bin Goncang of Singagore certainly wins the "Worst Job in Singapore", for his job as a Zoo Sperm Bank worker. The Wildlife Reserves Singapore (WRS), which runs the Singapore Zoo, has set up a bank of sperm and animal tissue in order to help preserve endangered species. And someone has to collect the samples. Daily.
Yes this is tasteless.
Yes, it is educational.
Because there are some jobs in some fields that you really do not want to have.
-- "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
You don't judge the whole human race by the people who attend monster car rallies, do you?
Well actually I do.:)
Dolphin Sex - On topic???
by
TheAJofOZ
·
· Score: 5, Funny
Mostly, dolphins want to eat fishes and have sex with other dolphins
For once that Dolphin sex link the trolls keep posting is actually on-topic.....
So you want to be a software engineer?
by
MAXOMENOS
·
· Score: 5, Funny
(With apologies to the Love Lab people.)
Every once in a while, I hear from folks who want to become a software engineer. Good for you, I say, and why is that? The following is a list of good and bad reasons that I've heard.
I want to be an insanely rich billionaire like Bill Gates. And who wouldn't? The thing is, Bill Gates did not become wealthy through software engineering. Neither did Steve Ballmer, or Larry Ellison, or Scott McNeil. They became billionaires by being brutal, ruthless businesspeople; it just so happens that the business, in their cases, happens to be software.
I want to re-define and revolutionize the way people do X. That motivates a lot of the best people, for sure. Getting yourself in a position to do this is bloody unlikely. There are hundreds of great operating systems, programming languages, databases, etc, out there. Only a few of them really change the way people do things.
And while it is still possible to make a buck in this world off a good idea, there's still a lot of luck and business smarts involved (see above) in taking an idea and turning it into a fortune. I've worked for more than one company based on a good idea that, lacking either luck or leadership, turned sour. Many fortunes are lost on such ventures.
I want to be a Revolutionary like RMS and stick it to Microsoft. Hey, great. I now pronounce you a Revolutionary. Now: how are you going to stick it to Microsoft? Any schmuck can write free softwarwe. Not every schmuck can write something world-shaking.
I want to be able to make big bucks. My advice: get a Microsoft certification and milk it. Or better yet, consider another profession, such as auto mechanic. The computer field is subject to many ups and downs; what looked like a steady income yesterday is a quick trip to the unemployment line today, and vice versa. Sure, you can earn the big bucks, but there's no guarantee that it will be a steady income, or that your skills will be in demand three years from now.
I want to solve interesting problems / I love to code / I find computers endlessly fascinating. Well then, you've probably chosen the right profession. There is nothing better than doing what you love.
I want to wear whatever I want and have nobody tell me otherwise. Despite stereotypes, this isn't always going to be possible. Remember, as a coder you're a part of a team, usually trying to conduct business. That means that sometimes, you're going to have to dress up, go to meetings, make presenations, and otherwise do some really boring and unpleasant things. Guess what? That's life! And, especially now that there's a glut of qualified coders, employers are going to expect you to dress and act more like a regular professional.
Hmm, being from Europe I have noticed that quite often the VERY attractive girl(s) in the Standard American Low Cost Soap or Cheap Movie is a Marine Biologist.
From this I deduce that a rather large percentage of the US (and I see a growing tendency in Australia as well) Marine Biologists are incredible beautiful model type young girls, although often with with larger key features (aehmn). They also quite often are very naive and have affairs with men who Only Are Up To No Good.
Even girls in their late teens (with mid-twenties female features) can be fully professional Marine Biologists over there if they are beautiful enough (and aren't already scientists, a profession with also have many beautiful women or works for a advertisement agency).
So I want to quit my SW development job and go to the US working as a Marine Biologist, Scientist or Advertisement Something That Doesn't Require Any Education because of all the incredibly beautiful and naive or at least flimsy girls working in these jobs.
Only downside is ofcourse that they seem to be unable to maintain a long term relationship (say between a week and a few months on the max), but one should not smell only one flower anyway...
Check google's cache here
apparently you shouldn't become a biologist because the first thing you post will get slashdotted beyond belief.
FreeBSD for the impatient.
Funny that everyone says its slashdotted... I can still get to it (then again, I live about 10 miles from the server...).
So you want to be a marine biologist? Well sonny, or sonnette, as the case may be, why don't you just sit down and let a real marine biologist give you some damn good advice. And wipe that smirk off your face, sit up straight and for goodness sakes stop fidgeting! You'd think you had lice the way you are carrying on. You do? Oh well, never mind.
First of all there are three really, really bad reasons to want to be a marine biologist. If you have even an inkling that these are yours, please run away as fast as possible, 'cause neither you nor we will be happy.
Three Really, Really Bad Reasons to Want to Be a Marine Biologist
Reason Number One: "I want to be a marine biologist so that I can talk to dolphins."
Believing this is simply the Kiss of Death. This is the verbal equivalent of reaching down your throat, pulling out your own intestines, wrapping them around your neck and choking yourself. When we hear this our impulse is to thwack you a good one on your keester with the frozen haddock we keep within arm's reach just for this occasion.
And why is that? It is because, and please listen carefully, while you may want to talk to dolphins, dolphins do not want to talk to you. That's right. Mostly, dolphins want to eat fishes and have sex with other dolphins. And that pretty much cuts you out of the loop, doesn't it? Oh, I know that there are the occasional dolphins that hang around beaches, swim with humans and seem to be chummy, but these are the exceptions. You don't judge the whole human race by the people who attend monster car rallies, do you?
Just be honest with yourself. If you want to talk to dolphins you don't want to be a biologist. What you really want to do is explore your past lives, get in touch with the Cosmic Oneness and conduct similar-minded individuals on tours to Central America looking for evidence that We Are Not Alone. Our experience is that people who feel this way last about 6.5 minutes in any biology program.
Reason Number Two: "I want to be a marine biologist because I really like Jacques Cousteau."
That's nice. We really like Jacques Cousteau, too. But, drinking thousands of gallons of red wine while scuba diving around the world does not make you a marine biologist. It makes you a wonderful and effective spokesperson for the sea, and gives you a liver with the consistency of a chocolate necco wafer, but it does not make you a marine biologist.
Reason Number Three: "I want to be a marine biologist because I want to make big bucks."
Okay, here's the bottom line. By Federal law, marine biologists have to take a vow of poverty and chastity. Poverty, because you are not going to make squat-j-doodly in this job. Just how squat is the doodly we are talking about? Well, five years after finishing my PhD I was making slightly less than a beginning manager at McDonalds. Ooh, a 36 year old guy with 13 years of college and 5 years of post-doctoral experience making just about as much as a semi-literate 19 year old with pimples the size of Bolivia, who can speak perhaps 3 words at a time before the term "you know" enters the conversation.
And chastity because, well, who's going to date a marine biologist? The smell alone tends to dissuade a large proportion of the opposite sex.
Two Really, Really Good Reasons to Want to Be a Marine Biologist
Reason Number One: "You can dress and act almost any way you want."
This is true. Marine biologists are almost entirely free of any of those silly restrictions that blight the professional landscape of our fellow proletarians. This is because no one really cares about what we do or what we say. You want to come to work dressed in scabrous khaki shorts and a torn black Sandman shirt? Fine. You want to grow a scruffy beard, get a tattoo of a gooseneck barnacle on your arm or burp at inopportune moments? No problem, just do good work.
Reason Number Two: "If you like it, just do it."
Look, the reality is that you only go around once in life and if, by chance, you do come back, knowing how you have behaved in this life, you will undoubtedly come back as a slime mold. And most slime molds cannot be marine biologists. So just go out there and do what you enjoy. Marine biology is a wonderful profession. You want to find cancer cures by grinding up sponges? How about figuring out why hammerhead sharks always come back to the same seamount? Or where is the missing carbon dioxide that industries are producing; could the ocean be soaking it up? All neat projects. But pay attention here. None of this involves drinking copious quantities of fermented grape juice, while intoning "The ocean, she is strange and wondrous, filled with animals that disturb even a Frenchman."
The ocean is an exciting, never-dull place that is perfect for piddling away your existence. And just think, you actually get paid to think cool thoughts and do cool things.
And so what if you will never have sex again?
Though... this is probably my one chance to get an article submitted.
And so what if you will never have sex again?
What's he mean, "again"?
Yes, it is educational.
Because there are some jobs in some fields that you really do not want to have.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
You don't judge the whole human race by the people who attend monster car rallies, do you?
:)
Well actually I do.
For once that Dolphin sex link the trolls keep posting is actually on-topic.....
Every once in a while, I hear from folks who want to become a software engineer. Good for you, I say, and why is that? The following is a list of good and bad reasons that I've heard.
I want to be an insanely rich billionaire like Bill Gates. And who wouldn't? The thing is, Bill Gates did not become wealthy through software engineering. Neither did Steve Ballmer, or Larry Ellison, or Scott McNeil. They became billionaires by being brutal, ruthless businesspeople; it just so happens that the business, in their cases, happens to be software.
I want to re-define and revolutionize the way people do X. That motivates a lot of the best people, for sure. Getting yourself in a position to do this is bloody unlikely. There are hundreds of great operating systems, programming languages, databases, etc, out there. Only a few of them really change the way people do things. And while it is still possible to make a buck in this world off a good idea, there's still a lot of luck and business smarts involved (see above) in taking an idea and turning it into a fortune. I've worked for more than one company based on a good idea that, lacking either luck or leadership, turned sour. Many fortunes are lost on such ventures.
I want to be a Revolutionary like RMS and stick it to Microsoft. Hey, great. I now pronounce you a Revolutionary. Now: how are you going to stick it to Microsoft? Any schmuck can write free softwarwe. Not every schmuck can write something world-shaking.
I want to be able to make big bucks. My advice: get a Microsoft certification and milk it. Or better yet, consider another profession, such as auto mechanic. The computer field is subject to many ups and downs; what looked like a steady income yesterday is a quick trip to the unemployment line today, and vice versa. Sure, you can earn the big bucks, but there's no guarantee that it will be a steady income, or that your skills will be in demand three years from now.
I want to solve interesting problems / I love to code / I find computers endlessly fascinating. Well then, you've probably chosen the right profession. There is nothing better than doing what you love.
I want to wear whatever I want and have nobody tell me otherwise. Despite stereotypes, this isn't always going to be possible. Remember, as a coder you're a part of a team, usually trying to conduct business. That means that sometimes, you're going to have to dress up, go to meetings, make presenations, and otherwise do some really boring and unpleasant things. Guess what? That's life! And, especially now that there's a glut of qualified coders, employers are going to expect you to dress and act more like a regular professional.
Did I miss any?
Finding God in a Dog
Hmm, being from Europe I have noticed that quite often the VERY attractive girl(s) in the Standard American Low Cost Soap or Cheap Movie is a Marine Biologist.
From this I deduce that a rather large percentage of the US (and I see a growing tendency in Australia as well) Marine Biologists are incredible beautiful model type young girls, although often with with larger key features (aehmn). They also quite often are very naive and have affairs with men who Only Are Up To No Good.
Even girls in their late teens (with mid-twenties female features) can be fully professional Marine Biologists over there if they are beautiful enough (and aren't already scientists, a profession with also have many beautiful women or works for a advertisement agency).
So I want to quit my SW development job and go to the US working as a Marine Biologist, Scientist or Advertisement Something That Doesn't Require Any Education because of all the incredibly beautiful and naive or at least flimsy girls working in these jobs.
Only downside is ofcourse that they seem to be unable to maintain a long term relationship (say between a week and a few months on the max), but one should not smell only one flower anyway...