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U.S. Science Gap Fictional?

James Cho writes "There are more science and engineering students than ever, says one Newsweek journalist. Inflated counts of Chinese and Indian students have created the myth of the U.S. science gap. While no gap exists yet, an exodus of retiring U.S. scientists could create one." From the article: "...a country's capacity for scientific and commercial innovation does not correlate directly with its number of scientists and engineers. Hard work, imagination and business practices also matter."

475 comments

  1. Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why bust your hump getting MS or PhD in one of the hard sciences/engineering, only to land a job making less than 80k?? OR ... you can go to law school, or get an MBA, or sell cell phones, or flip real estate, and have a much greater earning potential for much less work. Until wage scale for engineering and the sciences returns its proper level there will be a deficit of people entering those careers.

    1. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why bust your hump getting MS or PhD in one of the hard sciences/engineering, only to land a job making less than 80k?

      Because it is all you want to do. That's the only reason to do it in the first place. A real scientist/engineer will live in a garage and scrounge dumpsters for materials if he has to. Some of them do.

      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      KFG

    2. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then, once they finally invent something that could change the world, they get sued into oblivion by the patent trolls from companies staffed with MBAs.

      Actually from recent memory I can think of two people who fit your description and made it big. They're James Dyson and Trevor Baylis, both of whom are British. I can't think of any Americans who have made it big working from a garage since the two Steves back in the 70's.

    3. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please."

      Right on. Gosh darn those scientists and engineers for wanting to make a living and pay off those hundred thousand dollar student loans and have enough money left aside to convince a prospective wife to overlook his scientist-ic geekiness and marry him.

      Maybe they should live in Russia where they paid their nuclear scientists absolutely nothing. If they don't like that they could sell real estate. Or, of course, sell nuclear technology to foreign powers in exchange for putting food on the table...

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    4. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I didn't say that's how they should work. I said that's how they will work, if they have to to get the work done. It's the question of motivation and the work being its own reward.

      Lilienthal said "Sacrifices must be made," not, "Is this covered in my benefits package?"

      But that doesn't mean that the sacrifices can't be made while working for NASA. Some have.

      KFG

    5. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 4, Informative

      Perhaps you should read my post again.

      convince a prospective wife to overlook his scientist-ic geekiness and marry him.

      On the other hand, someone who would have a wife like this probably shouldn't be a scientist/engineer in the first place either.

      KFG

    6. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by rbannon · · Score: 0

      You said 80k? Well, I have been studying (and paying tuition) my entire life and have been teaching for almost twenty years in a so-called demand subject (mathematics). Right now I'm barely clearing 50k. Oh, and I'm one of the better paid teachers at my school, there are other teachers getting paid an adjunct's wage (500 per credit hour) with no benefits.

      Please tell me where someone would be willing to pay me 80k?

      Free iPod?

    7. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until wage scale for engineering and the sciences returns its proper level there will be a deficit of people entering those careers.

      That will never happen until I"P" law is done away with. Engineers and scientists are good at making NEW stuff. I"P" gets in the way of that, allowing monopolisation of existing stuff. If engineers were all working at the SERVICE of designing NEW stuff, they'd be happy, and free of the market-distortion of I"P", they'd be relatively well paid. Instead we have patent monopoly rights treated as "property" and "owned" in vast numbers by the corporate MBA/Lawyer scum.

    8. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      What do business people say? Hmm..

      You get what you pay for?

      Ain't no free lunch?

      This is what they tell customers when they gleaming-teeth-smile and power-sell the $7500 television. Then when it comes time to pay their employees what they're worth, well, guess not.

      Hey business people? Want professionals? Gotta pay a professional wage. Welcome to reality.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    9. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey business people? Want professionals? Gotta pay a professional wage. Welcome to reality.

      Perhaps if there were fewer worker bees and more professionals in the field they could command professional wages.

      KFG

    10. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Baki · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It remains irritating that society is profiting from our most talented individuals. The others are only in it for the money, but their well being in the end depends on science/engineering. It is injust to value that so lowly.

      In the long run, this shall have an impact: each parent wants the best for their children. I studied physics, and landed in time in software consulting to make a very nice living. However, future prospects don't look very good. I won't really motivate my 2 children to study physics for example, but rather become a doctor or something else with better prospects. After 1 or 2 generations, you'll have less and less people (already happening) that might be motivated in the first place because they have been influenced from infancy onwards to stay away from hard science & engineering.

      Especially in times of gloomy prospects for the world and standard of living, people go back to ensuring basic needs, and in this case money is important. I am sure that many of these so called idealistic engineers are very annoyed by lawers and sales people being valued much better (both in money and also in influence in politics and power in general) nowadays. Where are the times that engineers also had a word to say in politics, in leading companies etc. For me personally, I am especially concerned with the low status not so much because of money, but for status and influence in society.

      The general tendency now is that scientists and engineers are weird people that should be happy for their job but for the rest should be quiet and just make sure that the political elite (mainly lawyers, MBA's and the like) can continue their egoistic way of living.

      If all higher educated people are only of that kind, I think society crumbles. The real substance is gone, all real innovation happens somewhere else (i.e. in Asia). The egoistic kind makes short sighted decisions and decisions that are harmfull to the great majority of the people.

      So to summarize: if the state wants more engineers, maybe they should not (only) value them better in terms of money, but especially in terms of influence and status. And money is a secondary part of that.

    11. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Education alone does not guarantee that you will make boatloads of money. Why should it? There are several factors which determine earning power.

      One thing that is not taught in school: How to make money.

      You can be virtually guaranteed a decent (50-80k) paying job if you have an engineering / science degree. However, there is some relationship between risk and reward. Perhaps this is why there are wealthy people in sports/arts/entertainment/business ownership - because the risk is so great (fail before you make it, and your broke). Also, alot of scientific/engineering tasks have been commoditized (sp?).

      Sure some people dont have to work hard/smart at all to make mega bucks. Some poeple hit the lottery

      What I believe is powerful, is the ability to tie several disciplines together.

      Now who do I give the most respect to? Engineers & Scientists. But respect != money.

      PS - it's 7:30 on a saturday, so I don't care that much about my spelling or grammar (for all of you grammar nazis out there).

      Also, I busted my Hump to get an engineering degree. Then I busted my hump to get a law degree. Then I busted (well kinda cruised at this point) my hump to get an MBA. Yes, the hardest was engineering. Should I be uber rich? I certainly don't feel entitled to be. looking at things from different perspectives, the key to wealth is being prepared to identify/execute/take advantage of an opportunity when it comes along.

      I know poor lawyers, rich college dropouts, rich engineers, poor athletes. looking at things from different perspectives, the key to wealth is being prepared to identify/execute/take advantage of an opportunity when it comes along - that's what seems to be common among the wealthy. Sure, some or even alot of it is luck...but if the luck comes your way, you have to be able to take advantage of the situation.

    12. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by m0nstr42 · · Score: 1

      Why bust your hump getting MS or PhD in one of the hard sciences/engineering, only to land a job making less than 80k??

      I don't know, something about the pursuit of philosophical truth?

      Besides, just marry a doctor (the other kind), that's what I did ;-) Er... there's that whole quarter-million-dollar loan debt thing.... but after that, we're golden.

      And where I came from... $80K is ALOT of money. If I start at $80K I'll be making more than my parents combined after they've been at their (actually decent) jobs for a long time.

      No, I don't believe I feel so bad about busting my hump to get that PhD.

    13. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Perhaps if there were fewer worker bees and more professionals in the field

      That's the way management wants it. More slaves. Less innovation. Cubicle-managers don't want innovation, knowledge, brilliance or achievement. They want control.

      they could command professional wages

      Any degree with the word "Engineer" or "Engineering" on it commands a professional wage. Period.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    14. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I read your post. You said those who are in science/engineering for the money, should do real estate.

      I am saying that is a foolish notion. People have bills to pay, you know. And if America adopts your attitude then perhaps they should move out of America to somewhere that will pay more for their knowledge.

      On the other hand, someone who would have a wife like this probably shouldn't be a scientist/engineer in the first place either.


      If you're a scientist of any good skill, you spend a lot of time in the lab doing very geeky things. Some scientists - one in a thousand - will attract an "I love geeks" kind of woman. The other 999 have exactly 2 choices: woo her with money, or stay single forever. Option #2 means he won't be contributing any intelligent children to the gene pool. Few options are worse for our nation and our species in general, than that.

      But in America, option #2 is happening more and more. We are, after all, the nation of jocks, jock worshippers, and "My daughter turned down your honor student" bumper stickers.
      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    15. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by diggitzz · · Score: 1

      Indeed, the only thing that makes a person worth something (in terms of power, respect, and money) in American society today is their ability to directly generate or protect revenue. For this reason, pure science and fundamental research have especially suffered, and graduate students entering such programs can be assured of $7.50/hr and 12-hour workdays (no overtime paid) for the full 10 years it takes to get a PhD.

      I just finished a BS in Physics. I was originally planning to push through to a PhD, but now that I've found an SO and eventually want a family, there's no way in hell I'm going to risk it. Instead, I'll be developing some patentable ideas in my garage while working as a waitress for an average of $20/hr.

      Seriously, why do waitresses get paid more than particle physicists?

      --
      -=[You cannot consistently judge this statement to be true.]=-
    16. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      However, future prospects don't look very good.

      This is the first generation in the history of this society that will do worse than the previous generation. The numbers of people who are now in their 30s having never owned a home, for example, are absolutely staggering. Most people in the previous generation had owned a home for at least 5-10 years by the time they were in their mid-30s. The modern workplace simply doesn't allow that any more.

      So we have an entire generation of permarenters who are told to "put their degree last." So much for the social contract. An entire generation cheated out of their opportunity to contribute.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    17. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, why do waitresses get paid more than particle physicists?

      Business wants slaves. Not employees. They want brands, not products. They want control, not innovation. Business doesn't want the responsibility of employing people. They like the social contract as long as it doesn't cost them anything.

      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    18. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by aztec+rain+god · · Score: 1

      It seems to me like the bigger problem isn't scientists and engineers making 80K, rather, where I live, starting salary for a math or science teacher is under 30K. Not much of an incentive to enter the field.

      --
      Sig cannot be found.
    19. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      how anybody could advocate letting others reap the benefits of the work of those who are most capable of doing it?

      Wouldn't be a problem at all if business were willing to pay for what they buy.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    20. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Metasquares · · Score: 1

      10 years is towards the higher end of the scale. You can get one in as little as four sometimes. I believe that six years is the average.

      A lot of it depends on how quickly you prepare your dissertation.

    21. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 1

      And if America adopts your attitude. . .

      Then we might have a few engineers who are actually worth a crap, and a salary.

      KFG

    22. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why am I slightly dubious that someone with the name Prince Vegeta SSJ4 has three law degrees? A few to many senzue beans today maybe?

    23. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Loquax · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. Face it if you live in even a somewhat progressive Western industrial nation (like the U.S.) you can take a job in about whatever floats your boat and still eat 3 meals a day and have a roof over your head. If you want the best foods and the best four walls and roof around, bust your hump for money. If you adjust what you "need" (read "want") you are not likely to starve or die of exposure. You'll have a longer life and a better attitude doing something you love than going for the bucks. Currently, I hear that a bunch of students are being scared away from IT and being told that India, China, Fernando Poo, and a host of other sweatshop nations will be taking all the jobs from the US. I gotta call BS on that (and I ain't refering to a Bachelor of Science). People in the West (and especially in the US) have got to stop acting like sheep everytime a scare monger talking head pukes up statistics to grab viewers and readers. As James Brown says, "Do what you like, do what you wanna do..."

    24. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it didn't say three law degrees

    25. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1
      Then we might have a few engineers who are actually worth a crap, and a salary.

      Please show me some proof that the engineers we have now aren't worth a crap. I find your implications of their incompetence insulting and also highly unfounded.
      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    26. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mikapc · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You think engineers have it rough? Just look at what professional classical musicians have to do just to survive.

    27. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      Seriously, why do waitresses get paid more than particle physicists?

      Simple: because economy is ruled by offer and demand, and nothing else. Since there's a higher demand/offer relationship for waitresses than there's for particle physicists, waitresses wages use to be higher.

      There are some ways to change this:

      a) Particle physicists to begin to heavily marketing to capitalists the marvelous things their businesses would get by opening job positions for particle physicists. With a higher demand, higher wages.

      Also, they could argue heavily on how extremely useless waitresses really are, so that the demand for them would lower and so their wages. :)

      b) Particle physicists to begin to heavily discourage young people from entering the field. For example, by refusing to give science journalists ideas for articles. This way, the offer of particle physicist will become lower, and thus the wages of the already existing ones would go up.

      c) The above solutions are free market one, meaning that they are based on the freedom of the individuals to act or not act as they see fit. The third solution is the anti-free market one, i.e., for particle physicists to lobby the government for subsidies and such. This way, the money that people aren't willing to voluntarily give to particle physicist is actually taken from them by force and then given to particle physicists.

      Currently a lot of the wages of science practitioners is earned by way of method "c". Scientists are usually poor at convincing people to give them money, so they usually prefer to indirectly impose their will. Nothing so much different from RIAA or software makers, who also despise free market, or from the unions, who don't like it either, or from the sueing specialists, who also earn tons of money by using the power of state police in their favour.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    28. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Gosh darn those scientists and engineers for wanting to make a living and pay off those hundred thousand dollar student loans

      You do realize that it's perfectly possible to get an engineering or science degree without borrowing money, don't you? Just don't go to the most expensive school, look into the scholarship opportunities available and work part-time during your education. Between scholarships and GI bill payments (USAF Reserves), I made money by going to school. That plus a part time job writing Math Ed. software paid my living expenses and provided useful experience to support my degrees (which are in Math and CS). Sure, I went to an obscure university, but I got a good education and with a few years of real-world experience behind me the size/name of my school ceased to matter at all. For someone one a scientific or academic track, the school you get your graduate degrees from does matter significantly more, but that's not where people acquire huge loans, and coming from an obscure college can actually *help* you get into a good grad school, assuming you've got the grades and the exam scores to prove your ability.

      Those big student loans are *not* necessary. That doesn't mean they never make sense: they do enable a more enjoyable college experience and perhaps for some people that's worth what it will take to repay the debt later. But to say that the need for the income to repay huge loans is a limiting factor preventing people from becoming scientists or engineers is just wrong.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    29. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cluckshot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "That's the way management wants it. More slaves. Less innovation. Cubicle-managers don't want innovation, knowledge, brilliance or achievement. They want control."
      This is it in a nutshell. Why else would a company what a computer scientist to move across the continent and work in some super expensive place when via internet the party could work from home, not have to pay for relocation, save money on commuting and do the work just as effectively.

      Sorry but this said it all. The whole thing is about control and not about economics.

      --
      Never Politically Correct ~ I prefer the facts If you don't like what I say, get a life, or comment yourself.
    30. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      Stop telling people that, I'd like to afford to buy a house some day. :-)
    31. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Most people in the previous generation had owned a home for at least 5-10 years by the time they were in their mid-30s. The modern workplace simply doesn't allow that any more.

      Bah. If they haven't owned a home that's because they chose not to. I'm 36 and I've owned a home for 12 years. My household income is only marginally higher than average now, and I was only making $30K when I bought the house. That's just an anecdote, of course, but the fact is that buying doesn't cost much more than renting, and in many cases it actually costs *less* -- at least in terms of the payments. With a home come other expenses but, still, nearly anyone who wants to can afford a home. It may not be new and it may not be fancy, but they can buy one.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    32. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1
      Because it is all you want to do. That's the only reason to do it in the first place. A real scientist/engineer will live in a garage and scrounge dumpsters for materials if he has to. Some of them do.

      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      I don't get this. Science should be paid decently well because of it's importance to society. And frankly, it is. But I don't understand the point of view of people who revel in its economic marginalization. I, for one, would be very happy to have a lot of people entering scientific fields for the money!

    33. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by ErikZ · · Score: 1


      How many jobs out there *aren't* important to society?

      People don't get paid simply because someone was feeling generous.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    34. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Tolookah · · Score: 1

      I don't know about most people, but I didn't go to school just so I could pay off my student loans, I went to school because I wanted to be an engineer, I was/am looking at work in an education field right now, and you know what they pay? I don't care, because it is what I want to do.

      If I was in it for the money, I would have jumped into some high paying field with low entry costs, but I'm not, and I am up to my ears in debt, and contemplating starting work for an open source group in the electrical field, either http://www.fpgaarcade.com/ or http://www.opencores.org/

      There are alot of OSS people who would consider your statement of money really silly.

    35. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by stanmann · · Score: 1

      Well, your mistake is teaching, research mathematicians make better money, Teachers will always be underpaid until they are willing to take the hard steps of weeding out the worthless chaff, and demand pay based on performance.

      As long as teachers, and teachers unions continue to put up with ~50% of teachers knowing less than the uppper 10% of the student population, then they will be underpaid and unappreciated.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    36. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1
      How many jobs out there *aren't* important to society?

      People don't get paid simply because someone was feeling generous.

      Well, actually with the magic of government redistributed wealth, you too can have a job merely because someone felt generous with Other Peoples' Money. And honestly, science gets a decent chunk from the US government and when you include the massive subsidization of US university education by student loans, most scientists fall at least partway into that category.

    37. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by rve · · Score: 1

      You American engineers have no reason to complain about money.

      No scientist or engineer here in Europe can expect to make anything like $80,000 straight out of college. You're lucky if you make half that after several years of work experience.

      In addition to that, you pay less income tax, and the cost of living is far lower in most parts of the US.

      If you're not willing to work for less than $80,000 straight out of college, are you surprised your jobs are moving to India?

    38. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      cubicledrone, you sound bitter. Along with all of this bitterness you must have invested some energy in thinking through a solution to this unfair system.

      Let's say that I make you absolute ruler of our society. What will you do to correct the injustice that you so loudly decry? Please reply.

    39. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by doppe1 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Bah. If they haven't owned a home that's because they chose not to. I'm 36 and I've owned a home for 12 years.

      Bullshit. Since you have had you own house for so long you haven't got out much, and I am guessing since you got a house at 24 you aren't a scientist.

      I'm pushing 30 in the next few days and I am a scientist and I have never had the chance to buy a house. Can't afford to buy a house as a student, I got my PhD at 25 relatively young. Back in England the cheapest 1 bedroom houses where around 5 times my sallary as a Post-Doc, more than a mortgage will lend you. Then you have the problem of moving every 2 years as a Post-Doc anyway, cause thats what you have to do as a scientist, so you are never going to be in 1 place long enough to buy a house until your mid-thirties, meanwhile, as you pointed out, I have been paying the higher price of renting losing even more money from my already pathetic sallary.

      And society will continue to treat me like shit, because scientist are one of the few people that will put up with it for the love of the work.

    40. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...American cars?

    41. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by ErikZ · · Score: 2, Funny

      Seriously, why do waitresses get paid more than particle physicists?

      Because particle physicists won't bring me food.

      They maybe know all sorts of stuff about particles, but that's not something people pay for at an individual level.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    42. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's this insightful? Naive to the ways of the world != insightful. Sure, you can imagine your utopian society where people do what they want to do. I'm over here in the real world, with bills to pay. I'm an engineer instead of a scientist because I make more money that way.

      It's nice of you to discount all of those people that may have been in science and engineering during the golden age of space programs who were in it for the money. But in case you haven't noticed, people with different ideals other than "engineering is so great, I'll do it for free" also contribute to their fields.

    43. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      "There are alot of OSS people who would consider your statement of money really silly."

      Did they go to college to learn how to code OSS projects?

      Also, what jobs do you think are okay for people to get into to make money, and which ones do you think are not okay for that? Please give me your most high and arbitrary standard here...

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    44. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by contrapunctus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      MBAs

    45. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      The management of American car companies are responsible for that.

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    46. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Gulthek · · Score: 2, Informative

      Scientists (and engineers aren't exactly scientists) study problems that interest them. They would study these problems while working as a patent clerk, or a food prep in a hotel, or a "real" scientist in a lab. Whether they get paid for their work is not a concern.

      Scientists who get PhDs found a problem that seriously interested them in college, and continued to study it; generally not worrying about the money. These are the scientists who do things that really and truly matter.

      "Scientists" who look at the earnings potential for a PhD in physics and decided to go for that and then look for a job, aren't.

    47. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mrm677 · · Score: 1

      Right on. Gosh darn those scientists and engineers for wanting to make a living and pay off those hundred thousand dollar student loans and have enough money left aside to convince a prospective wife to overlook his scientist-ic geekiness and marry him.

      You are a fool if you got an engineering education and have that much debt. There are so many state schools that have fine engineering programs. And most M.S. and PhD students are supported and do not pay tuition. There is a big opportunity cost in pursuing a PhD, but not a direct cost.

    48. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not the OP, but: your very question borders on silly. If one were an absolute ruler, to make a just society one of the first things one would have to do is likely going to be abdicate! It's like "assuming you use MS Windows, how do you ensure a 100% open source computer system?".

    49. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1
      Scientists who get PhDs found a problem that seriously interested them in college, and continued to study it; generally not worrying about the money. These are the scientists who do things that really and truly matter.

      These scientists then starve and die before their projects are complete... unless they
      a) take on a day job that distracts from their research

      or

      b) move to another country which values scientists more and then pays them (see: Russia after the fall of the USSR)

      BTW one question... by what arbitrary standard is it uncool or unproductive for a scientist to want a good paying science job? Couldn't we also say that doctors shouldn't want to be paid for healing patients? Why not apply this to professional athletes, reporters, pilots, and so forth?

      The nation that pays the most money for scientists, gets the best technology. Your results vary for each individual scientist but in the end that, along with the gift of life in a Democracy, is why Capitalism won out over Communism.
      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    50. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      "You are a fool if you got an engineering education and have that much debt."

      Ok, that was a bit of an exaggeration. What about the undergrad pre-MS tuition?

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    51. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by LihTox · · Score: 1
      You do realize that it's perfectly possible to get an engineering or science degree without borrowing money, don't you?

      Particularly since most U.S. science graduate programs in my experience waive their students' tuition, and pay a small stipend, in exchange for their working as teaching or research assistants. It's not a lot of money to live on, but my wife and I lived comfortably enough on our graduate stipends in Chicago for five years. (It helped that we didn't own a car and don't drink.) And we only have student loans from college (which you'd presumably have even in real estate, no?)

    52. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by SerpentMage · · Score: 1

      Sorry to break your bubble here dude, but welcome to the rest of the world! How many young people do you think own houses in Japan? Here in Europe the minority owns their own houses. What is happening in the US is what has been happening in the rest of the world. Too little space too many people. Simple capitalism of supply and demand!

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    53. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Tolookah · · Score: 1

      I know a number of software engineers who have been doing OSS projects, they didn't go to school just to do that, but they found their passion, and went with it.

      As for what jobs would be ok, if an engineer wanted to do it for money so be it, I said nothing against that. I actually just mentioned a counterpoint that some people (like me) do things for other reasons. Everything in my post except the OSS statement was a personal account, yeah, I see there are people who do it for money, but there are also people who do it because it is their passion, and couldn't care less about the money.

      My statement was just a counterpoint to your statement which looked like it was a blanket statement, if mine seemed like a blanket statement, sorry for the confusion.

    54. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And yet the simple fact that THERE'S NO SUCH WORD AS ALOT eludes you?

    55. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by The+evil+non-flying · · Score: 1
    56. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      As long as teachers, and teachers unions continue to put up with ~50% of teachers knowing less than the uppper 10% of the student population, then they will be underpaid and unappreciated.

      Is this ever true. I'd also like to point out that private schools, frequently religious, consistantly manage to produce quality students at a fraction of the public school cost.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    57. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'd like to point out that most private schools, mostly religious, just end up crapping out a huge percentage of drug users and whiners who can't compete in the real world, move on to college for 4 year adn then move back in with mommy and daddy.

      Private schools have the same problems as public schools, it's just that the students have bigger allowances and can afford more chic drugs.

    58. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by masterzora · · Score: 1
      I think the point of the original post wasn't to say that scientist shouldn't make money, but to say that he doesn't want people to go into science purely for the money. He says that scientists should be interested in doing science for science, with the money being an great benefit.

      Now, whether or not I agree with that statement I will not say, but I just wanted to clear up the apparent confusion.

      --
      Remember, open source is free as in speech, not free as in bear.
    59. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Solandri · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      Money isn't some evil reward that only greedy people desire. Money is a measure of how much society values your time and work.

      If people who took a few months' night classes to get a real estate license can make more money than people who studied 12 years for a technical degree in a difficult field but necessary field, that points to a fundamental problem in how society values individual accomplishments.

      Ideally the valuation would be based on how much your work contributes to the betterment of society. Indeed, a free market tends to push valuation and wages in that direction. Unfortunately, your proximity to those who "set the price" often has a greater influence on the valuation of your work. That's why real estate brokers, bankers, membership-based professional fields (e.g. lawyers, doctors), managers, CEOs, etc. tend to be overpaid. They have enough control over "setting the price" that they can thwart free market forces to (correctly) devalue their wages to better match their contribution to society.

    60. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Jester99 · · Score: 1

      I can't think of any Americans who have made it big working from a garage since the two Steves back in the 70's.

      And therefore, it didn't happen.

      Google was started in a dorm room.
      Yahoo was started in a garage and, famously, their "war room" in their corporate HQ actually looks like a garage, complete with roll-up garage door, to complete the feel.

      That's just two companies I can think of off the top of my head. I'm sure there are hundreds more.

    61. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      > most U.S. science graduate programs in my experience waive their students' tuition

      That was true at one time. It's becoming increasingly more rare and typically only at larger universities. Unless you see a PhD as nothing more than a personal pat on the back there's little sense entering a graduate program in a small, unknown research group. The most prominent research groups usually waive tuition but their total of the graduate population gets smaller every year. Many of the smaller research groups at smaller universities no longer have the funding for 100% tuition coverage.

      > and pay a small stipend, in exchange for their working as teaching or research assistants

      Again, only the largest universities and research groups can afford to pay any significant stipend any longer. Typical stipend for a large prominent research group may be $6-10k/year, smaller and less prominent groups less. TA'ships can often be close to $6k/semester but the TAs are being required to teach more classes, take on more students, write grant applications, and conduct their research. Just as in the IT work world the trend is: do more, get paid less.

      Don't expect to see that pleasant job once (if) you graduate either. In a science and technical field you can expect to go through one, maybe three, post-doc positions (same conditions as grad school--low pay, long grueling hours) before you finally hit it big with a major corporation.

      My advice is the same advice I use for playing poker. If you can't afford the ante don't bother playing the game. The house is there to clean you out and they do not give a fuck if you end up dead in a ditch.

    62. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by aaqubed · · Score: 1
      I, for one, would be very happy to have a lot of people entering scientific fields for the money!

      The problem with that, of course, is that we wouldn't have very many good scientists then. Those guys who enter the field for the money would quickly leave without having contributed much when they realize that they can get more somewhere else.

      --
      Need help - license plate reverse lookup. NY plate CSE-2960. Guy almost hit me, blamed me, pissed me off.
    63. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by OmnipotentEntity · · Score: 1

      C'mon now. Real love for your profession will only take you so far. Most people interested in (and good at) science are intelligent enough to get less skilled jobs elsewhere. And when these easier, less skilled jobs pay better the choice is a no brainer.

      Face it, people work primarily to get money. I know that if money were purely immaterial I wouldn't work at my job. I'd sit at home, post to slashdot and work on my pet projects.

      I know if I were placed in a situation where I was asked to pick a job between $60K a year as an engineer, where I'd have to work my ass off and deal with corporate crap (or as a scientist which has to spend half of his time reapplying for grants instead of doing research), which I knew would leave my mentally spent at the end of the day, or $100K as a lawyer with a comparitivly* small work load, where I could choose my clients and do pretty much what I want in the confines of my own office. I'd take the job as a lawyer. No brainer. Because then I could continue to work on my pet projects anyway. I could still do computer stuff or science stuff, but I'd have far more freedom to do so than if I worked in an scientific field.

      *Note: I know lawyers actually do quite a bit of work. It was an example used in a nth-parent post.

      --
      "Build a man a fire warm him for a day, set a man on fire and warm him for the rest of his life."
    64. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or, you can take a different tack and barter your expertise. I have made an excellent living by taking a lower salary, but making sure that I am paid well in stock for whatever startup company I work for. I flip companies every 5 or so years and collect the results over time. I've had a couple of winners which has more than paid for the experience and I continue to be able to profit well from what I love to do.

      It's not just a salary... very few people actually get rich by taking a salary. You get rich by taking an equity position in the company that you're working for. I happen to be able to barter my computer science degree (GT '84 -- go Jackets :-) for an equity position in the startups that I choose to work for. I don't have the business knowledge to start my own company (yet...) but I have something worth a lot to a young company that needs expertise.

      I also have gotten a ton of experience in how companies grow (and frequently die... :-) I'll probably start my own company in a few years and put my additional learning into practice.

    65. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by m0nstr42 · · Score: 1

      I've ostensibly chosen to assimilate it into my own personal lexicon.

    66. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Omaze · · Score: 1

      > bust your hump for money

      That's so completely ignorant. I can slack off at my job, smile nice, and keep my mouth shut and get a 4% raise. I can work hard, think hard, ask hard questions, make difficult decisions, take chances, and get a 3% raise. How hard, or even how smart, you work has absolutely nothing to do with how much money you make in the scientific industry. Even if you're paid hourly, most scientific jobs only have sporadic opportunities for overtime. The vast majority also have exclusivity agreements. That means that, if your manager stops off at the gas station or orders a meal at Olive Garden and you happen to be working there you can be legally fired the very next day.

      I'm calling BS on you. You obviously have approximately zero clue what you're talking about.

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    67. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Shelled · · Score: 1

      Obviously written by someone who A) hasn't busted their hump in a field they loved for 20+ years and are still treated like a white-collar janitor, or B) a real estate agent.

    68. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, apparently a particle physicist might be bringing you your food when they can't get particle physics jobs.

    69. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Mukaikubo · · Score: 1

      I don't know, man. I for one am utterly fnord terrified of Fernando Poo.

    70. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Scientists (and engineers aren't exactly scientists) study problems that interest them. They would study these problems while working as a patent clerk, or a food prep in a hotel, or a "real" scientist in a lab. Whether they get paid for their work is not a concern.

      WTF?? So if a particle physicist is working as a patent clerk or in a hotel, how exactly does he afford to build himself a collider so he can continue with his work? A lot of scientific work requires serious money, not for buying the scientist a nice home and attracting a wife, but for actually doing the research itself. And without a society that values putting money into researching these problems, and also attracting people with the talent to do the research, then these problems simply won't be solved (in that society. Maybe in another.)

    71. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Since you have had you own house for so long you haven't got out much, and I am guessing since you got a house at 24 you aren't a scientist.

      Nope, a software developer. I tend to put that in the "engineer" class, although some disagree, of course. As for the "getting out", bit, that's subjective. Take a look at my little slashdot bio if you care, but I think I've had a rather full life thus far.

      Back in England the cheapest 1 bedroom houses where around 5 times my sallary as a Post-Doc, more than a mortgage will lend you.

      It's certainly possible that my comments don't apply in England. There are areas in the US where they don't apply as well... but also plenty of areas where they do apply. I suppose if your choices of location are limited, you could be stuck renting. Even in those areas, though, there are usually options like condominiums so that you can build some equity but start at a lower price.

      Then you have the problem of moving every 2 years as a Post-Doc anyway, cause thats what you have to do as a scientist, so you are never going to be in 1 place long enough to buy a house until your mid-thirties

      Two years is plenty of time to buy a house. It's a lot more effort than finding a place to rent, sure, but people do it. I know lots of people in the military who make a habit of buying a house each place they're stationed, even though they may only be there a year. Given that even over the course of a single year real estate tends to appreciate a bit (and does so more often than it depreciates), plus the fact that a little effort can usually add considerable value to a somewhat run-down house, they're usually in nice homes within a few years. Actually, I know a number of people who *don't* have to move around for their employment and choose to trade houses every year or two because if you're willing to do it, and if you're smart about it, it's a way to build equity much faster than just buying a house and making payments.

      Like many things in life, whether or not you can own a house depends heavily on how badly you *want* to own a house, and how much you're willing to do to get there. It's all about what's important to you.

      And society will continue to treat me like shit, because scientist are one of the few people that will put up with it for the love of the work.

      That's the wrong way to look at it, IMO. Note that I'm not telling you my opinion is more valid than yours, but that's simply not the way I see it. I think that being able to do something you love is a reward that does, in fact, compensate for much. This is a subject I think about a great deal, because a few years ago when I loved my job I made half what I do now. I could quit and get another job I really like, or I could go back to school to do something I would love, but both options would cost me a lot of money -- especially the latter. Having grown comfortable, I'm not willing to make that trade, so I continue on with a job that I don't really like all that much. You, on the other hand, do love what you do, and probably always will. That's worth a significant amount, and it's something that not everyone can have.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    72. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by 2443W · · Score: 1

      I absolutely agree with the quoted portion, and it is incredibly frustrating from the students perspective, and i even attended a private school. Thank God i didn't go to a public school... But as for the price of education, i agree as well, my little school on a shoe-string budget with a lot of minority and low-income students beat the pants off of all the school districts around in the state testing.

    73. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by epee1221 · · Score: 1

      by what arbitrary standard is it uncool or unproductive for a scientist to want a good paying science job?
      When money is his primary motivation for becoming an engineer/scientist.
      As was said before, I study to become an engineer because I find the field interesting; if I only wanted money, I'd sell real estate.

      --
      "The use-mention distinction" is not "enforced here."
    74. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I take the first post as more-
      Why the hell do salesmen, real estate agents, and the like get better treatment than engineering experts??? Just because they aren't selling their soul, it doesn't mean they don't deserve reward, if not more earning potential than better conditions and better hours...perhaps a more relaxed working environment. A few engineer at a business I worked for look like goddamn zombies, they absolutely love what they do, and they continued doing good work.

      A salesman swindling an old lady into a gaming video card at dell should not be rewarded... or treated as a human at all!!!

    75. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by epee1221 · · Score: 1

      Particularly since most U.S. science graduate programs in my experience waive their students' tuition, and pay a small stipend, in exchange for their working as teaching or research assistants.
      That doesn't exactly help undergrads, who certainly outnumber grad students.

      It's not a lot of money to live on, but my wife and I lived comfortably enough on our graduate stipends in Chicago for five years.
      Hmm... just out of curiosity, what school was that?

      --
      "The use-mention distinction" is not "enforced here."
    76. Re: Currently not worth the educational investment by PeterAitch · · Score: 1

      If you're in it for the money, go sell real estate; please.

      This was my view when I was about 15 and considering my future career. I viewed it then as the 'new monasticism' and went into hard science because I was passionate about it and thought that the poor terms and conditions would keep out the less dedicated.
      Much later, I finally became permanently irritated by the way we are taken for granted and by the way that Joe Public has NO CONCEPT of how difficult true innovation is. Not to mention constantly 'making do' with a lower standard of living than my peers (or even intellectual inferiors).
      Now I teach - the money's about the same, it's actually more fun day-to-day (!) and (at least here in the UK) a much more stable career long-term. It means I get to have my say with Joe Public's children, too. Of course, I'm rather wary about giving careers advice...

    77. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mpaque · · Score: 1

      Money isn't some evil reward that only greedy people desire. Money is a measure of how much society values your time and work.

      That's why my kids are going to law school! My daughter is aiming to become a top producer in the class action industry. Engineers are just here to generate actionable causes for litigation.

    78. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by sunwukong · · Score: 1

      Watch out, cubicledrone! cryfreedomlove will apply for a business process patent on your idea and make millions!

    79. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by sunwukong · · Score: 1

      Because particle physicists won't bring me food.

      Or they'll only bring it to you one subatomic particle at a time. *

      * which means, on a prorated basis, particle physicists are paid extremely well.

    80. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by XchristX · · Score: 1

      [quote]
      b) move to another country which values scientists more and then pays them (see: Russia after the fall of the USSR)
      [/quote]

      What!??? Are you retarded? Do you know how lousy it is for physicists in Russia today? How many of them lost their funding after the Yeltsin cartel took over the country? The Physics Department at Texas A&M is 90% Russian/East-European (faculty I mean). There is a reason for that.

      I assure you, The US(presently) treats academicsa lot better than the Russian mafia-government.

      --
      l'Homme n'est Rien l'Oeuvre Tout: Gustave Flaubert to George Sand
    81. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by jp10558 · · Score: 1

      Isn't this the same argument about not pirating music? If you're in it for money, you're in it for the wrong reasons.

      Although, it seems somewhat depressing that you should not ever expect to be able to make money doing what you love.

      --
      Opera, Proxomitron-Grypen,GPG 0x0A1C6EE3
    82. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by jiggly67 · · Score: 1

      You really don't think it's worth it to get that PhD? That's a title earned... even if you don't make that 80K, you should be satisfied that you are one of the few people out there that is capable of earning that degree!

    83. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by epee1221 · · Score: 1

      There are areas in the US where they don't apply as well... but also plenty of areas where they do apply.
      If you don't mind my asking, what part of the country are you in?
      I've definitely seen some expensive housing markets, and some (relatively) inexpensive ones as well. Unfortunately, the inexpensive ones have all been in areas where the demand for software developers is rather low.

      --
      "The use-mention distinction" is not "enforced here."
    84. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Omaze · · Score: 1

      That's idealistic and pretty but completely unreal. Self-satisfied pride won't pay for groceries. Nor will it keep the debt collectors at bay. Nor will it explain to the insurance company why your credit is trashed when you couldn't make any payments on college loans while spending two years looking for a job. Nor will it keep you warm when your landlord evicts you. Nor will it explain to the neighbors when you're living in your parents' house at age 30. Nor will it sweeten the bitter taste in your mouth when you're jumping from one temp position to another just waiting for that "perfect job" to drop out of the sky. Self-satisfied pride won't even help you in the afterlife.

      Don't get me wrong. I believed that very same thing which you're preaching. Then reality came along. There should be a warranty on PhDs. "Yes, I'd like a refund. You can have the certificate back. Apparently it's broken because it's not doing any of the things which the admissions department said it would."

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    85. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, that was amazing swillden!

      I just can't understand why everyone else can't seem to grasp that your incredible anecdotal data can apply to everyone everywhere!!!!

      Here's a clue, dumbass - just because you managed to do it, doesn't mean the vast majority will have anywhere near that luck.

    86. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>b) move to another country which values scientists more and then pays them (see: Russia after the fall of the USSR)

      He's referring to scientists moving AWAY from the former USSR and to countries such as America.

    87. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Hear hear! And actors and athletes should also work for free since they love their activities just as much. Some actors do, but not too many athletes and not the former after they get successful.

      This is a ludicrous double standard that is also promulgated by the business community: yes, the idiots who contribute little or no value to their own companies while claiming that production is a necessary evil that should be sought to be eliminated or reduced wherever possible. Yes, the people actually creating their products without which it is debatable whether they'd even have a business.

    88. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by soldack · · Score: 1

      "Money is a measure of how much society values your time and work."

      I think it is more a supply and demand issue. Demand comes from the ability of a job to produce something of value for an employer.

      Perhap it is sad but true, but the US is a capitalist society where we are paid by the value of what we produce and how easy it is to find those that can do our work. This is the real reason a PhD in History may earn less than a PhD in a science who may earn less than an MBA.

      -Ack

      --
      -- soldack
    89. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Bah. If they haven't owned a home that's because they chose not to.

      Yeah. They've all had the opportunity but decided to keep renting instead. Sure thing.

      That's just an anecdote, of course, but the fact is that buying doesn't cost much more than renting, and in many cases it actually costs *less* -- at least in terms of the payments.

      And if buying a home were that simple, it wouldn't be a problem.

      Buying a home requires good credit, something which the student loan, 28% credit cards, confiscatory rents and multiple layoffs don't really help with much.
      Buying a home requires a down payment, something which the student loan, 28% credit cards, confiscatory rents and multiple layoffs don't really help with much.
      Buying a home requires 360 monthly payments in the four figures, something which the student loan, 28% credit cards and multiple layoffs don't really help with much.

      Then we can add the negative wage growth, total lack of job security, massive taxation and inflation. Yeah, buying a home is just like buying a box of Corn Flakes.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    90. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      I suppose if your choices of location are limited, you could be stuck renting. Even in those areas, though, there are usually options like condominiums so that you can build some equity but start at a lower price.

      Doesn't solve the credit, down payment and job security problem. Signing a mortgage in this job market is like signing a bankruptcy. Real estate is at the top of the market. Prices have nowhere to go, so in addition to the constant layoffs and debt, that mortgage is looking at negative equity if values drop, and looking at foreclosure when the layoff happens because they can't sell negative equity.

      That's all presuming they qualify for a mortgage in the first place with half their income being absorbed in taxes, inflation and debt.

      Like many things in life, whether or not you can own a house depends heavily on how badly you *want* to own a house, and how much you're willing to do to get there. It's all about what's important to you.

      Owning a house depends heavily on a stable job. Houses outnumber stable jobs. That's the problem.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    91. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by techno-vampire · · Score: 1
      But I don't understand the point of view of people who revel in its economic marginalization. I, for one, would be very happy to have a lot of people entering scientific fields for the money!

      You're right, you don't understand the point of view. If the most important thing to you is earning a huge salary, don't plan on a carear in science or tech. Go into Real Estate, the stock market, or marketing because that's where the money is. If science is what interests you, study it and make it your life's work. Yes, those doing cutting-edge, basic research should be paid more, as should those working out how to apply the new developments. Alas, no matter what we do, they'll never make as much in science as they could in Real Estate because that's just the way the world happens to work.

      --
      Good, inexpensive web hosting
    92. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kesuki · · Score: 1

      Well for one america isn't a 'free market' http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Market
      Because,
      A. every citizen and buisness must pay taxes, or prove that they owe no taxes under current tax code etc.
      B. Numerous industries recieve 'subsidization' through the form of federal grants, pure subsudies etc.
      C. Numerous laws attempt to 'protect' against foreign trade, with some exceptions for 'favored' trading partners.

      America was much closer to a true 'free-market' system in it's early history, however the 'great depression' and many other events trigerred a much greater intervention in the US 'economy' makking it even Less 'free-market' than it originally 'attempted' to be.

      Believe you me, if we had a 'free' market real estate brokers would be begging on the streets and crying, because of the 2 'economic depressions' that have been sucessfully 'averted' through government intervention.

    93. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      cubicledrone, you sound bitter.

      I'm also right.

      Along with all of this bitterness you must have invested some energy in thinking through a solution to this unfair system.

      There are no solutions to this problem that can be offered by government. It is a societal problem. People who own and run businesses have to take the social contract seriously, because without it eventually they have no customers.

      1. Having a workforce of homeowners is good for business.
      2. Hiring and training entry-level workers is good for business.
      3. Stable neighborhoods are good for business.
      4. Entrepreneurial employees are good for business.
      5. Education is good for business.

      But what do we get now?

      1. A layoff as a reward for signing a mortgage.
      2. No employee with less than five years of experience is qualified.
      3. Have to move every three years to find another job.
      4. People with new ideas aren't being "team players" so they get fired.
      5. Put your degree last.

      Government can certainly help, however.

      Tax credit for telecommuters. (Shared by the company and the employee)

      Want to reduce traffic? Want to reduce energy costs? Want to encourage mass transit? Want to reduce taxes? Give business a reason to allow telecommuting. There is absolutely no reason whatsoever for people to drive 35 miles a day back and forth to an office any more. None. Zero.

      Mandatory education about the capital markets, credit, contracts, corporation/LLC/partnership and accounting.

      We claim to be a capitalist society, yet the average college graduate probably knows less about the capital markets than the receptionist at an accountant's office.

      Apprenticeship

      Business in general should have a formal process of apprenticeship, supported by legislation, which would allow both employer and employee to determine precisely how qualified someone is for a particular job. It worked very well in the 50s and 60s, especially in fields like journalism and manufacturing. This is one of the reasons it is so easy to get a job as a doctor or lawyer. "I have a medical license" or "I passed the Bar exam" means the person is qualified. Period.

      But even with all this help, it's really the responsibility of business to employ people in stable, well-paying jobs. That's part of the social contract. Without it, nobody has any reason at all to honor their part of the contract, which is to work hard, get an education and get a good job.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    94. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      He's referring to scientists moving AWAY from the former USSR and to countries such as America.

      "America" is not a country...

      Or perhaps you meant the United States of America?

    95. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yeah. They've all had the opportunity but decided to keep renting instead. Sure thing.

      More precisely, they've decided not to invest the time, energy and emotional effort that it takes to buy. It's much easier to keep renting.

      Buying a home requires good credit, something which the student loan, 28% credit cards, confiscatory rents and multiple layoffs don't really help with much.

      And who decided to take out the loans and use the credit cards? Further, buying a home doesn't require very good credit. Sure, if you have really lousy credit you'll have a problem, but lenders are pretty easygoing on homes, because the house makes such great collateral that the risk to them isn't that large. And even if you do fall on hard times, it's not that difficult to maintain a decent credit rating as long as you actively work with your creditors, rather than just letting the bills go unpaid. Talking to them in advance and working out ways to make partial payments will generally keep you from getting too many bad marks.

      Buying a home requires a down payment

      Not a large one. First-time buyers are eligible for FHA loans which have very low downpayment requirements, as little as 3%, and with an FHA loan you can borrow the downpayment from friends or relatives. Most states have other programs to assist first-time buyers, also, and they usually work with FHA loans to enhance the FHA offerings.

      Buying a home requires 360 monthly payments in the four figures

      Depends on where the house is. My home cost less than $100K when I bought it. Of course, that's in Utah... you can't find a shack in silicon valley for that. Then again, monthly rents in silicon valley are in the four figures. Though I'm sure there are exceptions, in general, with the low interest rates today, your monthly payment on a home or condo will be about the same as your monthly rent for a similar space in a similar area. In most cases it will be a little less, particularly after you factor in the tax deduction on the mortgage interest.

      Then we can add the negative wage growth, total lack of job security, massive taxation and inflation.

      Well, the house helps with the taxation, and your home equity benefits from inflation. As for the others, if you're really concerned about them, you should be hoarding every penny you can, and putting it into a house is a really good way to do that, since you'd just be throwing it away on rent otherwise.

      Yeah, buying a home is just like buying a box of Corn Flakes.

      Who tried to claim that? It takes a great deal of work to buy a house. Lots of planning, lots of research... hell it takes several hours just to do the final paperwork even *after* everything else. It's a good idea, though.

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    96. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Between scholarships and GI bill payments (USAF Reserves), I made money by going to school.

      Your experience, while an inspiration to us all, cannot be applied to all individuals. I, for one, refuse to put my life and limb at risk feeding our nation's war machine in exchange for school money.

    97. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by spun · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, silly cubicledrone! You have to understand, the system still works for some people. These people do not want to believe they succeded through luck. They do not want to believe they are part of an unjust system. Therefore, they have to defend the system and state that it can work for anyone as well as it did for them. This is just what the corporate fat-cats want, an unpaid group of fanbois promoting corporate fat-cat interests.

      Remember, if you aren't succesful, it's your problem. You are the failure, not the system. Everyone in this country has exactly the same opportunities, the playing field is completely level, and any unfairness is all in your head. So STFU and get back to work. Some rich guy has a boat payment due, you know. /sarcasm

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    98. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by MayorDefacto · · Score: 2, Insightful
      And we only have student loans from college (which you'd presumably have even in real estate, no?)

      Not the real estate agents I work for. A lot of them only have high school diplomas (and some of them seem to have barely scraped by!)

      All it takes to sell real estate is to pass a test and pay $600. Any monkey can (and does) do it. Greediest bunch of mouth-breathers you are likely to ever meet...

    99. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by s.fontinalis · · Score: 1

      Talk to engineers in China & India.... they don't do it because they love it. They do it because it will give them a comfortable upper middle class lifestyle and they've an aptitude and some affinity for the profession. This is the same reason my grandfathers, and my father, were engineers.

    100. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by bware · · Score: 1

      When I graduated 10 years ago, the average time to get a particle physics Ph.D was a bit over 7 years. That's for the people who graduated; over half of my entering class quit without a Ph.D. I doubt that the amount of time it takes to get one has decreased in a decade.

      A lot of it depends on how quickly you prepare your dissertation.

      BS. I doubt that the variation on "how quickly you prepare your dissertation" is more than six months. The years add up because your experiment doesn't get funded, or your advisor likes having you around to design electronics. Hardly anyone spends more time preparing their dissertation than needed. Most spend less, because after seven years, they want to get the hell out (and start the 10 years of postdoc'ing).

    101. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      If you don't mind my asking, what part of the country are you in?

      Utah. A few years ago Utah had the second-largest software industry after California. That was largely due to Novell and WordPerfect and with their, er, decline, we've slipped down to third or fourth place. There's still lots, though, mostly small companies.

      Anyone considering coming here, though, had better make sure they're comfortable with the conservative, Mormon-dominated culture. Lots of non-Mormons get along just fine and like the family-friendly atmosphere, but some seem to have a really hard time

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    102. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      And who decided to take out the loans and use the credit cards?

      The student was offered a low-interest loan so they could get that all-important college degree that nobody told them was worthless. The credit card was free. You see, there are about 118 billion banks that hire people to scream "FREE CREDIT CARD" on college campuses. Since college students aren't taught to understand how revolving credit works (and their parents likely don't understand it either) they get a nice fat pile of debt to go with that worthless degree just before they take the $9 an hour job sweeping floors at Wal-Mart.

      For young adults, a credit card is what makes it possible for them to afford the dentist, the new transmission for the car and the trip to the family reunion. Since wages have stagnated, they have no disposable income, so they pay 28% compounded on any expense that isn't rent, food and utilities.

      Further, buying a home doesn't require very good credit.

      Getting a decent interest rate does. How about a nice 15% rate on that mortgage to go with the credit card?

      because the house makes such great collateral that the risk to them isn't that large.

      Until the value drops. Negative equity is a wonderful thing.

      And even if you do fall on hard times, it's not that difficult to maintain a decent credit rating as long as you actively work with your creditors, rather than just letting the bills go unpaid.

      This stereotype of people who "just let all the bills go unpaid" is quite entertaining.

      Talking to them in advance and working out ways to make partial payments will generally keep you from getting too many bad marks.

      Uh huh.

      First-time buyers are eligible for FHA loans which have very low downpayment requirements, as little as 3%

      Please refer to the previous comment on "total lack of ANY disposable income" and "negative wage growth."

      Most states have other programs to assist first-time buyers, also, and they usually work with FHA loans to enhance the FHA offerings.

      Sounds great. Do states have programs to find a steady paycheck?

      Though I'm sure there are exceptions, in general, with the low interest rates today, your monthly payment on a home or condo will be about the same as your monthly rent for a similar space in a similar area. In most cases it will be a little less, particularly after you factor in the tax deduction on the mortgage interest.

      Yeah, deduction on mortgage interest. Why do we tax renters more than homeowners? Why not a tax deduction for renters to help first-time buyers save a down payment? Why do we tax the poor and give tax breaks to the middle-class?

      It's a good idea, though.

      Stable jobs are a good idea too.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    103. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Here's a clue, dumbass - just because you managed to do it, doesn't mean the vast majority will have anywhere near that luck.

      I suppose I was lucky to have the brains to get the grades required for the scholarship (I *didn't* have the grades in high school, BTW -- I paid for the first quarter of college myself and got a 4.0 that qualified me for a tuition waiver for the next year, and so on as long as I kept my grades near 4.0 and my full-time student status). And I was somewhat lucky to get the particular part-time job that I got -- not because it paid better than other on-campus jobs, but because it gave me experience as well as money. I was also somewhat lucky in that military reserve service was relatively low-risk (although I actually recieved orders for Gulf War I, though they were ultimately rescinded).

      However, the real key to not having huge debts is simple: Go to a cheap school, live cheaply and plan on working full-time every summer and part-time while you're in school. Invest some time in researching the grants that are available to you, and take them. You'll have little if any time for partying and you'll be eating lots of Ramen noodles, but you, too, can get a degree and come out owing little, if anything.

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    104. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by SavvyPlayer · · Score: 1
      Having grown comfortable, I'm not willing to make that trade, so I continue on with a job that I don't really like all that much. You, on the other hand, do love what you do, and probably always will. That's worth a significant amount, and it's something that not everyone can have.
      Comfort is also worth a significant amount, something very few can have, and by your example clearly worth more than a fulfilling career. This is the crux of the problem -- scientists and engineers in developing countries are relatively far more comfortable than their counterparts in the first world.
    105. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you want the best foods and the best four walls and roof around, bust your hump for money.

      Ahh yes, the Horatio Alger myth. Are we still buying into that? Your comment amuses me almost as much as the "Don't like you job? Just get another one," fairy tale.

    106. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by MayorDefacto · · Score: 1
      How many jobs out there *aren't* important to society?

      Real estate agents, off the top of my head. Any middleman position, actually.

      Impeding the free transaction of property with your hand out, expecting to take a chunk of the seller's equity just because you "found them a buyer" sounds pretty parasitic to me. The only way these leeches manage to perpetuate this scam is because the National Association of Realtors is one of the largest lobbying organizations around and jealously crushes any attempt to open up access their cartel-like MLS systems.

    107. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Doesn't solve the credit, down payment

      There are no credit problems unless you create them, and the downpayment problems are really not that bad.

      Signing a mortgage in this job market is like signing a bankruptcy.

      I see a rather different market than you, I guess. Every developer I know in my area is working, and every company I know has unfilled positions. Even at the worst of the dot boom, nearly everyone I know had a job.

      Real estate is at the top of the market. Prices have nowhere to go

      This is true in some areas, but not in most. Well, it appears to be true in some areas... people have been predicting the imminent collapse of the Bay Area housing bubble for a decade now, and it just keeps going up. Not that I'll disagree that the bottom must fall out sometime, and probably sooner than later.

      If you're in such an area of the country, you should consider moving.

      Prices have nowhere to go, so in addition to the constant layoffs and debt, that mortgage is looking at negative equity if values drop, and looking at foreclosure when the layoff happens because they can't sell negative equity.

      So what? Assuming you don't get into payments that are considerably higher than your rent, the worst case is that you're in the same position as if you'd rented. And you don't even have to accept a big black mark on your credit rating from the foreclosure, because it's easy to avoid foreclosure -- every mortgage contract has a clause that basically says the buyer can opt out at any time and simply walk away. You don't default, you just cancel the contract -- the bank gets the house and you walk away clean.

      This goes back to your incorrect comment about bankruptcy. Even if things get very bad, your *house* isn't the thing that will force you into bankruptcy, because you can always wipe that one out in a hurry, either by selling or by walking away. Further, mortgage lenders are among the most willing of creditors to allow you to defer payments as long as you're up front about it, negotiate in good faith and then follow through on your negotiated commitments. Even *further*, if you're concerned that you might not be able to make your payments at some time in the future, mortgage insurance is quite inexpensive.

      Owning a house depends heavily on a stable job.

      Not as heavily as renting depends on having a stable job. You can pretty easily stay in a house for a year without making the payments, perhaps even longer if you're willing to accept complete destruction of your credit. How long can you stay in your apartment when you can't pay the rent? And in both cases, it's less important to have a stable job than it is to have a reasonably consistent income. You may think those are the same, but they're not. You can lose and change jobs frequently and with a little savings to buffer you, your payments don't have to suffer.

      Banks will even lend money to people who don't have stable jobs, as long as they can show that they consistently have a job, especially if the jobs are consistently in the same field. When I bought my house, I'd only had my job for about four months, and I'd only worked for my previous employer for about a year, but I had nearly four years of nearly continuous employment in the same profession.

      You keep throwing up obstacles, but most of your obstacles simply aren't real. The only real, significant problem you mention is the most basic one: inability to keep a job. That's going to affect renting, buying food and everything else just as much as it does house payments, arguably more.

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    108. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe they should live in Russia where they paid their nuclear scientists absolutely nothing.

      Oh please! Russian nuclear scientists were pretty well paid to match the arms race for decades. If they were not, they could all run away to the west where they would be in high demand.

      In any case, the whole point of this nuclear science thing is moot because the slashdot topic is just a feel-good "we Americans ain't going down in science" propaganda meant to keep alive an illusion that should have gone long. Please keep the glass house intact...

    109. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by MayorDefacto · · Score: 1
      Because particle physicists won't bring me food.

      You won't be saying that when they invent the food replicatior...

    110. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      The student was offered a low-interest loan so they could get that all-important college degree that nobody told them was worthless.

      But the student didn't *need* the loan to get the all-important degree, which is not, in fact, worthless (just not worth as much as is generally claimed).

      Since college students aren't taught to understand how revolving credit works

      Ah, yes, everyone is a victim. Sorry, I can't drum up much sympathy for people who choose to behave stupidly. Revolving credit is a very simple concept.

      Getting a decent interest rate does [require good credit]. How about a nice 15% rate on that mortgage to go with the credit card?

      Again, this is wrong. FHA loans have very reasonable rates, and the state programs generally work to lower those rates further. First-time buyers can generally get a *lower* rate than buyers using conventional mortgages.

      Please refer to the previous comment on "total lack of ANY disposable income"

      Sorry, I don't buy it. Not that there aren't people who are living a bare minimum existence, eating the cheapest possible food, buying all their clothing from thrift stores, etc., but it's a pretty rare college graduate who is in that situation. Even most people working for $9 an hour at Wal-Mart can forgo a few things and free up $100 per month to put into savings. Assuming a two-earner family, that means they can get that house downpayment in just a couple of years.

      Dude, I know plenty of people in that income range: dual-earner families with annual gross incomes of less than $50K. Some less than $40K. And you know what? They all have houses. Small, old houses, but houses. Few of the people I'm talking about are college graduates, either.

      Do states have programs to find a steady paycheck?

      Yes, actually. Welfare. If you want better than that, you have to find it yourself.

      Stable jobs are a good idea too.

      What would you like engraved on the silver platter on which that job is handed to you?

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    111. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Comfort is also worth a significant amount, something very few can have, and by your example clearly worth more than a fulfilling career.

      Worth it to me, right now, because I have a family to support. In general, my opinion is that the comfort is less important than the fulfillment. Opinions do (and should) vary wildly, of course.

      This is the crux of the problem -- scientists and engineers in developing countries are relatively far more comfortable than their counterparts in the first world.

      That's a very interesting point.

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    112. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by LihTox · · Score: 1
      Particularly since most U.S. science graduate programs in my experience waive their students' tuition, and pay a small stipend, in exchange for their working as teaching or research assistants.
      That doesn't exactly help undergrads, who certainly outnumber grad students.

      I was comparing scientists to other college graduates who would have the same difficulties. Hadn't been thinking of high-school graduates who go right into the workforce.

      It's not a lot of money to live on, but my wife and I lived comfortably enough on our graduate stipends in Chicago for five years.
      Hmm... just out of curiosity, what school was that?

      University of Chicago for me, Northwestern University for her. Granted, big schools. Then again, that's where the science graduate programs tend to be, in big schools. Or am I being woefully naive? :)

    113. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by LihTox · · Score: 1

      >> most U.S. science graduate programs in my experience waive their students' tuition

      >That was true at one time. It's becoming increasingly more rare and typically only at larger universities.

      Well, either it's changed that much in the past decade (I was in grad school 1997-2002), or I'm only familiar with graduate departments at large and/or top schools. Either is possible. :)

    114. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      But the student didn't *need* the loan to get the all-important degree, which is not, in fact, worthless (just not worth as much as is generally claimed).

      They needed it if they couldn't afford to go to college otherwise.

      Ah, yes, everyone is a victim. Sorry, I can't drum up much sympathy for people who choose to behave stupidly. Revolving credit is a very simple concept.

      But THEY DON'T UNDERSTAND IT. NOBODY TAUGHT THEM. A credit card is a loan. Why are banks loaning money to people with NO JOB?

      Again, this is wrong.

      No it isn't, and you know it. I know just as much about the mortgage industry as any homeowner. The FHA is great. If someone has bad credit, the bank WILL charge a higher interest rate EVERY time REGARDLESS of what kind of loan it is. PERIOD.

      Give it up.

      Sorry, I don't buy it. Not that there aren't people who are living a bare minimum existence, eating the cheapest possible food, buying all their clothing from thrift stores, etc., but it's a pretty rare college graduate who is in that situation.

      Just keeping believing the dream world. Ignore the problem.

      Even most people working for $9 an hour at Wal-Mart can forgo a few things and free up $100 per month to put into savings.

      Sure thing. Until a dentist appointment erases it.

      Dude, I know plenty of people in that income range: dual-earner families with annual gross incomes of less than $50K. Some less than $40K. And you know what? They all have houses. Small, old houses, but houses. Few of the people I'm talking about are college graduates, either.

      Great.

      What would you like engraved on the silver platter on which that job is handed to you?

      Yeah. Everyone who complains is asking for a silver platter. They're all losers, so it's okay if they fail.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    115. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 3, Insightful

      There are no credit problems unless you create them, and the downpayment problems are really not that bad.

      I see a rather different market than you, I guess. Every developer I know in my area is working, and every company I know has unfilled positions. Even at the worst of the dot boom, nearly everyone I know had a job.

      So how's the weather in paradise?

      So what? Assuming you don't get into payments that are considerably higher than your rent, the worst case is that you're in the same position as if you'd rented.

      Huh?

      And you don't even have to accept a big black mark on your credit rating from the foreclosure, because it's easy to avoid foreclosure -- every mortgage contract has a clause that basically says the buyer can opt out at any time and simply walk away. You don't default, you just cancel the contract -- the bank gets the house and you walk away clean.

      Every mortgage contract can be unilaterally canceled now? Ok sure thing. So why do they need a signature? If the borrower can simply cancel the contract at will, what is the value of the contract?

      Even *further*, if you're concerned that you might not be able to make your payments at some time in the future, mortgage insurance is quite inexpensive.

      Mortgage insurance is required without a very substantial down payment. The mortgage company is insured. Not the homeowner. Credit rating still gets toilet-rammed. Sorry.

      You keep throwing up obstacles, but most of your obstacles simply aren't real.

      These aren't obstacles. This is reality. My parents AVERAGE length of employment at the same job in the same BUILDING was well over 20 years. Twenty YEARS. They both had pensions, full insurance benefits including homeowners and auto (zero deductible, zero premium), disability, paid vacation.

      The most time I spent at one job was 15 months. Three months after I left that job, 200 people (my entire division) were fired. I have never had a pension. In less than 10% of my jobs did I have any insurance benefits at all. Never had a paid vacation. I've been fired or laid off ten times. My parents were never laid off. Ever.

      The kinds of jobs my parents had DO NOT EXIST any more.

      These aren't obstacles. This is the truth.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    116. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by infaustus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm fairly sure that was the exact phenomenon he was referring to. (Russian scientists emigrating to the US after the fall of the Soviet Union.) Read more carefully.

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    117. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by XchristX · · Score: 1

      Mea Culpa.

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    118. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by SlashSquatch · · Score: 1

      Scientists who get PhDs found a problem that seriously interested them in college, and continued to study it; generally not worrying about the money. These are the scientists who do things that really and truly matter. "Scientists" who look at the earnings potential for a PhD in physics and decided to go for that and then look for a job, aren't.

      Yeah, it's a calling. Just like being a high school football coach. Seriously, no one will ever do the great work you do. I just wish I had a dollar for every Phd that was not worth a tinker's damn.

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    119. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by kfg · · Score: 1

      If you want the best foods and the best four walls and roof around, bust your hump for money.

      You can get the best on $40k a year.

      The rest is just more expensive.

      Any engineer worth his salt, and paycheck, should understand that.

      KFG

    120. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mmkkbb · · Score: 1

      All it takes to sell real estate is to pass a test and pay $600. Any monkey can (and does) do it. Greediest bunch of mouth-breathers you are likely to ever meet...

      The laws of real estate licensing vary incredibly from state to state. In some states, the training is extensive and agents can actually be expected to arbitrate disputes!

      --
      -mkb
    121. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, would be very happy to have a lot of people entering scientific fields for the money!

      That would, of course, increase labor supply and depress wages for scientists.

    122. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Doctor+Memory · · Score: 1

      Um, this is the way it's always been. I remember when I first joined the ACM, I checked out the "help wanted" section they have in the back, and I was shocked (shocked, I tell you!) to find that they were offering people with Ph.D.s only a fraction of what the current going rate was. I mean, they were advertising positions that required a Ph.D. in Artificial Intelligence, and they were paying $22K, when the average starting salary was closer to $30K. I supposed that these people were used to living on research assistantships or similary low-paying gigs, but if I had an advanced degree and I could do things that only a couple hundred people on the planet could do, I'd damn sure hold out for some serious green.

      It could be those positions offered hefty raises once you proved yourself, but I pretty much lost interest in going for an advanced degree after I saw that.

      --
      Just junk food for thought...
    123. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mkiwi · · Score: 1
      I go to a major state University, we have one of the top 50 engineering programs in the country. Last semester, there were about 40 new Electrical Engineering Freshmen- Quite a disappointment for me and many of the professors. In my class there are over 100 students, and I am in EE. Maybe my school is not attracting good people, our EE enrollment is way down.

      On the other hand, we do quite well for Chemical Engineering. Especially in the organic chemistry areas where we have some of the top professors in the nation in the department, we have very good enrollment there.

      I can't figure out what the problem is, and neither have any of my friends. What does the shashdot crowd think is happening at major American Universities?

    124. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, you make me sick with what you say... you must be from another planet. I have spent hours and hours discussing this issue with friends of mine ( we are all doing PhDs in science/engineering ) and I can assure you that none of them is in it only for science itself. Does this mean that they are after money only? No! But f*ck it if I am to spend my life studying like a miserable piece of sh*t for pennies. Not all scientists are nerds, I am definitely not and I value a nice car and a nice flat ( and nice women and everything that it is "nice", that is actually a characteristic of human nature that plays a major part in our civilization, I could write an essay about this ) more nowadays than I used to. As a matter of fact I spend more time thinking of what I should do in the next few years in order to have one than thinking anything else and I am not embarassed at all when admitting it. You know, I am actually proud of it because I have finally established contact with reality. And mind you, if these people doing PhDs in sciences like physics didn't care about their fields, they wouldn't be there doing the PhD in the first place. Because, at least in the part of the world I come from, it takes gutts to make it to grad school, get good grades as an undergrad, go to summer schools, obtain recommendation letters, do an MSc and so on and at the same time pay loads of money. Particularly if you are after a decent college. If you believe that having money is not appropriate for a scientist ( because that is what you say ), I say give me the money and if you find the Higgs boson, do not even bother letting me know. Really. Because I am sick and tired of paying $30,000 a year out of my parents' pocket while leaving in a 10m^2 room sharing the toilet with another 10 people.

      Quoting Joao Magueijo, the fact that salaries and stipends and so on are sow discustingly low ( 50,000 pounds/year if you are a Professor in University of London and if you subtract the taxes you end up with something like 40,000 or even less, in London for Christ's sake!! ) is a reminiscent of the 19th century where the scientists where wealthy gentlement ONLY with no need of fat salaries. Well, you know something? Things have changed!!

      Anyway, what the hell, I wish you knew what you where talking about mate...

    125. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by epee1221 · · Score: 1

      University of Chicago for me, Northwestern University for her. Granted, big schools. Then again, that's where the science graduate programs tend to be, in big schools. Or am I being woefully naive? :)
      I hope not -- University of Chicago is on my list of possible grad schools

      --
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    126. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      The apprenticeship idea is a good one but who should pay for it?

    127. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by arminw · · Score: 1

      ....Unfortunately, the inexpensive ones have all been in areas where the demand for software developers is rather low.....

      Software is one of these commodities that can be shipped with little cost in money or time. Maybe some software businesses would hire someone for less in exchange for letting them live in an area where there still is affordable housing and other lower living expenses. In our area a number of writers are able to send their product to their publishers electronically. A good software producer ought to be able to live almost anywhere a fast, reliable broadband connection to the Internet is available.

      --
      All theory is gray
    128. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by theLOUDroom · · Score: 1

      You do realize that it's perfectly possible to get an engineering or science degree without borrowing money, don't you?

      It's possible to win the lottery, but that doesn't mean that everyone:
      A) Can do it
      B) Should plan on it

      Also, going into the military at this point in time is a completely retarded idea unless you want to end up in Iraq/Iran.

      I went to a damn expensive school and have loans beacuse of it, but I don't mind. I got a great education and had a wondeful time. There are resources that a world-class university can offer that smaller schools just can't.

      It's not to say that cheaper schools suck, but ITT is not equivalent to MIT. Their degrees are not interchangeable and for many it many to be possible to go to a top school without taking on debt.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    129. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      The apprenticeship idea is a good one but who should pay for it?

      The employer, since they will benefit from more skilled employees.

      Yes, employees might go through the apprenticeship and quit for another job. All the more reason to pay a competitive salary and offer decent benefits. I don't understand why businesses wouldn't want employees to have as much training and knowledge as possible.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    130. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by SeeMyNuts! · · Score: 1

      "Greediest bunch of mouth-breathers you are likely to ever meet..."

      Of the realtors I've dealt with, I'd say they represent a pretty wide spectrum of people. However, never have I left a real estate transaction feeling that any agent really cared about my interests in the deal. For one house, I even calculated that our agent was making over $100/hour (commission ÷ time invested) to print out a color brochure and fill out the MLS listing forms...sigh. Another selling agent lied to us _twice_ while were shopping around for another house (she must have thought we were retarded?). Thankfully, we did have one buyers' agent who was decent, which means there are at least a few good agents out there.

    131. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Also, going into the military at this point in time is a completely retarded idea unless you want to end up in Iraq/Iran."

      Don't think only the soldiers are so lucky! I interviewed with a _civilian_ defense contractor who asked me if I liked to travel. They said I would be doing "on-site" support. Later in the interview they said I would be given a gun, if they thought it was needed. Holy shit! And the best they could do is take me to a chinese buffet for lunch!

    132. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by SeeMyNuts! · · Score: 1

      IMO, it isn't that engineers aren't talented, it's that they aren't valued. In one office I worked at, when money got tight, the first people to go after the secretary were our senior engineers. These were the people I looked up to, and the people I learned the most from. After the layoff, the people who were left were the "good values", i.e., the cheapies (relatively young...and often just plain dumb).

    133. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by all_the_names_are_ta · · Score: 1

      Remember everyone, if you're not successful, it's not your fault! It's the system! The man is keeping you down!

      It's funny how many people talk about life being stacked against them. These are the same people who are fat because it's the food companies fault, or are smoking because they're addicted, or have huge credit card debts because the banks make it too easy to get credit.

      It's really easy to come up with these sort of excuses. I even came up with one of my own - "I'm really smart, therefore I'm disadvantaged, because I've never learnt how to work hard". But the problem is, they guarantee you'll be stuck at the bottom.

      In the end, I'd rather believe that I am 100% responsible, however false this may be. At least it'll encourage me to do my best, rather than complain that everyone else is unfairly rewarded.

    134. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Triones · · Score: 1

      The problem is, if you don't go to a top school, your chance of getting into an interesting/influenctial company (e.g. M$, Apple, Google, etc) is pretty small. Of course you can join some no-name places first and work from there. But you're at a disadvantage if you can't join a top company right out of college.
      So, i'd say those good schools are worth their tuition.

    135. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      They needed it if they couldn't afford to go to college otherwise.

      In other words, if they were unwilling to work their way through school.

      But THEY DON'T UNDERSTAND IT. NOBODY TAUGHT THEM. A credit card is a loan.

      Bullshit. You can't get a card without receiving information explaining that. It's required by law. If they chose not to read it, well, laziness has its rewards, doesn't it?

      No it isn't, and you know it. I know just as much about the mortgage industry as any homeowner. The FHA is great. If someone has bad credit, the bank WILL charge a higher interest rate EVERY time REGARDLESS of what kind of loan it is.

      It depends on what you mean by "bad credit". If what you mean is "little to no credit history" then you're wrong. If what you mean is "an extensive history of missing payments and defaulting on obligations" then you're right. But in that case, the potential buyer screwed himself, no one did it to him.

      Just keeping believing the dream world.

      No dream. If garbage men and cosmetologists have houses, engineers and scientists can. It's a matter of will, not means.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    136. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      In other words, if they were unwilling to work their way through school.

      Yeah. What job does a college student get that pays the tuition at Cal Tech?

      You can't get a card without receiving information explaining that.

      There's a course on how revolving credit works included with every credit card? Does it tell the new unemployed college student that by making minimum payments it will take eight years to pay off their balance?

      If what you mean is "an extensive history of missing payments and defaulting on obligations" then you're right. But in that case, the potential buyer screwed himself, no one did it to him.

      So he chose to be laid off twice in six months and chose to not be able to find an equivalent job for another four months, right? People choose to be unemployed and choose to watch their credit destroyed. Let's take the Disney animators, shall we?

      These are people with irreplaceable skills. They were directly responsible for nine figures in revenue to their employer. Not once. Not twice. FOUR times. This doesn't count foreign distribution or licensing and merchandising. Just box office. Nearly one BILLION dollars in total revenue.

      They were all systematically fired from studios in Europe, Austraila, Japan and Florida. They lost entire careers they had dedicated all of their professional efforts to.

      A few years later, Disney spends seven BILLION dollars in an acquisition to replace their animation division.

      "But, but, maybe they thought 2D animation was no longer profitable!" Yeah, yeah. Not going to fly. Sorry. The 2D animation market at that time was nearly $5 billion a year WITHOUT the domestic box office and WITHOUT Disney.

      So here we have hundreds of careers that were destroyed for no other reason than their employer felt like it.

      But it's their own fault, right?

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    137. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      So how's the weather in paradise?

      It's cold. It's wintertime.

      Every mortgage contract can be unilaterally canceled now?

      I don't know how long it has been the case, but since my first mortgage contract in 1993, at least. I suspect it probably comes from the various fair lending laws enacted during the 70s, along with the federally-required disclosures, the three-day right-of-recision period, etc. Find someone who has a house and a relatively recent mortgage and read their mortgage contract. If I weren't several thousand miles from home at the moment, I'd quote you the relevant text from mine. Interestingly, I've noticed that the contracts for my second mortgages don't contain the same language, so if you walk away from a house on which you have a second mortgage, I think you're still liable for that.

      Ok sure thing. So why do they need a signature? If the borrower can simply cancel the contract at will, what is the value of the contract?

      It defines all of the terms, including the fact that if you walk away you'll lose any equity you have. No loss, if the equity is negative.

      Mortgage insurance is required without a very substantial down payment. The mortgage company is insured. Not the homeowner. Credit rating still gets toilet-rammed. Sorry.

      There is mortgage insurance and mortgage insurance. The PMI you're talking about indeed benefits the bank, and they generally require it on any loan for greater than 80% of the value of the propery. However, the homeowner can *also* purchase mortgage insurance... it's usually offered by the lender although you can buy it from third parties as well. And it's actually cheaper than the PMI you mentioned. Every time I've gotten a mortgage (I've refinanced a few times, so I think I've had four), I've gotten calls shortly afterward trying to sell me mortgage payment insurance. The same often happens with credit cards. I've never bought it, but if I were more concerned about my ability to keep a job, I would. Not that I haven't lost jobs; I've been laid off twice since I bought the house, the first time just a few months after closing.

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    138. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      or have huge credit card debts because the banks make it too easy to get credit.

      Banks give credit cards to unemployed college students. They loan money to people with no income. People have credit card debt because their paycheck is insufficient to afford things like the dentist and a new transmission for the car.

      It's really easy to come up with these sort of excuses.

      Wages have been stagnant for three decades. Half of working-age adults are not employed in full-time permanent jobs. Six hundred thousand people a year quit their jobs at Wal-Mart (the highest employee turnover rate in the history of the world) because they can't afford the cost of living.

      By contrast, my parents were gainfully employed perpetually (with full benefits) from the moment they graduated college, and were never laid off. Not even once.

      Ain't no such jobs no more.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    139. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      It's possible to win the lottery

      You don't have to win the lottery to work your way through college.

      Also, going into the military at this point in time is a completely retarded idea unless you want to end up in Iraq/Iran.

      I agree. Actually, I very nearly went to Iraq in 1991. I got orders, but the commanding general threw a hissy fit that they were only calling up his cops and his firefighters, and not his pilots or fighter jets, so the orders were cancelled and another group was called up instead. So it was risky then. Now, of course, you're nearly guaranteed to go to Iraq.

      I went to a damn expensive school and have loans beacuse of it, but I don't mind. I got a great education and had a wondeful time. There are resources that a world-class university can offer that smaller schools just can't.

      Absolutely. And the people I know who went to world-class universities largely feel the same way about it -- that it was worth it. But that doesn't change the fact that it's not necessary, even if it is really cool and a lot of fun.

      It's not to say that cheaper schools suck, but ITT is not equivalent to MIT.

      I'm not talking about ITT. I'm talking about a real university, just one that isn't so expensive. There's no doubt that MIT has advantages over such a school (here's mine), but you can get a very decent education for a lot less money.

      Their degrees are not interchangeable

      Here I disagree, at least in many instances. A four-year degree from the big schools will get you a better first job, but by the time you've got a few years experience that no longer matters (at least in the software field; I can't speak for others).

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    140. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      What job does a college student get that pays the tuition at Cal Tech?

      Who's talking about Cal Tech? I'm talking about Podunk U.

      There's a course on how revolving credit works included with every credit card?

      There's a pamphlet that explains revolving credit. Required by law.

      So he chose to be laid off twice in six months and chose to not be able to find an equivalent job for another four months, right? People choose to be unemployed and choose to watch their credit destroyed.

      No, he chose not to take steps to work with his creditors to warn them that he was in a difficult situation and to negotiate an approach that would allow him to retain decent credit.

      So here we have hundreds of careers that were destroyed for no other reason than their employer felt like it. But it's their own fault, right?

      Of course not. How they may or may not have responded to the destruction of their careers is their responsibility.

      In any case, I've never denied that there are exceptional circumstances. But you're trying to imply that because this sort of tragedy happens to some people that it happens to the entire young working population. That's just not so.

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    141. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you're in it for money, you're in it for the wrong reasons.

      That's a ridiculous notion. A good many writers - most, in my anecdotal experience - wouldn't be writing at all if they couldn't make a decent living off of it. They don't care to starve in some Bohemian tragicomedic-style just to prove how "artistic" they are to some self-involved college shits who don't have the first fucking clue about real life.

      Money IS the motivator. Without money they'd be doing something else, like...selling real estate. So they could, y'know, perhaps eat, and feed their kids, and stuff. It's only when writing becomes sufficiently profitable to be worth the effort that most writers will decide to toss alternative career choices and go for the gold.

      All the other reasons in the world mean jack if pursuing a career in writing (or art, or music, or whatever) means that you're like to end up living on the street. Or even not making a decent wage, where the alternatives practically guarantee that sort of wage.

      You think otherwise, talk to some REAL writers. The people who actually make a living off it and don't have to support themselves with some other form of work. They're some of the most practical people you'll ever meet, and for good reason.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    142. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by identity0 · · Score: 1

      I think you are confusing the question of whether something is personally 'admirable' with the question of whether it is 'effective'. One is something that an priest or romantic poet would ask, the other is something an scientist or engineer would ask.

      Reading your post, it sounds like you want scientists to be the ascetic monks of rationalism. Well, that's just not right. Scientists are not there to be your personal heroes, they are there to do science. If having higher wages in the field means having more and more qualified scientists, then that is good at a societal level, regardless of whether you personally like them. If you think that those people scrounging in the garbage for parts are so admirable, have you tithed any money to them, or donated your things?

      Imagine how much more that man could accomplish if he didn't have to waste time dumpster-diving.

      On the other hand, while you may like to think that there would be poor tinkerers doing science in their garage if science became a wageless profession, real scientific work would be restricted to the handful of independently wealthy people(usually born into a wealthy family), just like in the 19th century and before. Ironically, it would be only the people who seek wealth (who you seem to dislike) who will end up propping up science. Work in any field takes money - you can pay for it with wages for the middle class, or the upper class's personal wealth, but one way or another someone has to pay for labor, equipment, and space.

      It reminds me of the days when amatuerism was made a virtue in sports and music, because the upper classes did not want to compete in these fields with 'mere commoners'. The amatuerism requirement meant that only the independently wealthy or those funded by the rich could even compete. Since then, we have found that people from poor backgrounds can excel in these fields if they are able to earn money doing it.

      One of the good things about science is that it is results- and evidence-oriented. It is not like art or religion which says that your inner motives matter as much as your results. If some scientist works for money and their colleague works for love of the work, it is their results that will be judged against the others, not whether one is 'more admirable' than the other. That is Romanticism, not Science.

      So in closing, making scientists work for piss-poor wages makes for good presonal drama and character, but is bad for science and society in general because it would lower the overall output of the scientific community.

    143. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by all_the_names_are_ta · · Score: 1


      Banks give credit cards to unemployed college students. They loan money to people with no income. People have credit card debt because their paycheck is insufficient to afford things like the dentist and a new transmission for the car.


      Not being too far out of college myself, I managed to survive without having all my money stolen by the evil banks. I've noticed that a lot of students who run up large debts manage to do so because they spend money on nonessentials as soon as they get it, rather than paying off their loans and credit cards. I have an ex who, up to her eyeballs in debt would get more cash from her family and buy new clothes and toys and stuff.

      Plus, if you're going to sign up for a credit card or something, you should be smart enough to read the fine print. If you don't do that you're going to get thoroughly screwed throughout life. These are college kids we're talking about.


      By contrast, my parents were gainfully employed perpetually (with full benefits) from the moment they graduated college, and were never laid off. Not even once.


      I'm not sure why I'd want permanent full time employment without being laid off. I was out of work for seven months at one point, which, after I stopped slacking around, caused me to go out and get a new job where I'm making three times as much. Now, the process of finding that job made my life pretty hellish, and went through probably fifty interviews, but it paid off in the end. There are opportunities out there if you're willing to consistently push yourself towards them.

    144. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Loquax · · Score: 1
      Horatio Alger myth? Come on, what a canned response to the truth. The West, specifically places like Britain, Canada, the US, Australia, Germany, Norway, Sweden, etc. have droves of people from all over the world beating down their doors, paying ungodly amounts of money to be smuggled in containers, cars, boxes, and the like just to come to countries where a free market affords them the ability to have one thing that they do not have where they are from, a chance to get filthy rich and live like they want to. Most, I agree just want to be able to make what we consider a "moderate" amount, but for them, our poverty is as good or better than their middle classes.

      The only Horatio Alger myth that exists is the one propogated by lazy individuals that rich people don't work their asses off for what they have. I have had jobs where I didn't care for how things were done, and I moved on to others, and I am in the backwater of the U.S. That doesn't mean that there aren't people who suffer in this system of the free market. We see them daily, we hear about them daily when companies like Ford and Bell South lay off vast crowds of people, but look at how the immegrants in the West (and I am thinking specifically of the U.S.) work hard at whatever job they have and in a generation or two they excel at whatever they do.

    145. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Loquax · · Score: 1

      Great point. The concept of Free Market is much like the concept of "Democracy." America is also not a "Democracy." We are a republic with democratic elements. As far as I know their are no true democracies or free markets in existence, just as there have never been any true communistic or totalitarian states around. Don't get me wrong, North Korea and Iran are giving the world a run for the money in the attempt to create a communistic and/or totalitarian hell on earth.

    146. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Loquax · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry you were despirate enough to sign a contract that had such an agreement on it. I understand however, as I've have had to sign such non-compete and IP rights documents, that they can be exceedingly strict and unfair in these areas. The state I live in however has a right-to-work law that pretty much negates these types of contracts. I suggest you either move to such as state, or lobby your elected officials to make your state a right to work state.

      Just be ready for a fight from the companies who love such crappy contracts.

      Good luck!

    147. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
      It's not just "Business". Business is people. Businesses don't want to pay more because people don't want to pay more. Think about it: When was the last time you went to a restraunt? Okay. You've just supported the restraunt, and their employees. Now: when was the last time you bought a particle from a particle physics group? What do you mean, you've never done that?

      If waitresses are paid more it's because people actually get a tangible benefit from them and are willing to pay for it. Particle physics, now, is all fine and dandy, but they're not coming up with anything but Abstract Knowledge which will remain pretty theoretical for years to come. Which are you more willing to pay for: a tasty dinner with good service at Applebees, or a tiny fraction of a new experiment at Fermilab?

      Stop blaming Evil Evil Business and start taking an honest look at the economics of the thing from a few more angles.

      --
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    148. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Omaze · · Score: 1

      > I'm sorry you were despirate enough

      Me and the other 15000 people who work for that company, eh?

      Save the pity position.

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    149. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      What if I am starting a small business and I can only employ one engineer. Can I hire the experienced engineer that will help my business grow or will you force me to train an inexperienced engineer who is a net drain on my business?

    150. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by mathmathrevolution · · Score: 1

      You're willing to live in a garage and scrounge dumpsters for materials just so you can be a "scientist/engineer"?

      Dude, that's not being principled that's being a sucker. Ever think that the reason scientists are underpaid is that suckers like you are willing to accept shit pay, no benefits, and an enormous opportunity cost just for the priviledge of doing science? Maybe if you valued your own dignity enough to not go rummaging through dumpsters then some of us could finally get a raise.

      The fact that we love what we do should be an asset to our work and a reason to pay us more, not a reason to deduct our pay.

    151. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doctors, overpaid?

      For one, my parents are doctors. They absolutely hate it. They said, given the choice of a do-over, no amount of money would have convinced them to become a doctor again. Why?

      You spend some time helping a patient, and the rest of your time is documenting what happened to avoid lawsuits. Yes, that's right -- it's relatively easy for a doctor to be sued for *all their assets*, and go broke, in the blink of an eye.

      Eight years of medical school + residency, plus four years of college? You've got to be kidding.

    152. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      A particle physicist has a degree in higher education, thus they found a problem that interested them enough to get a masters and then a phd (or just a straight phd). They undoubtedly went to a university that had equipment that would allow them to study that problem. Eventually that scientist would either solve the problem, or delve deeper and deeper and just become a professor out of necessity. Teach a little to get the funding to have access to the equipment.

      At no point should someone think "Gosh, there's a lot of money in research. I guess I'll do some of that!"

    153. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      When did this become about writers? But anyway, real scientists and writers (yes I know a few, and I've read about the experience of writing by famous authors such as Heinlein) are most certainly NOT in it for the money. The money is a good bonus because it allows them to focus solely on their work (if there is enough of it). If there isn't enough to make it a sole income, then it certainly helps.

      At no point should someone cast about and think, "Gosh, there's a lot of money in scientific research. I gotta get me a piece of that!"

      Do you what you find interesting, and you'll succeed.

    154. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      I didn't say scientists shouldn't have money. Only that those who desire to be a scientist FOR the money are not scientists.

      You are either a scientist, or you aren't.

      The money is there so that the real scientists can focus on their interests that we, as a society, find important. Many, many scientists study things that get no funding at all. At ALL! Yet they study their interests anyway, because that's what they want to do. Many scientists study interests that are deemed worthy of financial support, but they would study their interests anyway.

      At no point should someone cast about and think, "There's a lot of money in being a research scientist. I guess I'll get me some of that!"

    155. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by wealthychef · · Score: 1
      Do you what you find interesting, and you'll succeed

      Obviously insufficient on the face of it. It's not enough to like what you do. Here is an excellent article on how to do what you love, to save some breath. Paul Graham's "How to Do What You Love". Here's the first paragraph to whet your appetite.

      To do something well you have to like it. That idea is not exactly novel. We've got it down to four words: "Do what you love." But it's not enough just to tell people that. Doing what you love is complicated.

      --
      Currently hooked on AMP
    156. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      only to land a job making less than 80k

      I make less than 40k you insensitive clod!

    157. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by bigpicture · · Score: 1

      So scientists should live at the poverty line. And used car salesmen should hog the limelight. What kind of upside down twisted thinking is that? Who designs cars and creates efficient manufacure methods, who designs the homes that the real estate agents sell?

      It is science and not real estate agents or lawyers that brought human kind out of the caves.

    158. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1
      The problem with that, of course, is that we wouldn't have very many good scientists then. Those guys who enter the field for the money would quickly leave without having contributed much when they realize that they can get more somewhere else.

      I don't see how the quantity of good scientists is going to decline here. Also, I don't see the problem with people moving on after a minor contribution to science. That's what currently happens to a signficant fraction of people who get a PhD anyways. I routinely run across people whose lifetime work is summed up in one or two papers.

    159. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't have a problem with that. Because the preconditions for that to occur would be splendid.

    160. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1

      That's what malpractice insurance is for.

    161. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1

      Reflecting on it, I think it's just sour grapes. Movie stars, top realtors and brokers, people who are far less worthy than me, are paid far more than me. Rather than accept that, I'll rationalize that money isn't important to me and build up this mythos about how only the good scientists, living on shoestring budgets, do the work of Science. It'll placate my insecurities.

    162. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by CommieOverlord · · Score: 1

      Buying a house in your early twenties worked for you. Congratulations.

      Most people starting off the careers make in the 20-40K range, assuming they're even actually able to find a career job not just temp job.

      I was lucky, I started at around $36K and was up to $45K by the time I was 25. I had about $15K in the bank and great credit. It was also _impossible_ for me to by a house in the area.

      At $45K, the banks would only cover a $140K mortgage. Do you know how many $140K houses there were in my mid-sized city? A couple dozen. And those were for houses that were desparate need of repairs. Sure, I may have been able to afford the house, but not the $20K for the new roof it needs.

      The price of a town-home was $225K, and a single family home around $300K. Well beyond my means, and I had a stable, reasonably well paying job, _and_ savings with no debt.

      Housing prices were also going up abnormally at 3-8% a year.

      Contrary to your statement about buying a condo, they tend to not be an investment. In some markets, for some periods of time, they can be. However, unlike a house, you don't own the land. The actual physical structure is what you own, and that devalues over time. Normally, buying a condo is not an investment.

      Contrary to your statement about people moving around a lot buying a house for a year or two, that also tends to be a money drain. Between legal costs and realtor costs, expect to lose at least 3-5% of your house's value. If you own the house 20 years and it appreciates 50%, that's not too bad. If you own it 1 year and it appreciates 2-3%, well, you've just lost money.

      Plus, a house isn't a liquid asset. If you need to move or if your employment status changes, you can't just put up a for sale sign and have it sold immediately.

    163. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by techno-vampire · · Score: 1

      You may be right, for yourself. Personally, I do tech support. Part of my "compensation" is the ability to know that when I go home each day, there are people who's lives are a little bit better because they spoke to me. If I had to work in a job where that wasn't possible, I'd want more money to make up for the loss of job satisfaction.

      --
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    164. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by aaqubed · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't actually help things, though. Perhaps it increases the number of scientists, but it doesn't really increase progress.

      --
      Need help - license plate reverse lookup. NY plate CSE-2960. Guy almost hit me, blamed me, pissed me off.
    165. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by pingveno · · Score: 1

      No, teachers will always be underpaid because the schools won't (and can't) pay them as much as their counterparts in other fields. The pay ceiling for a teacher in my local school district is about $60,000 for a teacher that has teaching for decades. Beginning teachers make a lot less. They have to really love teaching to be willing to take a lower salary.

      And please don't start on the shit about "performance." Usually when people say performance, they want more tests to be run on the students. Guess what? A good teacher doesn't gear their curriculum to a test. There are many, many other things that students need to learn, most of which can't be quantified. The principals of accountability in the business world simply don't apply.

      The most important thing that a teacher needs to be able to do is teach. In high school, there were a few areas - not many, but some - in which I knew more than a specific teacher. I was definitely in the upper 10% (I got a 1490 on my SAT, which is about 98 percentile). I assure you that fewer than 50% of my teachers knew less than I did. But the main difference between me and my teachers was that they were continually giving their knowledge to their students. You try keeping 30 kids under control, learning in a wide variety of areas, and having all of their papers graded. "Worthless chaff" soon becomes "Oh my God, these people are amazing."

      Disclaimer: I'm the son of two teachers.

      --
      "it's not about aptitude, it's the way you're viewed" - Galinda
    166. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      What if I am starting a small business and I can only employ one engineer. Can I hire the experienced engineer that will help my business grow or will you force me to train an inexperienced engineer who is a net drain on my business?

      Why would an inexperienced engineer always be a net drain on the buisness?

      If you're starting a small business why would the experienced engineer automatically be an employee?

      An apprenticeship program would help businesses qualify employees. It would not force them to hire any particular employee. Businesses should be training people to do particular jobs. Every company should have entry-level positions for professionals. Entry level means no experience. None.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    167. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      I was lucky, I started at around $36K and was up to $45K by the time I was 25. I had about $15K in the bank and great credit. It was also _impossible_ for me to by a house in the area.

      Yes, its very tough in many areas for a young single-earner to purchase a home. Supposing you'd been married and your wife pulled in another $30K you'd have been able to reach -- barely -- the townhouses.

      In my case, BTW, I was making $30K when I bought my house. My wife was making $18K, but she had just quit to stay home with our first child. I did get a very good deal on the house, though, mainly because it was trashed. The structure was good, didn't leak, etc., but the renters who'd been in it for a year had done a lot of damage to the interior and had generally lived like pigs. The place was filthy. They had cats and most of the house was a giant litter box, especially the basement. Getting it clean was a lot of very nasty work, but it probably saved me $25K on the price of the house because the owner lived in another state and didn't really know *why* the house wasn't selling, just that it wasn't, so he repeatedly dropped the price until it sold.

      Contrary to your statement about buying a condo, they tend to not be an investment.

      I have to admit I've never seriously looked into condos. Even if they depreciate, though, the question would be whether they depreciate faster than you pay down the debt, and whether the mortgage payments are more or less than rent. Perhaps it wouldn't work.

      Contrary to your statement about people moving around a lot buying a house for a year or two, that also tends to be a money drain.

      This I have to argue with, because I know so many people who have done it *very* successfully and were ultimately able to trade up to much nicer homes than mine on significantly less income. I think a big part of making this work is that you have to select your property carefully, knowing that you're looking for something you can resell at a profit, rather than something that is necessarily what you want, and you may have to be willing to put in some labor to increase the value.

      Plus, a house isn't a liquid asset. If you need to move or if your employment status changes, you can't just put up a for sale sign and have it sold immediately.

      That's true, but just how true it is depends on the house in question and what price you're willing to take. Obviously, selling quickly means a low price, and selling at a profit means a high price, so there's a conflict between the two. If you really do have to move on very little notice, then it may not work out, but if you're doing a two-year post-doc, it seems to me you'll have a fairly good idea about when it will and and you can start the process of selling it well in advance.

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    168. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      I'm talking about Podunk U

      Right. So all the poor people go to Podunk U and pay their tuition with their part-time wages from their waiter/cashier/foodservice job. 70 hour weeks for four years. There's a great education.

      How they may or may not have responded to the destruction of their careers is their responsibility.

      When does the employer have some responsibility?

      But you're trying to imply that because this sort of tragedy happens to some people that it happens to the entire young working population.

      This is the first generation that will have a lower standard of living than the previous generation.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    169. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Not being too far out of college myself, I managed to survive without having all my money stolen by the evil banks.

      But that doesn't mean there isn't the opportunity to get a credit card with no income. Why do banks loan money to people with no income? At 28% interest?

      I've noticed that a lot of students who run up large debts manage to do so because they spend money on nonessentials as soon as they get it, rather than paying off their loans and credit cards.

      Yes. How would they run up huge debts without a credit card?

      Plus, if you're going to sign up for a credit card or something, you should be smart enough to read the fine print.

      Fine print. Uh huh. Why do banks loan money to people with no job? At 28% interest?

      I'm not sure why I'd want permanent full time employment without being laid off.

      Helps with the mortgage.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    170. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Right. So all the poor people go to Podunk U and pay their tuition with their part-time wages from their waiter/cashier/foodservice job. 70 hour weeks for four years. There's a great education.

      What's wrong with it? Doesn't leave much time for frat parties, but I'm not sure that's such a bad thing.

      This is the first generation that will have a lower standard of living than the previous generation.

      The generation that grew up in the 30s would beg to differ. Actually, the mean standard of living has declined several times in US history, though in most cases it was the immigrants pushing the mean down while the established residents maintained or improved (immigration has been the single largest force for economic growth throughout most of the US history).

      So what you should say is this is the first generation since WWII that will have a lower standard of living than the previous generation. And the standard of living of our children will probably decline still further. There are many, many reasons for that. Globalization is one of the most obvious... we're just beginning a process of global equalization that will raise the mean standard of living worldwide, but will depress the standard of living of those who've been living very high. But that's not the only reason. Another really big one is that our parents were just insanely lucky to live when they did. The post-Depression recovery, coupled with the economic boom kicked off by WWII and sustained by a generation of ex-soldiers who wanted to focus on building things and managed their money very well (being Depression babies) added to the repeated productivity enhancements that came from the Information Revolution led to an expectation that every generation should live significantly better than the previous one. Though the biggest real growth began to peter out by the 80s, we maintained it by pushing further and further into debt, both individually and collectively -- especially uncollateralized debt. Other factors are the growth of a substantial non-productive population in the lower classes, increasing societal costs of caring for the elderly, since medical science is prolonging life more than it's prolonging health, and since the loss of focus on extended family has meant that families no longer care for their own, slowing immigration (relative to the population size), and differing attitudes about the nature and purpose of work may also have made us less competitive (this assumes the Science gap is actually real), etc.

      There are lots of reasons. Your major complaint, that employers are screwing employees, though, is mostly the *effect* of all of the above, not the cause. My company, for example, just announced that they're doing away with the pension plan entirely (which they just gutted a few years ago). That sucks, but it's not like the decision is making stockholders insanely rich... rather, it's just maintaining an already fairly unspectacular profit margin. I wish it did push the stock price through the roof, because much of my own investments is in company stock, and I also have some stock options (though I'd rather have the pension).

      That's not to say that there aren't unscrupulous CEOs screwing the employees for short-term gains, there certainly are. But those individual decisions aren't what's depressing the standard of living overall, it's the general economic situation. The economy is growing right now, but much more slowly than people have become accustomed to, and chances are good that it's not going to get much better than this, and will probably get worse as the Asian economies really begin to compete with us and stop propping us up by buying all our debt.

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    171. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      What's wrong with it? Doesn't leave much time for frat parties, but I'm not sure that's such a bad thing.

      People can't learn when they are exhausted from work.

      The generation that grew up in the 30s would beg to differ.

      No jobs. No mortgage. Few opportunities. Education and experience meaningless. Yep, sounds like a depression.

      Your major complaint, that employers are screwing employees, though, is mostly the *effect* of all of the above, not the cause.

      And all the way through this discussion I've been told I was wrong. "Everything's fine! Just go find a job and quit complaining!" I'm not sure I want to work for a company that is actively trying to screw its employees. I'm not sure I want to work towards a lower standard of living. That really doesn't sound like much of an achievement.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    172. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      I looked into scholarships when I was in college, but never got more than a few very small ones for scholastics (~$250 each). I had a 4.0 GPA throughout my whole freshman year, too, but that didn't help at all. Of course, I'm a white male, so that's a big disadvantage right there. So I wound up getting lots of Stafford and Perkins loans (and a Pell grant or two) and being heavily in debt when I graduated, though it helped a lot that I co-oped for 4 semesters.

    173. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, I've heard about this on the engineering side, too. The professors need unpaid workers, so they basically just won't let you finish your PhD until you've put in a certain amount of time.

    174. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      So you think mob rule is the way to achieve a better society to live in?

      Part of being a leader is doing things that aren't popular, because it's in the peoples' best long-term interest. One of the big problems with our freely-elected political system is that politicians are more interested in pleasing their constituents than in doing things that are genuinely good for the people at large. A simplistic example: legislators would get more popularity, and more votes, by promising to eliminate government subsidies and then lower taxes, so that people will have more money to buy TVs and gasoline. Those legislators would be doing something good for the country by instead investing tax money in research for better energy sources, to eliminate our dependence on oil (esp. from foreign sources). But this wouldn't sound nearly as good to the voters as the first proposal, even though intelligent people can clearly see the latter proposal is much wiser. Unfortunately, most people are stupid and not wise.

      A forward-thinking government would invest more in the particle physicists and other scientists, because that's ultimately where the big innovations are going to come from which will really improve our society. Our society isn't going to improve if we stop looking for answers and solutions, and just spend all our resources eating at restaurants and watching movies.

    175. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      People can't learn when they are exhausted from work.

      Nonsense. Many people do it. Actually, it's not that exhausting, because being a full-time student is really only a part-time job, anyway. I found it quite easy to work 20 hours per week and carry an 18+-hour courseload, plus extra-curricular activities. Actually, I had more time to play then than I do now. I'd love to go back to those days, except that I couldn't feed my kids.

      No jobs. No mortgage. Few opportunities. Education and experience meaningless. Yep, sounds like a depression.

      No jobs? Do you know what the unemployment rate in the US is? Don't project your job search results on everyone else. If you want to do that, I'll do the same: I'm employed and I know of at least two other companies who would hire me right now if I said the word. Not because I'm particularly great, either.

      You should read a history book and find out what a real depression looks like.

      And all the way through this discussion I've been told I was wrong.

      You are wrong. You're not completely wrong, but you're making a mountain out of what is currently a molehill. It may very well grow into a mountain, but I don't think it will be that bad.

      I'm not sure I want to work for a company that is actively trying to screw its employees. I'm not sure I want to work towards a lower standard of living.

      So? What are you going to do about it?

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      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    176. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      I looked into scholarships when I was in college, but never got more than a few very small ones for scholastics (~$250 each).

      It probably depends a lot on the school. My University had a few hundred tuition waivers every year that were handed out on a strict GPA basis. They sorted the applicants by GPA and went down the list until they ran out.

      Of course, I'm a white male, so that's a big disadvantage right there.

      Me, too.

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    177. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by stanmann · · Score: 1

      IF the teacher doesn't have more knowledge than the student, then she's wasting her time and his time. Period Full stop!
      IT doesn't matter how good she is at passing on her feeble knowledge. Period Full stop!



      Paying teachers better is a choice.. When the guy holding the flag at the roadside on his first day is making more than a teacher at retirement, there is a problem with priorities. Fix that problem and you fix the system. Period Full stop!
      Other teachers know when the students are coming to them unprepared from the previous class. AND THEY DO NOTHING Thats accountability, and its not being done.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    178. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but the US isn't like Europe and Japan. There is no socialistic system that will take care of you when you lose your job, or when you're retired and need expensive medical procedures. Have you ever been to a third world country, where people without money just starve to death, or die of easily treated illnesses? That's what the USA is like. We're a third-world country that has won the lottery, so we've found ways for a lot of people to make a lot of money, but if they don't save it and invest it, they'll be totally screwed when there's trouble.

      One of the biggest ways people in the USA invest their money is in their houses. Houses, unlike just about every other investment out there, almost always appreciate. Plus, you get to live there, so you're killing two birds with one stone. In countries where you have to rent, a large portion of your income goes to just pay for a place to live. Here in the USA, we've turned that into a way of storing wealth. And when your house is paid off, then you basically have a free place to live (except for property taxes and utilities of course), taking a big burden off your shoulders: if you get laid off now, it's no big deal. Just don't eat out and save your money, and you can live for years without working. Again, in other countries, the societies there provide a safety net, but not here in the US. You can go from having lots of cashflow to living under a bridge overnight, just because you lost your job and didn't have any savings.

      IMO, the availability of affordable, individually-owned housing is one of the most important things sustaining American society. Without it, our economy would have collapsed long ago and we'd be living like they do in Afghanistan.

    179. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by khallow · · Score: 1
      It wouldn't actually help things, though. Perhaps it increases the number of scientists, but it doesn't really increase progress.

      I disagree for two reasons. First, a lot of the people who'd be really good scientists go into other areas. Second, there's a lot of grunt work in science. Even if the add-ons aren't top notch (and frankly a bunch of them would be), they can still contribute.

    180. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by diggitzz · · Score: 1

      Currently a lot of the wages of science practitioners is earned by way of method "c". Scientists are usually poor at convincing people to give them money, so they usually prefer to indirectly impose their will. You're right, but for the wrong reasons. This isn't an issue of scientists wanting more money than they're worth, it's an issue of the people (and corporations, etc) being largely unable to realize the long-term benefits of fundamental scientific research. For example, things like all modern electronics ultimately owe their development to discoveries in particle physics that happened almost 100 years before they were invented. Fundamental science doesn't often bring quick results (but it can if it's paid enough and combined with engineering - see "Manhattan Project"), and unlike the RIAA or unions or software marketers, scientific institutions aren't hoarding their revenue as profit - they're giving the products they create (knowledge) immediately back to the public, for free, with no restriction on its widespread general use. The small remainder of the funding, after using up most of it in equipment for research itself, is used to pay scientists just enough to live, which means they all spend quite a large percentage of their pay, which is arguably good for the economy (unlike the unchecked profit hoarding). These important distinctions between science and business are lost on the general public, who just wants "stuff, now!" (according to the market, anyway), and thus it is the job of the government, in looking out for the greater long-term good of the people, to know that we can't continue to advance without basic fundamental research, that the payoffs of the investment are unforseeable, and that when they come they will be in immeasurable amounts.

      Want quantum computers? New ultra-efficient energy sources? It's not gonna happen if the smartest, most ethical, and most creative scientists are leaving the field in the interest of supporting their families.

      --
      -=[You cannot consistently judge this statement to be true.]=-
    181. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Waiters/waitresses, and lots of other service positions. Someone else in this thread gave up a career as a physicist to be a waitress, because it paid more and because she wanted a marriage and family. But waitressing doesn't help society one iota. Look at fast-food restaurants: you stand in line, they hand you your food, and you find yourself a table, and you get up get yourself refills. Or cafeterias, which aren't much different. You don't need people to serve you; it's simply a luxury, and doesn't advance society at all. To retain the luxurious atmosphere, waiters' jobs could be done by small robots, and a control panel on each table that you use to order your food and pay, with robots bringing the food from the kitchen.

    182. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      This is what Swiss Bank accounts are for. (or other offshore accounts, like in the Cayman Islands). Tell them to stash some money there (don't tell the IRS, of course), so if they ever do get a big judgment, that money won't be touched.

      Also, you can keep the money there in Euros instead of Dollars, which seem to be rising in value versus the Dollar now.

    183. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by M0b1u5 · · Score: 1

      USD $80,000 is a respectable income. I doubt many people would be embarrassed to have people know they earn $80K PA.

      --
      How many escape pods are there? "NONE,SIR!" You counted them? "TWICE, SIR!"
    184. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      Let's say I run my business at break even and I employ 3 experienced engineers. I don't take a salary for myself as CEO because I want to put that money into growing the business. Then, you come along and force me to pay an entry level apprentice. The only way to pay for this is to let one of the 3 experienced engineers go. Which one should I fire?

    185. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Nonsense. Many people do it.

      Yep, then business gripes because people graduate without understanding the subject. College students should be college students. We don't expect doctors and lawyers to carry 12 units a semester until they retire. Why should students drag a W-4 around? It's a question of priorities. Education is not a priority in this society for some reason. Tall dollars are a priority, however, therefore all students must have jobs and 28% revolving credit accounts.

      No jobs? Do you know what the unemployment rate in the US is?

      Permanent, full-time, salaried jobs? 50% Data provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

      You should read a history book and find out what a real depression looks like.

      Thanks. I have a university education which included nearly 200 graded units with over 100 of those units in upper division coursework, and about two dozen units in directed upper division coursework. There are very few subjects upon which I cannot comment intelligently.

      So? What are you going to do about it?

      I worked four times as hard and I've nearly solved my problem. I shouldn't have had to do it, but I did. I'm concerned about the other people who watched their careers destroyed. They shouldn't have to work four times as hard either.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    186. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Let's say I run my business at break even and I employ 3 experienced engineers. I don't take a salary for myself as CEO because I want to put that money into growing the business. Then, you come along and force me to pay an entry level apprentice. The only way to pay for this is to let one of the 3 experienced engineers go. Which one should I fire?

      Let's say nobody ever hires an apprentice engineer. What happens when nobody knows how to build anything?

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    187. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      Yep, then business gripes because people graduate without understanding the subject.

      In my experience those who work their way through school graduate with a *better* understanding of the subject, because they place a higher value on their education. I am not going to pay for my children's education specifically so that they'll get more out of it. If they decide to go to an expensive school, we'll help, but they're still going to be responsible for coming up with several thousand dollars per year, and they'll have to earn the money, not borrow it.

      Permanent, full-time, salaried jobs? 50%

      You do realize you're excluding a huge number of very good jobs, don't you? Pretty much the entire blue-collar workforce. I'm amazed that salaried positions are as high as 50%, frankly. The white-collar workforce is in better shape than I thought!

      Thanks. I have a university education which included nearly 200 graded units with over 100 of those units in upper division coursework, and about two dozen units in directed upper division coursework.

      That's an interesting way to describe your education. It sounds like roughly enough for a BS/BA... but you didn't just say "I have a BS/BA".

      In any case, if you think the present looks anything at all like the 1930s, you need to review your American History texts.

      I worked four times as hard and I've nearly solved my problem. I shouldn't have had to do it, but I did.

      What's this "shouldn't"? You sound like you think someone owes you something.

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    188. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      You're right, but for the wrong reasons. This isn't an issue of scientists wanting more money than they're worth, it's an issue of the people (and corporations, etc) being largely unable to realize the long-term benefits of fundamental scientific research.

      Yes and no. "Money" is an objective expression of subjective "feelings", more specifically of felt needs, so the "value" of money is also ultimately subjective.

      For example, when you purchase today's newspaper, you do so because you "feel" that those pieces of written paper have a higuer "value" for you than the two green printed pieces of papers in your pocket. It's the same with the newspaper seller: he "feels" that your green pieces of paper have a higuer "value" (for him) than the newspaper in his hand.

      What you "feel" the newspaper is "worth", another person might think as being "too much", so that she would prefer to keep her pieces of green paper to herself instead of exchanging them for a newspaper. The same goes for the newspaper seller: if you offer him less green paper than he "feels" the newspaper is "worth", he'll prefer to keep the newspaper, while another newspaper seller might "feel" that amount of green paper you offered is "worth" more than the newspaper and agree to exchange it.

      What this means is that you "feel" that science is more important, while others don't. And you "feel" this way because you "feel" engineering derived from scientific research is a nice thing, "feel" that having more physical knowledge is good in itself, "feel" that the long term is way more important ("valuable") than the short one, and so on. Others disagree, and no matter how much arguments you make to support your feelings, they can do as best as you no supporting theirs.

      For instance, how would you answer to one who argued that *all* research funding currently destined to space research should be put into improving crops? He clearly "feels" food is more important than NASA. And what would you answer to one that said that both are wrong, that all this money should be spent in actually making crops so feed the starving people in the world? This one "feels" that scientific research is secondary to the most basic human needs, after all (he would argue), people will die before those researches get results, and it's most important to first save them, and only after that to pursued research.

      As for myself, I "feel" that philosophical research is more important than scientific research, for philosophy is the basis upon which science is constructed, thus better philosophy meaning ultimately better science, not to mention the fact that a good philosophy stays alive far more than any science, just look at the far reaching results of Aristotle developing the "nature" concept.

      Most scientists and engineers would disagree with me. That's because they're usually unaware of the philosophy they follow, since they learned it in College as being "the obvious thing" (what includes Aristotle's "nature" and much, much more). So, how about me asking for government to finance philosophical research more than scientific research? No "nice things" would come from it at first grance, such as new engineering marvels, but lots of new sciences might arise from this in some decades or centuries, and those new sciences would then lead to discoveries that might be later engineered.

      What do you "feel" about this proposal? About my prefering the extremely HUGE long term vs. you prefering the "mere" long term? ;)

      The bottom line is that there's no set of objective values with which to measure who is right. When the government decides to do this instead of that, while the people would prefer to to that instead of this, these are simple two subjective "feelings" that chocked and one win. Neither is by itself "better" than the other.

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    189. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      So you think mob rule is the way to achieve a better society to live in?

      See my answer to diggitzz. This is subjective. It all depends on what one "feels" is "a better society". Just as an example, think on the expectations of liberals and conservatives. A "better society" for a conservative would be the a living nightmare for a liberal, as well as a "better society" for a liberal would be seen as a fully degenerated society for a conservative (as a conservative I surely feel so).

      But I agree with the problem you point in democracy. I surely prefer an aristocratic solution, where something that was decided is carried along years in future, without things changing at every few years. And when a voting was necessary, only people with a clear understanding of politics should be allowed to vote, not everyone.

      Anyway, you should ask yourself why an "improving society" is better than a "non-improving" one, for many people would surely say that "improving" is precisely the problem. For instance, "improved" societies have fewer children thanks to the means developed to prevent or abort pregnancy, what in turn means less and less people paying taxes, thus a need to either increasing taxes every year, with in the end even a 100% tax not being enough to pay everything, and/or allowing massive immigration from countries where the pregnancy rates are higher, with in the end the immigrants becoming the majority of population, thus of electors, thus able to change the laws as they see fit (read "sharia" there).

      Were not for those "improvements" and the above outcome wouldn't be even a possibility, much less an almost certainty, what means that a long term-thinking government who wanted to keep its society as its society should actually "unimprove" things by prohibiting contraceptive means and abortion and even by granting subsidies to couples according to the number of children they had.

      So, where does this takes us? I have actually no idea. :)

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    190. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by arodland · · Score: 1

      "Money is a measure of how much society values your time and work."

      I think it is more a supply and demand issue.


      Uh right. What do you think supply and demand is an issue of? Oh yes, the demanded price is a function of how much society values your time and work. Strange, I think the GP said that.

      Demand comes from the ability of a job to produce something of value for an employer.

      True, but don't ever assume that that's the entirety of the equation, or else you end up with some really dangerous economic philosophies.

    191. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      I asked you a simple question and you've ducked it. Surely your model for forcing apprentice programs has enough credibility that you'll answer my question: Which experienced engineer should I fire so I can hire an apprentice?

    192. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      First off, your irrelevant conservative social ideas are just stupid. As a man, you want women to get pregnant, and then be forced to raise the children they don't want. But of course, you don't want any responsibility for those children yourself, otherwise you'd be lobbying the government to force men to pay a "male tax" for supporting all these children that deadbeat dads produce.

      I also don't see how Sharia Law is all that different from what conservatives want.

      As for massive immigration, you need to be complaining to your fellow conservatives about that. Last time I checked, Bush was a big proponent of illegal immigration and granting amnesty to illegals. So being against immigration is not a conservative viewpoint at all.

      I do agree somewhat with the aristocratic idea though. Common people (i.e. uneducated people) generally make stupid choices in voting. Look at how more college-educated people vote Democrat now, and how more uneducated people vote Republican. Maybe this is why only landowners were allowed to vote in the early days of the USA.

      Now, back to the topic at hand: what constitutes an "improved" society? This topic, in this discussion, really has nothing to do with social values, unless you're a Luddite. What's meant by that (considering this was a topic about science and engineering) is creating more technology to improve peoples' lives. Better transportation, better healthcare (no, having more children is not an answer to the various illnesses that plague people, not to mention injuries), space travel, better labor-saving devices, etc. Not only will all these things improve lives, they will also create new economic opportunities.

      Ideally, we should eventually live in a society where we have plenty of free time and don't have to work as much to support ourselves economically, we have labor-saving devices and robots to do all the menial drudgery work for us, and basically we can all live comfortable, and extremely long and healthy lives. Technology will allow us to achieve this. The alternative is going back to the Dark Ages, where most people live as serfs and work themselves to death, while a tiny number of rich people benefit from the serfs' hard work. I'm sure a few politicians and CEOs would like a society like this, but most of us don't.

    193. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by AgentDib · · Score: 1

      I attended the University of Washington and competition for the science and engineering fields was very strong. I think my senior year the EE department only ending up accepting around a third of the applicants, but a little of that is mitigated by students applying to multiple engineering departments.

      Some of the difference is probably regional in that Seattle has a very strong emphasis on technical wizadry, and a little of it is probably cultural. West Coast universities have a pretty high ratio of foreign students from the Pacific Rim who are specifically looking to study engineering and sciences.

      FWIW

    194. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      First off, your irrelevant conservative social ideas are just stupid.

      This is a so liberal way of arguing. :) Anyway, maybe you're interested in knowing that I'm not American. I'm a very 3rd-worldly Brazilian living in Brazil, nice to meet you.

      Regarding conservatism, it suffices to say that there's as much divergence among those who declare themselves as such as there is among those who declare themselves liberals. So, there're conservatives who approve of immigration and there're those who don't, and I'm among the later (I'm also among the anti-copyright conservatives).

      Anyway, you're right in that more educated people vote democrat. Now, the problem for democrats is that they use to have only slightly more than one children per woman, what means that their number use to halve each generation, while conservatives use to have two or more children, what means their number either stays stable or increases. Go figure what that'll mean in two or three generations. This article has more information on this.

      Now, back to the topic at hand: what constitutes an "improved" society? This topic, in this discussion, really has nothing to do with social values, unless you're a Luddite.

      It depends. You mention free time and talk about the "Dark Ages" (an expression, by the way, that no scholar of history still uses, since it's only Renaissance anti-medieval propaganda). The point is that, no matter how many machines you have working in place of actual people, the ones who pay taxes will still be the people, not those machines. So, if you wanna all retired people to have the same standard of living that the working ones'll have, the working ones will still need to make the whole amount of money necessary to pay their own needs as well as those of the retired. So, if the working/retired rate is 1:1, each working person will need to make money enough for himself and for another retired person. If it's 1:2, each working person will need to make enough money for himself and for two retired persons. If it's 1:3, enough for himself and for three retired persons. And so on.

      So, no matter how much the technology advances, if there's always less and less people entering the work force, these people will need to work more and more to pay all their bills and the bills of the retired, no matter what these bills are about (nursing robots, voyages to health centers in Mars, genetic rejuvenation therapy, whatever).

      Labor saving devices will only actually save labor if there're lots of working people to have their labor saved, so that the proportion is something like 10:1, not 1:10. Other than that, it'll be more and more work, always.

      And maybe all under sharia. ;)

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    195. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Now, the problem for democrats is that they use to have only slightly more than one children per woman, what means that their number use to halve each generation, while conservatives use to have two or more children, what means their number either stays stable or increases. Go figure what that'll mean in two or three generations.

      That might be seen as a problem. But in industrialized countries, the thing is, children are seen as a liability, not an asset. Children cost a LOT of money to raise in an industrialized country. So people tend to have fewer of them. If people didn't have to worry about making tons of money just to have a place to live and support themselves, and had more free time to spend with their kids, they'd probably have more of them. I know that my wife and I would probably want to have one right now if we weren't worried about our careers, but with the lack of job security in engineering, and her going to school to get into a new career, having the extra resources any time soon to have a child just isn't on our horizon. After we figure out how to get rich, move out to the sticks, and retire early (at least not depending on stable jobs), we might think about having one, but then because of biology, she'll probably be too old to have one.

      In third-world countries, people just pop out kids without thinking about it, and live in poverty and misery with all their kids. Doesn't sound like a good alternative to me.

      You mention free time and talk about the "Dark Ages" (an expression, by the way, that no scholar of history still uses, since it's only Renaissance anti-medieval propaganda).

      I think this is incorrect. The Dark Ages preceded the Middle Ages, and came immediately after Rome withdrew from most of Europe. But Medieval times weren't all that great either.

      The point is that, no matter how many machines you have working in place of actual people, the ones who pay taxes will still be the people, not those machines. So, if you wanna all retired people to have the same standard of living that the working ones'll have, the working ones will still need to make the whole amount of money necessary to pay their own needs as well as those of the retired. So, if the working/retired rate is 1:1, each working person will need to make money enough for himself and for another retired person. If it's 1:2, each working person will need to make enough money for himself and for two retired persons. If it's 1:3, enough for himself and for three retired persons. And so on.

      You seem to have a screwed-up notion of retirement. Ideally, retired people wouldn't be supported by working people; they'd support themselves, usually by their own investments (money saved) from when they were working. If their living costs were small, they could also get by on sporadic or part-time jobs.

      Also, if technology significantly reduced the effects of aging and extended normal lifespans, people simply wouldn't need to retire as early. Where is it mandated that you retire at 65? If you can expect to live to 200, and be healthy and active until 180, for instance, then why would you need to save enough money for 65-200 instead of just working until you're 150 or so?

      Furthermore, this notion of everyone needing to earn so much money and pay so many taxes is an effect of too many people competing for too few resources (such as oil). That's a direct effect of your population-increasing policies. Ideally, things should get to the point where living essentials (housing, food, transportation) are extremely cheap (and not for living in the ghetto, either), so that people don't need to work all the time just to afford a decent house, and a car to take them to work. This would give people more free time to enjoy life, raise a couple of kids, come up with great new ideas, etc.

    196. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by pingveno · · Score: 1

      Teachers having feeble knowledge? Definitely not. You apparently forget that teachers must get a Master's. I do know of one type of student that thinks that way, though. He/she comes to class and sits in the back of the room. They think that they know everything, so the teacher has nothing to teach them. The only reason they're taking this class is they have to.

      They're wrong.

      For one thing, the teacher has to teach everyone, not just the most intelligent people in the room. (S)he has to lower the level of their instruction, but that doesn't mean that they're stupid. If you're one of the upper people, you should put out the extra effort to get transferred to an honors class.

      It goes beyond that, though. Many people have had some sort of experience outside of school that has given them some information on a subject. That was the case in a couple of my science and computer classes. However, there was some basic stuff that I had missed. Never assume that the lessons are worthless.

      Your criticism has the mark of someone who has never had experience teaching a class, but has decided that they are an expert on the subject and can solve all problems if people just do want you want. Until you spend a year teaching children, you have no right to claim that. Period Full stop!

      By the way, you missed two apostrophes. Apparently you didn't listen during the grammar lessons in English class.

      --
      "it's not about aptitude, it's the way you're viewed" - Galinda
    197. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by alexgieg · · Score: 1

      That might be seen as a problem. But in industrialized countries, the thing is, children are seen as a liability, not an asset. Children cost a LOT of money to raise in an industrialized country.

      True, but that's so because people also require a lot of themselves and hold too high expectations. Even if we adjust for differing living costs, I know people who rise very well 5 or 6 children while earning half or less of what (comparatively) a middle American makes. I also know people who earn twice as much as upper-middle class Americans (and that's A LOT of money here) who do a very poor job of rising even a single child. It all depends on where each person puts his priorities.

      If people didn't have to worry about making tons of money just to have a place to live and support themselves, and had more free time to spend with their kids, they'd probably have more of them.

      Historically this doesn't seem accurate. The more technology, gadgets, money, big houses, health etc. one has, the more she wants to enjoy life for enjoyment's sake. The last 100 years history makes that plain clear.

      In third-world countries, people just pop out kids without thinking about it, and live in poverty and misery with all their kids. Doesn't sound like a good alternative to me.

      So the question actually is: where's the point of equilibrium?

      I think this is incorrect. The Dark Ages preceded the Middle Ages, and came immediately after Rome withdrew from most of Europe. But Medieval times weren't all that great either.

      See here.

      You seem to have a screwed-up notion of retirement. Ideally, retired people wouldn't be supported by working people; they'd support themselves, usually by their own investments (money saved) from when they were working. If their living costs were small, they could also get by on sporadic or part-time jobs.

      Yes, true. Problem is, most countries see such a investment-for-retirement scheme as being excessively "capitalistic" and "socially unjust". I favour it, and think everyone should adopt it, but that's not what usually happens. Most coutries make each and every working person contribute compulsively a given percent of his monthly income to the government so that the whole amount can be distributed among the retired ones.

      Here in Brazil the amount is 11% of income, so that 9 working persons contribute enough to pay one person's retirement. It would work, provided there were only one retired person per 9 working one, and provided all working persons were registered (what doesn't happen, only 50% are). Both condition not happening, the individual retirement wage lowers each year.

      I don't know what's the American system. If it's the investment based one, so far so good. You'll surely have less problems in the long run.

      Also, if technology significantly reduced the effects of aging and extended normal lifespans, people simply wouldn't need to retire as early. Where is it mandated that you retire at 65? If you can expect to live to 200, and be healthy and active until 180, for instance, then why would you need to save enough money for 65-200 instead of just working until you're 150 or so?

      I wholeheartedly agree! The problem here is that no one likes losing "rights". Suppose a presidential candidate includes in his political program the increase of retirement age. Do you think he would get elected? Or, do you think the representatives who voted in favour of such a law would get reelected?

      The article I linked you shows an example taken from an European country, where such a proposal appeared. It was abandoned almost as fast as it was proposed. People protested so much that no politician dared going forward with it. To get elected is always more important than to do the right thing.

      The thing is simple: if people get to live 150 years, they'll want to retire at 65 and enjoy retirement for the remaining 85 years of their lives. This doesn

      --
      Conservatism: (n.) love of the existing evils. Liberalism: (n.) desire to substitute new evils for the existing ones.
    198. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by stanmann · · Score: 1

      In NO state are teachers required to have a masters. In fact, in many localities they aren't even required to have a bachelors.

      If the previous level had not passed the students on until they had the tools to participate in the next level of instruction, then there wouldn't be the problem of "less intelligent" students.

      That being said, I understand that part of the problem is the (less small every year) group of parents who refuses to accept that their children are the stupid ones and demands (more successfully every year) that their children be promoted regardless of skill or knowledge.

      --
      Food not Bombs is a nice platitude but it breaks down when you notice that the Bombees are usually well fed
    199. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      I asked you a simple question and you've ducked it.

      It's not a simple question. It is a false dilemma. An apprenticeship program would require no business to hire any particular number of entry-level employees. The purpose of the program is to standardize experience levels so businesses and employees can better determine the skill and knowledge level of a particular job candidate.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    200. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      You do realize you're excluding a huge number of very good jobs, don't you? Pretty much the entire blue-collar workforce.

      No. Jobs with an hourly wage calculated for a 40 hour week (full-time) are included.

      50% of the adult working-age population is either

      1) A temp
      2) Employed part-time
      3) Self-employed
      4) Unemployed
      5) Out of the work force (unemployed, not drawing unemployment)

      FIFTY percent. Fact. Provided by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

      That's an interesting way to describe your education. It sounds like roughly enough for a BS/BA... but you didn't just say "I have a BS/BA"

      I have a four-year university degree. I have enough units for two degrees.

      You sound like you think someone owes you something.

      They do.

      "Go to school, work hard, get a good job and you'll succeed."

      They owe the "good job" and "you'll succeed" part of the lie I and most of the other people I know were told.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    201. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      Hear Hear!

      My father started in the garage, and now runs a multimillion dollar company specializing in organic chemistry formulations.

      But if he had to pick one, either studying (playing with) science, or the money alone, he'd pick the science. Well, 75% of the time, anyways. ;-)

      Real scientists do it for the love their profession. Money is a means to an end, not an end in and of itself. Similarly, real business men, real artists, real authors, real programmers, etc. . . .

      The greatest things in mankind's history are generally not created by profiteers; but some of the geniuses do end up rich. And some of those end up POOR again!

      Money is not a goal. He who dies with the most stuff does not win. Money is a tool, like any other. Some people build immense collections of eggs, or baseball cards. Some people build mounds of money. In the end, its not material objects that matter.

      I say this as a strict, capitalist libertarian.

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    202. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cryfreedomlove · · Score: 1

      Ok, cool. So in your model, I'm a business owner and I am free to stay put with my 3 experienced engineers and zero apprentices. I can make the free and voluntary choice to run my business that way. I'm cool with that.

    203. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      I'm a business owner and I am free to stay put with my 3 experienced engineers and zero apprentices. I can make the free and voluntary choice to run my business that way.

      Yep. Someone else can pay to train your engineers.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    204. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by swillden · · Score: 1

      They owe the "good job" and "you'll succeed" part of the lie I and most of the other people I know were told.

      I have two points, and let me say at the outset that both of these are intended in the best possible spirit. You seem like a decent, reasonable guy, but you've been badly mislead.

      The first point is that when you were told that getting an education would get you a good job, it was an opinion and a guideline, not a promise or a rule. If stated with precision the statement would be more like "If you get a good education, you will have a greater probability of getting a good job, and a better chance at financial success".

      The second point is that no one owes you anything more than the opportunity to try to make your way in the world. The notion that if you do X the world must provide you with Y simply isn't correct. The world doesn't work that way. Never has, never will. Luck, both good and bad, is a simple fact. There's a significant element of randomness that we all have to deal with. It isn't fair that you lost a good job (or weren't able to get one -- I'n not sure which). It wasn't fair when I was laid off for no fault of my own. It wasn't fair when my baby died. It isn't fair that my oldest son has severe learning disabilities which will probably mean that the best way I know to give him the best chance of success -- a good college education -- is probably not open to him, in spite of his high intelligence.

      Yes, some people luck into an easy life. Others don't. Some generations have it easier and some harder. At least in the modern world it's pretty certain that you won't actually starve to death... which hasn't been the case for most of human history.

      The first step to succes, though, is to realize that, odds are, no one is just going to hand it to you, and that there are no guarantees and no easy answers. However, there is also no shortage of opportunities. Not yet, and likely not ever, though I do expect the quality of the opportunities to be less for my children than it was for me.

      I wish you all the best. Sincerely.

      Here's a question: What is it that you do, anyway? What's your degree in?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    205. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 1
      These aren't obstacles. This is the truth

      Jeez, are you always this negative or are you suffering from depression or something? Therapy is quite good these days.

      He's right, you know. You are putting obstacles in your path.
      Look. I rented my entire adult life until about 7 years ago when I decided I wanted to own my own house. I couldn't afford one in the Northeast, so I moved to a part of the country that looked pleasant and where housing was affordable for a single person. Got a job in the Midwest off the 'net (at the start of the dot-com boom employers happily paid all relocation expenses plus large signing bonuses). After 6 months on that job I bought a small house.

      Got married. Bought a 2x larger house out in the burbs with the profits from appreciation on the first one (and my mortgage payment was actually lower than before). Decided we needed more land, and that being landlords would make us more money in the long run, so we rented out the house and bought another one way out in the country. Now I have rental income in addition to my salary.

      The point is not to brag (though I'm sure you'll accuse me of that). The point is that it can be done, and done quite easily if you just see past the artificial barriers you throw up in front of yourself. I knew someone who was making less than $20k/year when she bought her house in a suburb just 20 min outside the city. Sure, it was a tiny 1 bedroom cottage, but she loved it and it was cheaper than renting.

      If it's not something you want to do, fine, but don't go dissing people for talking about a real world you have decided doesn't exist.
    206. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by HeyLaughingBoy · · Score: 1
      Housing prices were also going up abnormally at 3-8% a year

      Average appreciation in the US over the last 40 years is 6% a year. 8% is a bit high, but not unusual.
    207. Re:Currently not worth the educational investment by Parker51 · · Score: 1

      I asked you a simple question and you've ducked it. Surely your model for forcing apprentice programs has enough credibility that you'll answer my question: Which experienced engineer should I fire so I can hire an apprentice?

      Most government-imposed employer mandates such as health insurance and unemployment benefits only apply to those that have more than a certain number of employees (usually 10-20). It would be an unfair burden on your 3-engineer business to require that you take on an apprentice without some additional subsidy or compensation. It might be a reasonable obligation for a business that employs 10-20 engineers or more, however.

      Running a business at break-even is a challenge, but sometimes a line has to be drawn with regard to its obligations to its employees and to society. One that reflects reasonable public policy trade-off between not burdening businesses and undermining the economic benefits they provide, versus causing a "race to the bottom" where every employer mandate (Social Security, workplace safety, sanitation, health benefits, unemployment insurance) is argued against because it could bankrupt, or at least downsize, some hypothetical business that is operating at break-even without such mandates.

  2. Comments about scientific innovation by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think it's an issue of the number of scientists, but rather how many do something so useful as to significantly change our society for the better.

    If the federal government wants to increase our scientific advancements, it would be in their best interest to offer prizes for such things as solar panel efficiency, new energy devices, spaceship design (easy way to get to Mars if we had to), cure for certain diseases, etc.

    (I don't know if they currently do prizes or not. I haven't read up on it.)

    By prizes, I mean maybe a tax-free cash payout, no personal income taxes for the person for life, etc. Prizes that would guarantee security for the person for life.

    1. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by gronofer · · Score: 1
      I don't think much of this prizes idea. It seems fundamentally unjust that a number of scientists could spend several years working on something but the one that finishes a few weeks earlier takes the entire reward.

      Furthermore, the one that takes the reward in your system has guaranted security for life, so may as well immediately retire. They won't necessarily do anything useful for anybody else after that.

      When considering how many scientists actually change the world for the better, you can start by discounting the ones that work for military or security organisations, or work on somewhat pointless projects for commercial reasons (the car tail fins of the 1960s, that kind of thing). In the USA this probably reduces the number significantly.

    2. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by pla · · Score: 1

      It seems fundamentally unjust that a number of scientists could spend several years working on something but the one that finishes a few weeks earlier takes the entire reward.

      Heh... You two do realize we have exactly such a system already in place, though not exactly a guarantee that the winner can rest on their laurels...

      We even argue about it frequently here on Slashdot - The US patent system.

      So, to the GP, I would point out the above; And to you, well, I suppose I more than agree with you - Not only does the US patent system not reward those who create great new ideas, it punishes everyone else who comes up with the same idea (even if the first never chooses to do anything beyond the pure "concept" stage), and favors those who already have deep pockets and a legal staff over the little guy with a great idea.

      Not to mention that it perverts truly great undertakings into nothing more than a legal-WMD mill. "Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy... What can I say... You got a fine product there, Mr Balsillie. Reeeeally profitable. But, you stepped on into the wrong playground here. Y'see, my boss, real sensitive-like guy, and it looks like you borrowed one of his toys without asking. Now, I hate to see Mr Campana cry, y'know? So I'll make you a little offer. You can say yes. I don't recommend you say no - The last guy what said 'no', well, somehow he found himself swimming with the Armani-suited sharks, if ya know what I mean..."

    3. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by TecKnow · · Score: 1

      There are a couple of problems with the prize approach, first is the speculative nature of research and the associated upfront costs. The entire point of research is that people don't already know what the answer is or how long it is going to take to find it. Even taking on something with an apparently straightforward goal such as solar panel efficiency might need a mechanical and electrical engineer and a materials scientist just off the top of my head. Someone would have to supply tools and materials for an unknown period of time, absorbing the cost of their many inevitable mistakes, revisions, and dead-ends all without money coming in or with reliable estimates of when the payoff will be, in the hope that some eventual payoff will exceed their cost, but someone else could always beat them to it, leaving them nothing but a load of debt.

      Speaking of beating them to it, this system hardly encourages cooperation. Science and engineering are not one-person jobs, as your statement on rewards would seem to suggest. There are simply too many facets to complex, real world problems to expect many individuals to be professionally competent in all of them. Even when there are such individuals, cooperation and free exchange are key to success in basic research. One of the founding principles of academic journals is that discussion between researchers can help spot problems and generate new ideas. A spirit of friendly (and even not so friendly, as in publish-or-perish) competition is one thing, but that's a far cry from the fear that if one researcher helps another the helpful person may be risking not just future success, but present well being. If you want evidence that hypercompetitive secrecy isn't good for research take a look at the soviet scientific establishment, particularly the soviet atomic bomb project.

      Even if you did find some way to fairly distribute rewards among the people involved, the problem with prizes of the magnitude you're discussing, that would set the recipients up for life is that they remove the most successful people from the talent pool. If a recipient is set for life, why continue working in a competitive environment? Even if recipients continue working for the love of their field, why would anyone else consent to work with them? The resentment towards recipients could be huge, and even if it wasn't they couldn't be said to be on a level playing field with non-recipients. Two people in need might help each other at a risk to themselves to improve the odds that at least one of them will succeed, but why would they help someone who, from their perspective, has no need?

    4. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Prices have a lot of problems, as some previous posters have already said. But it is not all that is wrong with your argument. Thei point with science is that you don't know upfront what research will ultimately change the way people live, and what will go nowhere.

      When Newton started working on the planets orbit, nobody could even imagine that it would lead to the industrial revolution. Or, to put it on more recent facts, who could tell that creating a protocol to interconnect a few computers on some universities at the 60s would affect all the way that our society is organized? On the other side, most of the money spent on what people knew that was important (oil discoveries, space flight, etc) generated only ordinary benefits.

    5. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 1

      These prizes already exist. They are called patents.

    6. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by JewFish · · Score: 1

      When considering how many scientists actually change the world for the better, you can start by discounting the ones that work for military or security organisations

      Why do you discredit scientists who work with the military? Some pretty good stuff has come out of science developed for the military. Have you have ever ridden in a jet, used a microwave, or admired anything mankind has done in space? War is ever present throughout history, to say that the scientific innovations that have come out of can't change the world for the better is utter foolishness.

    7. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by M.+Baranczak · · Score: 1

      What's your problem with the car tailfins? Sure, they don't actually make the car run any better, but they do look cool. It's a harsh world, and sometimes looking cool is the best we can hope for.

    8. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by ajs · · Score: 1
      I think the key issue is that the number is an indicator. The statement was:
      "country's capacity for scientific and commercial innovation does not correlate directly with its number of scientists"
      If you think about it, it really does. The per capita number of scientists will be directly correlated to the satus of scientists in that society and the rewards for being in that field, and that status and those rewards increase the overall chances that someone who would have done excellent work in a field is going to go into that field (rather than becoming a lawyer so that they can make a lot of money, for example).
    9. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by gronofer · · Score: 1

      You are right, to some extent. I doubt that current military spending gives good value for money in terms of useful civilian spinoffs. The jet/space examples originate in World War II, which was a very productive period for military research and far from typical.

    10. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by gronofer · · Score: 1

      I object to it because there's a genuine shortage of human intelligence and plenty of more pressing or interesting problems that people could be paid to work on.

    11. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are typing on a computer and using a global network all developed from military programs. More modern examples are GPS, various materials, (eg. kevlar, teflon) and a host of stuff that you take for granted everyday.

    12. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Indeed, every single study made on this subject shows that the correlation is strong. Not only in the US, but everywhere. This Newsweek journalist seems not to have done his homework.

    13. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by gronofer · · Score: 1
      "You are typing on a computer and using a global network all developed from military programs. More modern examples are GPS, various materials, (eg. kevlar, teflon) and a host of stuff that you take for granted everyday."

      I don't deny that such spin-offs exist, but I say they could have been developed far more efficiently from a non-military research program which had such things as its primary purpose.

    14. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Proposing prizes as the motivation for scientists shows that you do not understand how scientific work gets done.

      Of course, there are prizes around, offered to people that solve specific unsolved problems (like, say, the Clay Milennium Prize Problems), and, more usually, prizes given out to people for their achievements.

      But relevant scientific work is not only the solution of those "prize-worthy" problems like the ones you list, but the every day toil in the quest for information, without which those big problems would never ever be solved. If for some reason we were left only with the geniuses, science would essentially stop.

      Rewarding geniality only is blindness, as science is not built upon the work of geniuses. Geniuses do show the way, but the roads are not usually built by them. And, do note, it is quite rare that society can benefit from the mere knowing of where the way is: society needs to get to where the way leads to.

    15. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      When Newton started working on the planets orbit, nobody could even imagine that it would lead to the industrial revolution.

      It didn't. The division of labor and specialization of ssame combined with the steam engine did that.

      Or, to put it on more recent facts, who could tell that creating a protocol to interconnect a few computers on some universities at the 60s would affect all the way that our society is organized?

      Al Gore? He funded some of the research that allowed the internet as we know it to be built.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    16. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by marcosdumay · · Score: 1

      Division of labor was a cause. But not stem machines. The industrialization was aready happening when they become usefull, they simply changed the small factories, powered by water or animals into big ones, powered by fire.

      But what really started the revolution was the ability to design complex machines, that was only possible because of Newton's work.

    17. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

      Most Universities in Canada, Offer cheap tuition for the children of prof's that's pretty much a guarantee of a good job and in our society a good life.

    18. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      You mean cheap, but not free, tuition to children of professors, as in any kind of teacher?

    19. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by corngrower · · Score: 1

      You mean maybe like a $2 million prize for building an autonomous vehicle that can travel over 100 miles over rough desert terrain?

    20. Re:Comments about scientific innovation by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 1

      I mean more like developing a solar panel that will last more than 30 years while remaining efficiency. A solar panel that will deliver more than 0.5 kilowatt hours per 12 hour day.

  3. How ironic... by themysteryman73 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I find it ironic that the only people likely to care about this apparent decline in US Scientists is us, the Science types.

    1. Re:How ironic... by cliffy2000 · · Score: 1

      That's not so much ironic so much as it is unfortunate. It's not an unexpected outcome (because people interested in a certain field would be expected to be most interested in developments in said field), but it is a sorry state of affairs.

    2. Re:How ironic... by m0nstr42 · · Score: 1

      I find it ironic that the only people likely to care about this apparent decline in US Scientists is us, the Science types.

      I think mostly it's the professionals that care (and well they should, it's their jobs). I actually think that the people in academia don't really care that much. Maybe we should care more, but there's a conflict in that. The general academic dogma is that the pursuit is paramount and location/ethnicity/whatever is just not a consideration.

      There's also something to be said about the fact that ALOT of foreign students still come to the US to get their degrees, though that number will definitely decline if they keep leaving. Industry, like it or not, is vital for scientific research, and if all of the industry goes away then the research will follow suit.

    3. Re:How ironic... by prurientknave · · Score: 1

      it's a actually a good thing, ageism will no longer affect you when you approach the last 10 years of your career because there is no one smart enough to replace you. This obviously only applies to jobs that can't be outsourced.

    4. Re:How ironic... by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 1

      Well, speaking as a "Science" type: It does become very lonely if you don't have a single co-worker who understands elementary statistics. Having more "science" types around could be a plus.

      Not to mention the worrying ease by which it is possible to convince management of nearly anything, if you show them an analysis based on not one parameter, but two -- apparently this is so sophisticated that it must be true.

    5. Re:How ironic... by Dr.+Cody · · Score: 1

      I find your use of "ironic" in a situation which is very much the opposite of irony ironic.

  4. USA way ahead in AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Artificial intelligence has already been solved here in the United States, while the rest of the world is caching up.

    AI algorithms have been released into the public domain and have come to the attention of AI wannabes all over the world by means of U.S. search engines.

    An American book about artificial intelligence gives away the bleeding-edge American AI secrets to the rest of the world.

    Singularity Scams, alas, are also an American invention recently on the rise and seeking victims to defraud of their money by playing on fears of unfriendly AI taking over the world.

    1. Re:USA way ahead in AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As your links point out, it's not artificial intelligence we need to be worried about, but natural intelligence.

      Or rather a lack thereof.

    2. Re:USA way ahead in AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, go and implement that then. or, just to make it easier, go implement just a part of it, any part, doesnt matter which.

      or (my prefered idea) just stop talking rubbish.

    3. Re:USA way ahead in AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oi!

      Nutter!

  5. No amount of... by squoozer · · Score: 1

    Hard work, imagination and business practices also matters if you don't have trained people to do the science in the first place. Science has all but become a dirty word in the west and is associated with odd balls and hard work.

    --
    I used to have a better sig but it broke.
  6. Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there som kind of american mentality in this? The important thing seems to be how many engineers are graduated, not how well they are taught. I seem to see this everywhere in american approach. Brute-force v.s. clever working. I personally would be more concerned about quality of education than quantity. What does it matter that 10 Indian engineers graduate for every american, if an american engineer can do the work of 11 Indian engineers.

    1. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by SteveAstro · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is a comment in the article pointing out that Indian and Chinese engineering graduates do "only a 2- 3 year course similar to our associate degreess" in the UK for certain, when you go to school to study, say, electronic engineering, that's ALL you will study for your three years (well, it was 20 years ago) there was none of this majoring/minoring crap it was 9-5 EE (and maths, and labs) for three years. If the Chinese and Indians do the same, THATS why you really DO have a skills shortage. In our old style system, you had to have had a modicum of liberal arts before you went to school, not expecty to be taught it at the expense of your degree.

      Far more interesting is the comment that prices are FINALLY going up in the market, as shortage of supply has its wonderful effect.

      I suggest we FIGHT to restrict the supply of Engineers and scientists, and not whinge about there not being enough.

      Steve

    2. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by atari2600 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      " if an american engineer can do the work of 11 Indian engineers."

      BLEEEEEPPP. Troll alert.

    3. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No it isn't. It is mearly a hypotetical question to illustrate working harder v.s. working smarter.

    4. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you have right.
      Here in Europe is the same thing: the complaining of lacking tech people is a mean to lower salary...
      If it is a really necessity of people to do a work, the salaries rise, that's market baby.
      If you tell me that the salary is lower that the one of a medium lawyer, the problem is that it is too many tech people, not the lacking of that people.
      US industries don't seem to have tech gap problems, as i can see...

    5. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Bacon+Bits · · Score: 1
      In our old style system, you had to have had a modicum of liberal arts before you went to school, not expecty to be taught it at the expense of your degree.
      Sooo... I'm not getting it. Where's the difference? Either you already have to have it to apply, or you have to take it after you're there. No real difference, except for where the money goes. It should be no surprise that the American system tends to send all the money to one place.

      In any case, while lowering our standards -- effectively what you're suggesting -- certainly would produce a greater number of engineers and scientists, it probably would not produce a greater number of quality engineers and scientists.

      --
      The road to tyranny has always been paved with claims of necessity.
    6. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Exocrist · · Score: 1

      That's really interesting, I didn't know about the 9-5 thing for their students.
      Being an American college student, I noticed pretty quickly that college isn't quite as much as high school. The classes are about the same difficulty as high school(meaning you go to lecture, turn in your assignments, and pass your exams, the hardest part is remembering to ataully do it all), but far less intense. I know plenty of students taking three or four classes per semester, taking maybe 3 or 4 hours a day; nowhere near the 9-5 attitude that students in other countries may be taking. And what's more, is that students at different institutions can graduate with equal degrees with fewer classes than here (University of Minnesota).

      I think if the US were to reshape the image of what college is, from four years of sitting through class and partying, to focusing on learning, that would help any "gap" of the quality, and at the same time reduce the number of qualified people looking for jobs(as other people in the thread were suggesting, supply and demand, fewer scientists, the demand for them goes up, they get paid more) in the US.

      Just something interesting to think about.

    7. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It would certainly drop enrollment figures. Not that artificially decreasing the number of people in the U.S. in engineering would affect the global population of engineering talent significantly, or that having a larger population of uneducated boobs is better for the country's economy.

    8. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      University studies are all about learning to be creative. If you're entering a field where creativity is not a requirement, then you go to a trade school or a technical college, not a university. While there's probably a solid positive correlation between the number of hours per day spent taking classes and the amount you can learn in a non-creative subject, there most certainly is not for creative subjects. If you forced engineering and science students to take eight hours of classes a day, all you would do is destroy the creativity of the top half of the class (or simply discourage them from coming at all) while barely changing the abilities of the bottom half.

      I've done university-level classes in both the US and in France, which follows a much heavier course load for undergraduate classwork. I can tell you that, in my experience, French students generally have much less working knowledge of their field and less of an ability to come up with interesting solutions compared to their US counterparts. From what I can see, this is caused partly by a general curriculum which is designed for rote facts with no experience, and partly by the facts that students have no time for anything but class.

      Class is important, but if that's the only thing you do then you'll have a very tough time of it once you're out. Obviously if a student spends all of his outside time partying then it will be no help to him, but students who like the field will tend to tinker with it, and it's this combination of tinkering and classes that tends to produce true creativity. And the tough part is that if the tinkering is forced, it's no longer tinkering, so you can't fix it by simply changing requirements.

    9. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by mnemonic_ · · Score: 1

      Yes, it's called the American obsession with statistics. If it can't be quantified, then it doesn't matter. Numbers are god; qualitative reasoning is what cavemen do.

    10. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Ullteppe · · Score: 1

      I would rather say "1 brilliant engineer can do the work of 11 bad engineer". I've seen plenty of examples of this in practice. Hiring good people really pays for itself (but there are good and bad engineers of every nationality, so you should look at the individual).

    11. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      I believe the grandparent might have been exaggerating slightly when he made the 9-5 claim. At my (UK) university, you were expected to do 6 modules each semester. Each of these had two hours of lectures a week[1], and a few had lab classes and tutorials. You were expected (in theory) to spend as much time outside of lectures working as you did in-lecture. This made 40 hour week, which is the equivalent of working 9-5. In practice, I probably worked less than 30 hours a week.

      I have spent a little while comparing UK and US universities, and the main difference seems to be one of attitude. In the UK, the university is expected to teach you to know a subject well, and you are expected to acquire an education in your own time. In the US, your university is expected to provide you with an education. While I was an undergraduate (in Computer Science), I attended the occasional politics lecture, read a number of works of classic literature (including the Bible, cover to cover) and philosophy. I kept up to date with the latest developments in a few scientific fields. None of this, however, counted any more to my degree than did attending parties and getting outrageously drunk; they were just things you were expected to do at university, without needing some kind of external validation. At the end of my three-year program, I found I had a deeper and broader education than many of my colleagues completing four-year courses in the USA.

      [1] A few were seminar-driven, and a few were less formally structured, but 90% were two lectures per week.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    12. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by Darkman,+Walkin+Dude · · Score: 1

      I suggest we FIGHT to restrict the supply of Engineers and scientists, and not whinge about there not being enough.

      Oh yeah, good idea, why not form a guild while you're at it? With grisly punishments for anyone that lets guild secrets out, restrictive admissions to keep out the riff raff, and your very own club secret handshake! That worked well in the middle ages, keeping them, well, medieval.

    13. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by PitaBred · · Score: 1

      Sometimes you can't make up for talent with numbers. That's why Google hires who they do. They don't just hire more people... they make the people they hire count.

    14. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      I'd take that argument too. After all, the chineese and indians are knocking out engineers by the dozens, but they're hardly what americans consider "engineers". I doubt it's 11-1 but seriously closer to 5-1 because the wage disparity is so bad. One thing I always found about forigen students is that they were brilliant at their specialty, but not very good "out of the box". American engineering has become more about the "other stuff" paperwork, purchasing, managing, than about the engineering work.. The science almost an afterthought in most companies these days.

    15. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by SteveAstro · · Score: 1

      Hi "Raven",
      I did specify my experience was from 21 years ago ! Things have changed. This was Leeds 1982-1985 and we didn't even have semesters, just three terms.

      We really did do 9-5s. Morning lectures, afternoon labs (except Wednesday afternoon) + coursework. That workload was all the way to third year, when it was lectures, then project work.

      Where are you now BTW ? In the US or the UK ?

      Steve

    16. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1
      Things haven't changed all that much. Twenty-one years ago my university (Swansea) was still doing 8:30am lectures, something they stopped when they realised not even the lecturers could get up that early. For a lot of people on my course, 40 hours was about standard.

      Our third year was 25% project and the rest standard modules (mostly lecture + coursework/exam, with a few seminar-based).

      I'm actually in the US at the moment, doing a collaboration with someone at Utah's SCI group, although I'm still based at Swansea. I also work with some people from Leeds as part of the project my grant is under. Did they have the crazy system where they numbered the floors in all of the buildings from sea level when you were there?

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    17. Re:Hmm, some kind of american mentality? by SteveAstro · · Score: 1

      Silly floor system Yes, as far as I know its still in place.

      Steve

  7. All my TA's are from IIT. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    All my TA's are from IIT, graduate school (especially PhD) just isn't worth the time/money. You can make 50k starting off with a bachelor's, or 80k with a Master's (and this tends to get you raises as well). If you go PhD, you go 80k and stay there. It's just not worth the money. Then again, maybe it is in my area.

    1. Re:All my TA's are from IIT. by The+Step+Child · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Heh, I'm assuming you're an engineering major...for the sciences (mostly biology and physics, less so for chemistry) take away 20k for each of those.

  8. other Ethnic Origin? by atari2600 · · Score: 0

    How many of these American kids have their biological parents from China, India, any country in Africa, Phillipines, so on...Just curious.

    Per million people, the United States graduates slightly more engineers with four-year degrees than China and three times as many as India. The U.S. leads are greater for lesser degrees.

    This article is a dupe for this. Groan - is it Sunday already? Cmon people - these dupes are hurting me eyes :(. Well, strictly speaking, not an exact dupe but darned if i care.

    1. Re:other Ethnic Origin? by DavidHOzAu · · Score: 1

      This article is a dupe
      That's strange; to me it does not look like the comments are dupes.

      By now you must realize that comments are the most informative section of Slashdot, or you must be new here.

    2. Re:other Ethnic Origin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find the opposite, most posters don't RTFA. Some of us don't rely on these opinions to form our own.

    3. Re:other Ethnic Origin? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is that overrated you cocksuckers?

  9. I'm not retired yet! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (obligator MPATHG reference). In fact I'm looking for work and can't afford to retire since I've spent most of my retirement savings whilst unemployed. So you won't be able to means test my social security and the younger generations will be stuck on ss taxes. Age bias sucks, doesn't it?

  10. Accreditation Required by DavidHOzAu · · Score: 1

    From the article:
    Despite an eroding manufacturing base and the threat of "offshoring" of some technical services, there's a rising demand for science and engineering skills.
    What I get from this is that if you're a member of the IEEE and/or AITP etc., (basically any industry-recognized accreditation body,) you have nothing to worry about. On the other hand, you had better start praying if you are just a tech.

    1. Re:Accreditation Required by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure I understand your point. You think that engineers with accredidation are going to spend all day on the phone with Indian techs, trying to tell them what to do? That's an insane scenario, and won't happen with any hardware work. Oversight would be impossible. I don't know much about software development, so I won't comment on it.

      Also, on a side note, the best paying offers I got for my highly respected (but non-accredited) degree were from companies who didn't even ask about what professional groups I had sent dues to. They asked me technical questions.

    2. Re:Accreditation Required by Per+Bothner · · Score: 1

      As far as I know the IEEE will happily accept "techs". I always thought membership was open to anyone, but it's hard to verify that right now, as their server seems to be having problems. I don't believe they do accreditation, though there has been talk about it.

  11. AI Unsolved, But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    AI is far from "solved," given that nobody's built a robot that can beat the average five-year-old at walking across a room or a program that can equal one in conversation. (See the Loebner Prize Contest, which basically focuses on spawn of ELIZA.)

    But some projects and resources seem promising. I'll refrain from plugging my own little project, but check out Hofstader's book "Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies," Stephen Pinker's book "How the Mind Works," and Sony's QRIO robot (unfortunately no longer in development). We're getting there. Looks like us Americans and the Japanese are leading the way. I'm on Kurzweil's side in his bet on AI's success.

    By the way, why do all diagrams of AI systems look crazy? Maybe we should be focusing on narrower problems than a general-purpose AI -- and there have been successes in specialized tasks like face recognition.

  12. power of numbers by d_strand · · Score: 0, Troll
    I really dont giva a shit about this, America can go down the drain for all i care. But this part of TFA is interesting:
    Per million people, the United States graduates slightly more engineers with four-year degrees than China and three times as many as India.
    Since china's population is at least 5 times larger than the US's, I guess China must be producing one hell of a lot more engineers than the US.
  13. Look at who's talking by samuel4242 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The universities love to talk about the "science gap" because they hope to tap into Washington's money faucet. Congress fell for the missile gap during the Cold War and the PhD-granting institutions figured out that they could use the same logic to get more cash. But the cash isn't spread out evenly. Tons of it goes to create new PhDs but little goes to employ them. That's why less than 5% of the PhDs get jobs in academia practicing their specialty. There just aren't that many jobs.
    To get rid of the PhD gap, they should stop flushing newly minted PhDs out of the system. Create a sustainable system where 50-80% of the PhDs can use the knowledge they have. Too many have to go out and get a new career. It's just a rip off of the US taxpayer.
    So whenever big science comes along talking about a shortage of funding, I laugh. They're terrible liars.

    1. Re:Look at who's talking by blakestah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I think you are missing a big point. IP generated business.

      The federal government poured a lot of money into science and engineering R&D in the 50s and 60s, and there were a lot of patents generated as a result. This poured IP into US based businesses. And they used it to make money and jobs for people in the US.

      In recent years, science and engineering R&D money from the government has waned in favor of biomedical R&D, and IP from medical discovery is on the rise.

      At the same time, other nations have "caught on" to our little R&D approach. The fraction of papers in top scientific journal from US universities is decreasing, as are the fraction of patents from US inventors. IP is being spread more evenly.

      The US has always had an IP advantage over much of the world, and any way you try to quantify this advantage it is decreasing. R&D money is one way to help. But it may be the case that we will never dominate invention the way the US did 40 years ago.

    2. Re:Look at who's talking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm surprised that the parent post was marked Troll. After seeing some of the university funding politics, I think that the parent is more or less correct.

      At the university where I recently got my masters, they would make every case that they could to attempt to get more money from the state legislature. Yet many to most of the graduates could not find work that actually used their skills. Thus from a supply and demand perspective, the university was already overproducing masters and PhDs. Yet they would still scream about the pending 'shortage'.

      There have been similar articles two or three years ago about overproduction of MBAs. Many people got the impression that MBA = direct trip to management and $$. So many of people have gotten the MBAs that although it helps in eventually reaching management, it is not a direct ticket.

      With respect to PhDs employment in academia, I find it amazing that more people aren't aware of this. After the growth period of the 1960s, one simply has to do the math to realize that most PhDs won't find employment in academia. Say a department has 25 faculty members and 100 PhD students. Assume that the faculty members are employed for 25 years while the PhDs are at the graduate school for 5 years. Now, over 25 years, the graduate school will employ 25 faculty members, but will have produced 500 PhDs - a ratio of 20:1. So without assuming further growth of the graduate school, only 5% of graduates will be employed in academia. If we assume small but steady growth of the graduate school, it doesn't help the ratio very much.

    3. Re:Look at who's talking by Hits_B · · Score: 1

      As a Ph.D. who has been actively searching for the elusive academic job, I can say Ph.D. candidates are well aware of the job market. As a previous poster pointed out, you shouldn't be in a Ph.D. for the money. We do science because we love it. Funding wouldn't be such an issue if tenure and promotion committees wouldn't put so much weight on grants for tenure consideration. I can fund most of my work out of my own pocket and frequently do (field geologist). Why? Because I enjoy what I do.

    4. Re:Look at who's talking by Nutty_Irishman · · Score: 1

      I can see where some people would mark the parent as being a troll, but he really does hit on some good points.

      It's a pretty well known fact that Graduate students and post docs are cheap labor for Academia. In most cases, Post-docs are cheaper to higher than Tech's. In reality, if we were to only train the number of PhD's that we have jobs for, then there would be no people to do science in Academia. This is where the well known phrase: "A PI is only as good as his/her graduate students" comes from. The glut of PhDs is being created to maintain the system. I'm not advocating that all PI's are cold hearted people, but you can usually tell those who are actually interested in "training" graduate students from those who need a few extra warm bodies to do work. This is why I've always gotten a chuckle when I hear people refer to graduate support as "training" grants.

      However, stoping the flushing of newly minted PhD's out of the system is not the solution. What should be done is stoping the flushing of PhD STUDENTS out of the system. Some 40% of graduate students never complete their PhD. There are many reasons for this that I won't cover here, but this is where the waste and rip-off to US taxpayers comes from. Those who do graduate are actually doing productive work, perhaps have a few papers, etc-- taxpayers are usually getting their moneys worth from them regardless of whether they continue on in their chosen field or decide to work at McDonalds. Those who drop out often don't have anything productive to show for their training, and have basically justed wasted everyone's time (most especially their own).

      As for the shortage of funding fallacy-- it is no fallacy. The NIH budget this year isn't good at all. The lack of funding for Academia is more prevelant now than ever before. If the funding opportunity was good, we wouldn't have so many new PhDs leaving the system. I don't want to start an argument about funding though-- there are so many ways/avenues/opinions that people can take on the matter that there really is no "correct" answer on whether it's good.

    5. Re:Look at who's talking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for the shortage of funding fallacy-- it is no fallacy. The NIH budget this year isn't good at all. The lack of funding for Academia is more prevelant now than ever before.

      A picture is worth a thousand words. Look at this chart from AAAS. Even if you don't read another word of my post, please, please read the chart.

      The reason NIH takes cuts this year is to pay for increases in funding for DOE Office of Science and NSF. This will benefit the physical sciences (physics, chemistry, astronomy), which the federal government has largely neglected since 1992.

      NIH and the life sciences have done pretty well in funding since 1992, and great things have been done with this money. But it is important to fund basic physical research. The tools and theory developed there are the building blocks that will be used to make future advances in the life sciences.

    6. Re:Look at who's talking by Nutty_Irishman · · Score: 1

      I'm aware of the funding etc. The reason why I say that it is more of a matter of opinion is that there is more going on here than just raw numbers. Being in Academia, I can tell you that the overall acceptance of grants submitted has dropped by 1/2 within the past few years. While asking science funding to increase to what it was like during the Cold War is a bit much, having a grant acceptance rate of 7-8% (which is some of the figures I've heard of recently). It doesn't help science at all when PI's are spending 2-3 times the amount of time writing grants to get funding than they did several years ago.

      Again, there are so many ways to interpret science funding that it becomes more of a matter of opinion on how to interpret the facts.

    7. Re:Look at who's talking by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      It's a good thing you aren't a high-energy physicist or astrophysicist or something like that, because you certainly wouldn't be funding that kind of work out of your own pocket.

    8. Re:Look at who's talking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder what percentage of PhD students leave because they have been treated like nothing more than slave labor. Let me give three examples which I know personally:

      1. In a meeting mostly made up of professors, one prof remarked about masters students "I get them trained and then they leave". The same prof had graduated a total of one PhD student, who he had for almost ten years! More than one of his masters students had their funding run out before graduation because he wouldn't approve of their thesis until they did even more work.

      2. I have a relative who passed his PhD qualifiers at the start of graduate school, then it still took over seven years to get his PhD. After five years, he was seriously considering dropping out. I really don't blame him.

      3. I have a friend who took ten years full time to get his PhD.

      As for your point about the cheap labor being good for the US economy as a whole, I think that it is probably true. None-the-less, I think that the graduation time has really gotten far too long. Back in the 1960s with expanding universities, a PhD took about three years. Now I think of six years being common.

  14. 80k not worth it?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean that per year? I'd be pretty damn well off with $80k per year! I'm currently making 1.200 euros per month (after taxes), and while I won't buy the latest BMW anytime soon (which would be stupid anyways), I'm not exactly poor either!

    $80.000 per year, not worth it? You live in a fantasy, man.

    1. Re:80k not worth it?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is the level of compensation relative to other professions that require much less skill and discipline. There is no way a web designer should be in an earnings parity with a mechanical engineer ... they're not even in the same class skill wise. Or a pharmicist earning more than a chemical engineer. The problem with the US is that it is a bubble economy filled with service jobs that produce nothing of real value, and that is reflected in the salaries of MBAs vs engineers. How this economy continues running 60 billion a month trade deficits is beyond me.

    2. Re:80k not worth it?! by splorp! · · Score: 1

      It depends on where you live and whether or not you have a family. In the midwest, $80k is a fortune. In Southern California, $80 won't get you a median priced new home (over $600k).

      --
      Please don't humanize the morons around me. It makes me very uncomfortable.
  15. Missing the point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Given that there is the contention whether "Inelegant Design" should be taught as a science in public schools in 2006, somewhere, someone has missed the point - which is entirely the problem.

  16. Mentifex solved AI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    AI Has Been Solved -- with a Theory of Mind (TOM) that is 1) extremely difficult for anyone but multidisciplinary experts to understand; and 2) all but impossible to implement in AI Mind software before we have massively parallel (maspar) computing hardware.

    The Mentifex Theory of Mind is the long-awaited "solution to (the problem of) AI." Stand by for software solutions, and fall not prey to Singularity Scams.

  17. spam alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please mod parent down. He is spamming at the end of his post (and not in a sig, so it can't be turned off).

    1. Re:spam alert by rbannon · · Score: 0

      Sorry, didn't know I was doing something wrong. Now I put it into my sig, hope that helps.

  18. There cannot possibly be a science gap by DukeLinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am an engineer with a Master's Degree and even one of those silly Professional Engineer licenses. I work for a Mortgage company as an analyst / project manager. I gave-up on engineering years ago due to low salaries, poor opportunities and companies going down the tubes. People who fix cars make way more than engineers. Not a slam on them as I am thinking about going to tech school to do such a career change. There is simply a glut of people out there with technical degrees. Try hiring a programmer; you get flooded with thousands of resumes.

    1. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Maybe you just sucked at it? I'm an EE making $160,000 a year designing state of the art satcom link equipment. The work is pretty exhilarating at times. There's no glut when it comes to hardware engineers because everyone followed the trend to computers and software and IT. My department looks for someone who can sit down and do a board design with 2 GHz digital ECL chips mated with RF components, and there's just nobody.

      Talent pays well in any industry at any time.

    2. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by falcon5768 · · Score: 1
      yes but how long have you been working at that job, where do you live, and was that the job you started with.

      Those all play into it to. I live in the NY/NJ area and there are plenty of jobs, BUT they pay shit starting out. My cousin made less than I did working as a School IT tech working for Lucent.

      Talent will move you up in a job, thats for sure, but talent has little to do with you actually being hired for a job. Its who you know.

      --

      "Slashdot, where telling the truth is overrated but lying is insightful."

    3. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by pooh666 · · Score: 1

      "Who you know" calling bullshit on that. It is a hell of a lot how you present yourself. I have responded to job listings on the Internet with an email and gotten the job soon after, knowing that many other people responded, but they didn't seem to understand what the customer was looking for. I did and got it. Same thing goes for the numbers game. Sure we hire a programmer and get tons of resumes, more than 99% are total crap. So it you are actualy *good* at what you do, you will win :)

    4. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by PeterBrett · · Score: 1
      My department looks for someone who can sit down and do a board design with 2 GHz digital ECL chips mated with RF components, and there's just nobody.

      Guess why that is? You don't learn how to do that even at university. And no company will give you a job doing that if you don't already know how to do it, because they don't want to have to pay you while you learn. Not to mention the fact that it's impossible to do in your own time because the layout and simulation tools needed to create a working design are ridiculously expensive.

    5. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by kokorozashi · · Score: 1

      I don't know exactly what you mean by "programmer", but if you mean "HTML jockey", then I wouldn't be surprised if there were a glut. Too many people christened themselves programmers during the dot bomb era. On the other hand, if you want to hire, say, a good Windows audio device driver engineer -- or even just anyone who seems capable of becoming one within a few months -- good luck.

    6. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I must agree with You. Being a specialists always pays well (if not in the industry, then in consulting). Problem is, that in some countries (like Poland) entry salary for HW designer is pityfull. I am having part time job as a webdeveloper and I earn more than a guy with diploma going for HW designer post, and I am still studying. You can see that is not encouraging.

    7. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I'm a EE, and I have a pretty wide range of experience: FPGA design, Verilog, schematic design and PCB layout (analog and digital), firmware programming in asm and C, device drivers in Linux, application programming in Linux (C++), Perl, etc. etc. If some company came to me today and said they'd pay me $150k to design 2 GHz ECL circuitry, and would train me to do it, I'd take that job in a heartbeat. I've done board design, I took Radio Engineering classes in college, and I kinda miss doing board design, and I certainly could use a 2.5x salary increase. I don't think it'd take me that long to come up to speed.

      But guess what? No company would do such a thing, because they don't want to invest in their employees. They want to hire someone who is already an expert at that position. So we read in the news lots of whining from all these companies complaining they can't find qualified engineers. Well of course they can't! For each of their positions, there's probably a handful of qualified people in the whole world (because their requirements are so narrow), and they're already employed at the competition and aren't looking on job sites for a new job.

    8. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by djrogers · · Score: 1
      I have responded to job listings on the Internet with an email and gotten the job soon after, knowing that many other people responded, but they didn't seem to understand what the customer was looking for. I did and got it.
      You have inadvertently given away the secret to finding a great job - you called your prospective employer a CUSTOMER. That attitude is obvioulsy ingrained in you at some level, and it allows you to (conciously or not) treat an employer like a customer and to sell yourself to them. I think the #1 marketable skill that's missing from many of the 'educated' folks who can't seem to find good jobs is sales. Not that these folks should all be in a sales position, but if you can't sell anything, you can't sell yourself.
      --
      Think outside the... Hey, where'd the friggin' box go?
    9. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      There is simply a glut of people out there with technical degrees. Try hiring a programmer; you get flooded with thousands of resumes.

      One would think that... Yes, you do get flooded with resumes, but how many of those people you'd actually want to hire? How many of them you'd actually trust to finish the project---to actually be able to analyze -problems- (not just have "Java" on their resume).

      In other words, there are a -ton- of folks with fancy degrees... but very few actually qualified or capable to do the work.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    10. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by zCyl · · Score: 1

      So we read in the news lots of whining from all these companies complaining they can't find qualified engineers. Well of course they can't! For each of their positions, there's probably a handful of qualified people in the whole world (because their requirements are so narrow), and they're already employed at the competition and aren't looking on job sites for a new job.

      If they were to search for relevant skills rather than ultra-precise experience, they might find what they were looking for. People worth those paycheck levels can adapt.

    11. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by DukeLinux · · Score: 1

      I probably did. I made bad choices going after cool jobs and each company fell on hard times so I had to move on. Early out of college I hoped around alot and got discouraged. I found I was becoming a 'jack of all' and master of none. I went in the direction of programming and system administration - but I did this in a large corporate environment so you perfect political skills not technical skills. Now I am just a corporate weenie with decent political skills. I get paid well (Not $160,000) but my engineering skills are minimal as a result. Maybe I am whining...

    12. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by s.fontinalis · · Score: 1

      The perceived return just isn't there on that investment in todays market.

      A perfect example of this is the premium paid for engineers with a security clearance, companies are willing to pay 20+% more to hire someone who can do the job ASAP, and increasingly ignore canidates from outside the industry. (Lower level clearances require citizenship and a pulse. Higher levels require you didn't do really stupid things. Both can take 6-12 months to grant) This leads to the same phenomena - a pool of "too expensive" workers and cries from companies of "not enough skilled workers" - a direct result of their poor investments.

    13. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by udowish · · Score: 1

      Then your in the wrong country. My wife and I are Engineers here in Calgary ALberta, and our salaries combined is over 200K /yr. You won't find a guy fixing cars making anywhere near that!!

      --
      when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
    14. Re:There cannot possibly be a science gap by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      My department looks for someone who can sit down and do a board design with 2 GHz digital ECL chips mated with RF components, and there's just nobody.

      Then train someone. Hire an Electrical Engineer and train them.

      Question: What does the job ad say? "Need Electrical Engineer with at least 5 years of experience" Probably says zero about 2 GHz digital ECL chips.

      Ever wonder how UPS can hire enough people when their ads don't say "need person with five years of experience driving a big brown truck with no doors?"

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
  19. Only business matters by cubicledrone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hard work is meaningless in a bureaucracy. Imagination and innovation are simply incompatible with bureaucracy and office politics. Only business practices matter. That is why the modern workplace is an adversarial, backwards, anti-innovation toilet.

    --
    Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    1. Re:Only business matters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No way! The modern workplace is a sensitized, racially/sexually level playing space for us all to explore our professional choices.
      Let's have no sour grapes from displaced WASPs here. It's all about Liberalism and Progress. Old-school fascists need not apply.
      By the way, I totally agree with you, and believe nothing of what I have just said.
      It's a collision between post-modern nihilism and existentialist schizophrenia.
      Stalin's victory is complete. Props to ESR for details.

    2. Re:Only business matters by uop · · Score: 1

      Innovation and imagination are definitely compatible with bureaucracy.
      They're simply much harder to accomplish than they should be.

      Many of my peers work just for the sake of those innovation and imagination moments.
      Not all of us are cubicledrones, you know.

      --
      sig here

    3. Re:Only business matters by swillden · · Score: 1

      Hard work is meaningless in a bureaucracy. Imagination and innovation are simply incompatible with bureaucracy and office politics. Only business practices matter. That is why the modern workplace is an adversarial, backwards, anti-innovation toilet.

      Dude, you need to change jobs. There are places that aren't like that.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    4. Re:Only business matters by Shelled · · Score: 1

      You just need a better mission statement!

  20. As opposed to... by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    "It seems fundamentally unjust that a number of scientists could spend several years working on something but the one that finishes a few weeks earlier takes the entire reward."

    Interesting point, yet isn't that the case with patents? Whoever gets in first kills everyone elses work. Not only that, the way a vague description is accepted for patents these days, the person getting the patent may just be a bullshitter with a vague description of something they haven't researched.

    "Furthermore, the one that takes the reward in your system has guaranted security for life, so may as well immediately retire."

    Just like Gates retired? Page?...

    "When considering how many scientists actually change the world for the better, you can start by discounting the ones that work for military or security organisations..."

    I don't see why you would do this, if you need a gun to defend yourself a gunmaker is a good guy.
    Also having a reward like that doesn't preclude commercial success as an alternative. If tail-fins sell then thats a commercial success and the inventor of tail fins can still make money that way.

    Overall, I side with GP on this.

    1. Re:As opposed to... by gronofer · · Score: 1
      Yeah, it's like patents, but I'm against the entire concept of patents so there is no inconsistency.

      It's true that people don't necessarily retire once they have guaranteed security for life. Some would, some would not. I certainly would, or at least I would get out of the rat race and do what I please. Anything that came out of that that would be of use to anybody else would be purely coincidental.

      If you are defending yourself against somebody with a baseball bat then maybe buying a gun will help. But the guy with the baseball bat will buy a gun too. It's just an arms race with no ultimate benefit.

      Likewise making things sell better is often the same kind of "arms race": doing things just because a competitor does them and consumers for some reason prefer it that way, but without getting any benefit from it. Compare with the peacock's tail feathers.

    2. Re:As opposed to... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it's like patents, but I'm against the entire concept of patents so there is no inconsistency.

      So how do you propose to keep commercial research alive? I'd settle for simply tightening the patent system back to the point that you have to have a working prototype before you can patent. Oh, and chop back on how 'vague' they're allowed to be.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    3. Re:As opposed to... by gronofer · · Score: 1
      I doubt that there would be much change in level of commercial research without patents. But it's really impossible to say, without trying it.

      A case in practice is the introduction of software patents in the USA. Has this led to any increase in genuine software research?

    4. Re:As opposed to... by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      A case in practice is the introduction of software patents in the USA. Has this led to any increase in genuine software research?

      The trouble with using this as an example would be that, in the USA, software was traditionally protected by copyright, which already gives easier and longer protection than a patent. The only problem with this for businesses is that it's not as broad, in the sense that you can't copyright a 'method'.

      On the other hand, the software realm is where many of the most stupid 'patents' are found. They're vague and predictive. Used frequently simply for carniverous operations, where the company is a shell that employs lawyers to collect royalties on their patents.

      Heck, you even have the whole Rambus fiasco, where the same company went to meetings, then 'ammended' their patents to cover the technolgies decided upon in the meetings.

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  21. You need funding, not prizes afterwards. by cerebis · · Score: 1
    Prizes are nice to encourage research and development, but it's far behind funding the work in the first place. Nothing can be done if no money is available and funding isn't generated through speculating on a future rich prize market.

    Besides which, prizes are generally about chanelling development not the research which gets you to the point of development.

  22. Real world example by advance512 · · Score: 1

    Israel. Less than 7 million "units of population", yet vast amounts of science and technology when compared to the population.

    1. Re:Real world example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well, cut out the massive U.S. subsidies to Israel and see how well they do. Singapore might be a better example.

    2. Re:Real world example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you call subsidies are actually loans, you fucking idiot. All countries and governments (and businesses too) require loans to meet cash demands. Israel has paid back all monies required. Apparently you're too clueless to do the research.
      There's another difference, asshat. I don't see Singapore training American troops or consulting on regional politics. I don't see Singapore sending tonnes of medical equipment and weapons to the US in exchange for loans.
      You're too much of a jizzbag to see past your own hatred.

  23. The real lack by Veteran · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Business men claim that there is a lack of engineering talent grown here in the U.S. What they really mean is that there is a lack of U.S. engineers who are willing to work 60 hours a week for coolie wages - which is why they hire foreign engineers, programmers etc.

    Technical people get very little respect in the U.S. Last week's Battlestar Galactica - where an engineering officer was promoted to command showed the way that the "people people" view technical people: "they only know how to deal with machines", "its all about the people - don't forget that" Of course "people people" are not technical people for the very simple reason that they can't be. The technical people who go into management tend to be technical incompetents who couldn't cut it where they were.

    "People people" tend simply to be emotional bullies - stand up to them and they wilt. "People people" tend to make bad decisions that screw things up - hurting a lot of people in the process. Mostly their emotional strength is used for such ridiculous things as breaking off relationships - instead of making things work, they insure things are broken. While technical people get little respect from managers most managers don't know that the technical people are laughing at them behind their backs.

    And yes, there is such a thing as a good manager - just like there is such a thing as an incompetent engineer.

    1. Re:The real lack by ChuckDivine · · Score: 1

      Veteran wrote:

      Business men claim that there is a lack of engineering talent grown here in the U.S. What they really mean is that there is a lack of U.S. engineers who are willing to work 60 hours a week for coolie wages - which is why they hire foreign engineers, programmers etc.

      Too true. Some businessmen realize that these kind of conditions drive off talented people. Some do not. The ones who do not are the ones doing real harm to technical fields and the country in general.

      Veteran also wrote:

      Technical people get very little respect in the U.S. Last week's Battlestar Galactica - where an engineering officer was promoted to command showed the way that the "people people" view technical people: "they only know how to deal with machines", "its all about the people - don't forget that" Of course "people people" are not technical people for the very simple reason that they can't be. The technical people who go into management tend to be technical incompetents who couldn't cut it where they were.

      While there is some truth in this statement, I didn't see the same episode in the same way. People tell me I have both technical and people skills. Yes, today that's not as common as I (and others) think it should be.

      I viewed the Pegasus commander not as someone with high technical skills and poor people skills but more as some addicted to tight control of people and completely inflexible. That's a recipe for disaster in a leader. He didn't listen to people. He wanted everyone held to his beliefs. He thought even nontechnical people would perform better if they were held to rigid codes of conduct.

      For a real world example of what I'm talking about, I suggest a rereading (or initial reading if you haven't already done so) of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board Report. That report severely criticizes NASA for not listening to staff. Listening is a people skill, not a technical skill. I've heard current NASA Adminstrator Griffin expound on the need for people in his organization to listen. He did this is a public forum, by the way. I don't know what happens behind the scenes.

      Interestingly enough, some of the best technical people I know also demonstrate a people side. You'd be surprised, for example, how many of us dabble in some sort of art (writing, acting, photography, etc.) as a hobby.

      --
      "Beer is proof God loves us and wants us to be happy." -- B. Franklin
    2. Re:The real lack by MonsterMasher · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The only time you here about this 'lack' is when Business/Gov can't hire an Engineer/Scientist for near min. wage.

      I worked in a research lab programming while getting a degree in the 80's and saw a large number of young scientist trying to get established. In the lab I worked in we had 5 postdocs, none of which got funding and all ended up leaving the field, most after a series of 2-5 year postdoc's. Not enough funding in the field. The only one of my general age group I know of who made some progress is my wife.

      When I worked in a small engineering business there were always huge number of qualified applicant for new positions - we had our pick, so it was the best per $, sometimes getting experienced people for $35K. Sad.

    3. Re:The real lack by dfgchgfxrjtdhgh.jjhv · · Score: 1

      the techs may laugh behind their backs, but the managers are laughing all the way to the bank.

    4. Re:The real lack by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Business men claim that there is a lack of engineering talent grown here in the U.S. What they really mean is that there is a lack of U.S. engineers who are willing to work 60 hours a week for coolie wages

      Well, if we don't counter it with our own political power of some kind, we will be steamrolled by those who do. Merit is not enough: you need political influence or your profession gets eaten by those who have it. Thus, it is partly our collective fault.

      "People people" tend simply to be emotional bullies - stand up to them and they wilt. "People people" tend to make bad decisions that screw things up - hurting a lot of people in the process.

      So, that is what it takes to "get ahead". Life is a messy game and us techies don't know how to play it very well thinking better mousetraps are sufficient. They are not.

    5. Re:The real lack by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      I viewed the Pegasus commander not as someone with high technical skills and poor people skills but more as some addicted to tight control of people and completely inflexible.

      General George S. Patton

      Patton's 3rd Army in World War II covered more ground and successfully engaged more enemy divisions in less time than any military unit in the history of the world. In the process, Patton saved the lives of hundreds, possibly thousands of his fellow soldiers.

      High technical skills. Not quite as high people skills. One of the most capable human beings in the history of the planet.

      Leadership is not a popularity contest.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    6. Re:The real lack by typidemon · · Score: 1

      In Patton's case, highly technical skills equals military genius. I'd guess that would make you pretty popular in a war. Besides, Patton understood what made a good person a good soldier. Something which was/is rare in any leadership position.

  24. Lack of research support is a recent thing (Bush) by ultramatricity · · Score: 0, Troll

    You may have seen complaints about the growing science gap during "the Clinton years", but never has the president of the US directly eschewed basic research in a public forum until the election of the lowest common denominator--Bush. Now, 6 years into his administration we are finally hearing lip-service about basic research (which he'll fund about as well as "no child left behind"). This moron's driving us into the dirt. You need basic research not for the 1 problem you need fixed today, but for the thousand solutions it may provide tomorrow. You also need it because basic research is what attracts people who love science for the right reasons.

    Immediate application of a research topic should not be a requisite for funding (what was that thing that no one saw an application for, again? Oh yeah--the internet.) But it is under this intellectually clumsy administration.

    Don't even get me started on "applied vs. basic" research. One of them is Ph.D.-worthy, the other is simple technical training.

  25. Misread Headline by Indiana+Joe · · Score: 1

    Am I the only person who misread the headline as, "US Science Fiction Gap"?

    --
    I can't decide if this post is interesting, funny, insightful, or flamebait.
    1. Re:Misread Headline by Andrew+Kismet · · Score: 1
    2. Re:Misread Headline by Indiana+Joe · · Score: 1

      Maybe not the only one, but certainly the first. :-)

      --
      I can't decide if this post is interesting, funny, insightful, or flamebait.
    3. Re:Misread Headline by kadathseeker · · Score: 1

      Me too. I thought they were talking about people who weren't able to tell the difference between science fiction and reality for about 5 seconds (I woke up 30 min ago).

      --
      The 'Net is a waste of time, and that's exactly what's right about it. - William Gibson
  26. Morning Dyslexia by chenjeru · · Score: 1

    Am I the only one who read this as " U.S. Science Fiction Gap?"

    --
    Even if you're on the right track, you'll get run over if you just sit there. - Will Rogers
  27. America destroyed by design by danratherfoe · · Score: 1, Troll

    To the extent that there is no US science gap, I believe that the myth is propogated for the specific purpose of creating one. If people fear that there is no change for a good job in technology, they will not train for a job in technology. The whole purpose of this exercise is to de-industrialize America and militarize America so that the only non-menial labor jobs are in homeland security or the military. Once this is done, the transition to a facist dictatorship will be complete, and the elite will use this country as an engine to invade and subjugate the entire planet.

    1. Re:America destroyed by design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your ideas are intriguing to me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    2. Re:America destroyed by design by Debiant · · Score: 1

      Well, I think question is largely about quality not quantity. Propably Indian or Chinese Engineer is not really so far away from US counterparts, but propably far more motivated.

      Airbus for example has outsourced certaing things to Indian engineers, because they accomplish same things quicker than those in European side. When something is discovered somewhere, they usually spread quickest to near than far. If non-US engineers set the pace, then obviously there is far less need for US engineers than if they were setting it

      Lot of shortages in work market today isn't really about skilled people, it's about having the rights set of skills and enought them from the employers point of view. Personally I think companies are being overly cautious and except to have everything dropped front of them. To have lot of skilled engineers with relevant skills and experience, they need to gather that experience from a workplace. If companies don't want to pay much, and don't want to lure people to field, then of course is born egg and chicken people. HIghly skilled experts can't exists, if skilled people don't feel they're needed and companies don't want to invest to them.

      Indian and Chinese have honed and invested to engineering a lot. Not-so-few Chinse have in past decadedes been educated in US. I also suspect that lot of engineering education is done in both countries by people who have been educated in US.

      Thus the whole argumentt that the numbers somehow prove there isn't lack of engineers in US and nothing to worry as engineers in India and China are less good, is bit questionable I think. They may actually be same or better there.

      --
      Nobody knows the trouble I've seen, nobody knows has the trouble seen me, even I sometimes wonder why I write these line
    3. Re:America destroyed by design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First semester at college, eh?

    4. Re:America destroyed by design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry about us on the "rest of the planet" side. We'd win.
      OK, it'd probably be no-score draw if it went nuclear.

    5. Re:America destroyed by design by Ullteppe · · Score: 1
      Hmmm. I don't think I buy this. The Bush administration has poured billions of dollars into Iraq, and they don't look very subjugated yet. If anything, I think that the post-Cold War era has shown that military force is much less potent than before, and that economic power is the most important variable.

      If the US puts even more money into the military than now, it will only serve to weaken the US where it matters. The country will basically go bankrupt, and will not be able to compete with countries who spend much less of their BNP on military matters.

    6. Re:America destroyed by design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually this guy is a friend of mine who has 3 degrees and is working on a fourth.

    7. Re:America destroyed by design by woolio · · Score: 1

      Well, I think the American public will prevent this....

      When they find out that the next year's new cell phone won't have the promised 3D holographic screensaver, they will rebel.

    8. Re:America destroyed by design by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anyone who has three degrees and is working on the fourth either: 1) had plenty of family money to begin with or 2) learned how to game the system to be a career student. Either way they'll get no easy breaks from me.

    9. Re:America destroyed by design by danratherfan · · Score: 1

      or 3) Loves education a lot more than you do. What do you mean no easy breaks from you? Who the f*** do you think you are? He didn't do anything except upset your puritan sensibilities you genetic sh*t.

    10. Re:America destroyed by design by pommiekiwifruit · · Score: 1

      But that strategy worked so well for the Soviet Union! Oh wait...

    11. Re:America destroyed by design by jesterpilot · · Score: 1

      Traditionally, fascist dictators always hated engineers and loathed industry. When technology enters a country, the military is doomed.

      --
      Trust me, I work for the government.
  28. Science gap is not possible in a free country by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As demand rises for engineers, so will wages, especially wages to freshly graduated college students.
    If that happens, students will stampede to get engineering degrees and voila, no more shortage. Let's be realistic, these things take care of themselves and don't require organized management.

  29. Uh-oh by Hosiah · · Score: 1
    Hard work, imagination and business practices also matter.

    A mere lack of scientists could be recovered from. But look at it through these three traits, and now the US is doomed.

  30. Take care of our own, *first*. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    ...or maybe you can do a lasting solution by removing exhorbitant tuition(3000 max for citizens for unrestricted access to Ivy level) and overrestrictive admissions (the cat's out of the bag, you might as well let the Midwest in with no conditions at all, and all the same benefits upon exiting) out of the equation.

    Market based solutions do not work in relation to things such as jobs. They ignore external factors and do not provide favorable transition for displaced. They only destroy upward mobility.

    Why, yes Carly, an American has a right to his job, even if it means you suffer.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  31. Weak excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or people could realize that $100K universites are just a form of ass rape. I went to a state college and make well into six figures in engineering because I damned good at it. After four years in the industry no one gives a damn where you went to college. If you have six figure debts for an engineering degree, you were ass raped.

    1. Re:Weak excuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When was this? Did you happen to be a resident in the state you went to school? You're lucky then. At quality state schools, out-of-staters are going to be paying as much as many private schools for tuition. At UW-Madison, non-resident undergraduate pay over 20K for tuition alone. Add in books, fees, and the ridiculous rent here, and any 4-5 year degree is well over 100K. If mom and dad aren't rich, how are you going to afford that? Loans. And this is a state school that's known for being a "bargain". 100K on an education is the norm these days. It wasn't 10 years ago, but it is now.

    2. Re:Weak excuse by epee1221 · · Score: 1

      At quality state schools, out-of-staters are going to be paying as much as many private schools for tuition.
      I'm an out-of-stater paying about 16k each year. I also could have gone to a school in my home state for about the same price.

      And this is a state school that's known for being a "bargain".
      Is it listed as a bargain for out-of-staters or in-staters? Most lists I've seen assume in-state tuition.

      --
      "The use-mention distinction" is not "enforced here."
  32. Mine shaft gap? by slasho81 · · Score: 1

    Mr. President, we must not allow a science gap!

    1. Re:Mine shaft gap? by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      First he's got to get over his brain gap.....

  33. Degrees neither necessary nor sufficient for $ by j0el · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, Larry Ellison, all deeply involved in technology but no degree for them. While not even close to their level i left college and joined the Navy. In 1972 I started working in tech. Did some systems programming. Did some hardware design and was deeply involved in a few very significant products. Put 2 kids through college, eventually got a BS an MS and an MBA at night cause I wanted to. Have anice house. Had a nice airplane. Lived in 3 countries. Retired froma major vendor after 33 years. Started a second career with a small "free software" company and love it. And I am no genius.

    And I know some bright people do have degrees. rms for example

    Point: While I would have been disappointed if my kids did not get degrees, I wouldn't confuse education with diplomas.

    1. Re:Degrees neither necessary nor sufficient for $ by typidemon · · Score: 1

      Nice, we should all stop going to uni right now! Oh wait, how many college dropouts are living below the poverty line?

  34. Amen, because. . . by RossumsChild · · Score: 1

    . . .I sure as hell don't want moneybags here trying to design my next car while all he can think about is how he's going to be able to afford his in-ground pool.

  35. You have a point, but... by Mutatis+Mutandis · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Hard work, imagination and business practices also matter.

    In my experience, many organisations are organized in such way that it is barely possible for scientists to run a project successfully to completion. The more complacent they are, the more dysfunctional they tend to be.

    The reason is simple. To get a scientifict project (in fact any project) near its goalpost, you typically need to coordinate a number of elements in an intelligent manner: People, for you do need a certain critical mass of scientific knowledge to get a good team; space, in terms of laboratories and offices; equipment; engineering support; money; computer hardware and software; and so on. One missing element can be enough to ruin your day.

    Now look at the typical "professionally" managed organisation and you will see that rather than coordinated, these elements tend to be fragmented, sometimes very highly fragemented, each with its own manager. Who often enough will fiercely defend his turf against any interference and takes care great to ensure that any inter-departemental coordination is only done at the highest possible level.

    The theory of it usually is that the scientists need to be "supported" by taking the responsibility for budgets and computer and other circumstantial elements out of their hands, to leave them doing what they are best at, science. Scientists are supposed to be no good at administration. But in practice it only takes two breaths for these "supporting" departments to effectively take over control of the organisation, forcing the scientists to spend more of their time on fighting the system than on research.

    It would actually be far more efficient to hire more scientists and to let them improvise things in their own sloppy way, than to hire managers and administrators who are supposed to be more efficient.

    1. Re:You have a point, but... by ErichTheRed · · Score: 1

      It would actually be far more efficient to hire more scientists and to let them improvise things in their own sloppy way, than to hire managers and administrators who are supposed to be more efficient.

      In the IT world, I used to agree with you. Then I saw what happens to very large organizations when their IT dept. is run like that. This works very well for a time, because projects do get completed faster and everything's "agile." Once it scales beyond some critical point, problems happen. Your chief technology wizards quit, or are sidetracked with a million other things. Becuase there was no discipline in the beginning, nothing was documented, and the systems were allowed to grow uncontrolled.

      Now, the opposite extreme is to hire hundreds of PMI-certified Project Managers to implement a Project Management Office and centralize resource scheduling. This leads to endless bureaucracy, and nothing gets done. I used to think that project management was a good idea, but if left to its own devices, the paperwork alone can cut into productive work. Think of the differences in workflow in two organizations:

      "Sloppy" unmanaged organization:
      - Someone comes in and says "we need X, Y and Z."
      - Technical guys know what to do, and do it.
      - Next project.

      Rigid Project Management Office:
      - Someone comes in and says "we need X, Y and Z."
      - Submits a work request to PMO.
      - PMO coordinates a feasbility study meeting.
      - A group of techies sits with PMO and reviews X, Y, Z project proposal.
      - Inevitably, gaps are found, and PMO is sent back to get clarification.
      - Repeat last 3 steps n times, where n is proportional to project complexity.
      - PMO coordinates a meeting to draw up statement of work.
      - SOW presented and accepted.
      - Kick off meeting is arranged.
      - Resource scheduling occurs. Techies are assigned between dates a and b.
      - All the while, endless status meetings with the PMO.
      - Schedule slips.
      - More status meetings, and revisions to SOW.
      - Schedule slips more.
      - More status meetings...
      - Eventually, project is either somewhat completed, dropped, or some other disposition.
      - Mountains of documentation are written as part of the project plan.

      Now, it's our jobs in the next evolution of IT to come up with a happy medium. I'm fully convinced that we don't need the same rigid framework as civil engineering projects have when they're building bridges, etc.

    2. Re:You have a point, but... by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      Now, it's our jobs in the next evolution of IT to come up with a happy medium. I'm fully convinced that we don't need the same rigid framework as civil engineering projects have when they're building bridges, etc.

      Suggestions? My preference is to have techs running the show, with project managers dealing with schedules and facilitating dialogue on important things like overly aggressive schedules and external dependencies. Combine that with a somewhat rigorous development plan based on solid requirements and phased implementation, and I think you've got a winner.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
  36. Wow by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My hat is off to you, Capt. Tinfoil.

    You may just be oursavior yet.

    Again... wow.

  37. The Myth(?) of the Retiring Scientists by Myrmidon · · Score: 3, Insightful
    While no gap exists yet, an exodus of retiring U.S. scientists could create one.


    I couldn't find any discussion of this statement in the cited article, so the submitter appears to have pulled it out of an unspecified nether region. Is there any actual evidence to support it?

    When I started college 17 years ago the conventional wisdom was that the job market for academic scientists was tight, but that it was bound to improve as the big cohort of professors who got tenure in the 1950s and 1960s -- when colleges and universities were expanding like mad -- retired and opened up positions for new folks.

    Now, 17 years later, the job market for academic scientists seems to be as tight as ever. So I'm pretty skeptical of the old "imminent retirement" argument. As the article does point out, the rate at which science and engineering degrees are awarded has grown by 38% over the last two decades. Doesn't this growth more than assure that we can replace our existing scientists as they retire? Has the rate at which scientists retire really grown by more than 38% since 1990?
    1. Re:The Myth(?) of the Retiring Scientists by Myrmidon · · Score: 1

      Oops, my bad, I finally found the sentence in the original article. There's no supporting argument, though -- so it is Samuelson who has pulled this old argument from an unspecified nether region.

    2. Re:The Myth(?) of the Retiring Scientists by jhp64 · · Score: 1
      I think the conventional wisdom about people about to retire was right, but then a few things happened in the early 90s to screw things up:
      • Mandatory retirement ages went away, so many retirements came later than expected.
      • The Soviet Union collapsed, leaving lots of very talented scientists and engineers without reasonably paying work.
      • Tiananmen Square happened, and the US responded by changing immigration law somewhat; I think they allowed Chinese students currently in the US to remain there, instead of requiring them to return to China.
      • There was a recession in many parts of the US, which meant that when some people retired, they were not replaced -- their positions just disappeared.
      • There were probably other factors (like other changes in US immigration law) which also had an effect, but they are harder to document (and also more likely to start flame wars, hence omitted).

      So the job market got tighter because of the recession, there weren't as many positions as expected because retirements were delayed, and the market was flooded with top-quality people because of problems in the former Soviet Union and China. Boom: no academic jobs.

      Regarding the growth rate of new PhDs, I think the relevant questions are: how many of them are US citizens or permanent residents? How many of them want academic jobs? And conversely, how many non-academic jobs expect PhDs? Has this number increased significantly, either for good reasons or because of degree-inflation in job requirements?

      --
      This is the way Bi-Coloured Python-Rock-Snakes always talk.
  38. There's a bigger shift afoot! by ErichTheRed · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As several other posters mentioned, American students are becoming very worried about spending a lot of time in school and a lot of money pursuing a degree for which there will be a high supply and low demand. Doctors go into huge amounts of debt, but they know that the debt they incur now will more than pay for itself later. Same with lawyers...these two professions are immune to economic downturns, and we sure don't complain about a shortage of either!

    Now consider a student who wants to do pure engineering or scientific research. PhD's just aren't drawing the same salaries or lifetime employment that they used to. Tenured professors are an exception, but corporate research labs (AT&T, IBM, Lockheed, etc.) would invest im employees for the long term and make sure they were able to continue producing research. Today, every employee, scientific or not, is interchangeable. If you don't want to work for $60K, someone else will. Add to this fact that there are some areas of the country whose housing prices and cost of living are way out of control (New York, California, Boston area, etc.) and they just happen to have the scientific jobs right in that area (pharmaceuticals, Silicon Valley, MIT, etc.) Another point to consider is that you're out of the workforce for an additional 4+ years. Traditional pensions which kept workers comfortable for life are gone, and you have to do it yourself with a 401K and such. If you don't start right when you're 21 and get your first job, you can miss out on huge amounts of money later on in life. This is part of the reason why PhD's demand higher salaries...some of them are starting their retirement savings at 30!

    Ask yourself this: Would you be willing to watch your less-educated peers flip real estate or crawl their way up the MBA ladder, while you made comparatively less doing much more important work? For some, the answer is yes, and those are the people who should be in their chosen fields. I'm not a scientist, but I graduated with a scientific degree. I work in IT, and there's a definite difference between someone who took an MCSE course, and someone who takes the time to learn the systems they're working on inside and out. The second type of person would probably answer "yes" to this question, simply because they enjoy challenging work. Managers make more money, sure, but it is a totally different skill set. (If you think your boss isn't doing anything, look again. Good ones are constantly keeping their techies shielded from political battles so they can do their jobs.)

    I also think the gap is made up by foriegn students, just an empirical observations by educators I know. Universities can't find enough good talent at home, but they still need to fill positions. Science in this country just isn't as important anymore, I guess.

    One change that I'd like to see happen in general is a return to a stable workplace. Back in the day, it was unrealistic to switch jobs every few years and have to constantly worry about layoffs. A lot of technical people I know aren't buying houses or other things simply because they don't know whether their job will be yanked out from under them. If employers were forced to really think about their hiring as an investment, things would change for the better. The prosperity of the 50s and 60s was a result of a strong middle class with stable paychecks who could afford to buy things. Companies who hire someone with the intention of keeping them, giving them training, and putting them in places where they'll be productive will eventually see ROI. The other thing I'd like to change is the promotion structure in companies. Pure people management should not be the way to reward great technical people; it leads to ineffective management. Instead, identify your best leadership talent and technical talent, and compensate them on two parallel tracks. The more you produce, the better your compensation, in either track. That would be a fair way to go.

    1. Re:There's a bigger shift afoot! by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Also having science degrees, and having worked at Microsoft from time to time in their retail tech support (when it was still in this country), I can attest to the number of know-nothing MSCE's who called in for the lamest of tech problems and installs.

      Boggles the mind.....

    2. Re:There's a bigger shift afoot! by pipingguy · · Score: 1


      Today, every employee, scientific or not, is interchangeable.

      This belief is directly due to "computerization" of the workforce, as perceived by managers and those that have little or no experience in the trenches.

      The logical conclusion to constantly improving productivity is to maximize the use of computers and minimize the use of people.

  39. real estate? by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    The real money is in politics.. Little work, grand rewards in both power and funding.. And you dont even need to goto school..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  40. OTH, fewer know what defines journalism by Zero__Kelvin · · Score: 2, Interesting



    "There are more science and engineering students than ever, says one Newsweek journalist."

    True Journalists don't make claims, they report facts. In this case, the journalist is real; he reports facts (he is one of the real journalists, at least in this case.) The NSF provides facts that prove that more scientists and engineers graduated in 2004 than ever before.

    The real gap in the US is a different educational one. There are plenty of bright people, graduating and contributing, as the facts show. Empiral evidence, however, points us in the direction of concluding that there is a large contingent of US citizens who have no idea what to believe, cannot tell the difference between a fact and a claim, and ultimately get confused and just choose to believe what they want to, or have to to, to deal with the insecure feeling one gets when the people in control of their lives cannot be trusted.

    I recently revised my theory on Bush. I do not believe he was behind the tainted election results. Those who fixed the election chose him because he falls into the latter category. He is willing to say "I have the authority to do it, or - it is true - or -it is a good idea - for the Bible/my advisors tell me so." Bush is not a puppeteer; he is the favorite puppet of the military industrial complex, American corporations, and those who would twist and manipulate the words of Christ and the Bible to facilitate their own (not very well) hidden agendas.

    Sadly ironic ... the guy was never once elected to office by the American people :-(

    Chum the waters with enough bogus journalists and you can say whatever you want. The proverbial fourth part of the checks and balances system doesn't exist anymore, because people will think "that guy is just offering up his opinion ... he is after all just another journalst. We all know how those guys work."

    There is a lack of qualified journalists in the US, not scientists, and that is where the real problem lies.

    --
    Guns don't kill people; Physics kills people! - John Lithgow as Dick Solomon on Third Rock From The Sun
    1. Re:OTH, fewer know what defines journalism by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the most intelligent post of the century (and certainly today)!!!!

  41. not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Considering that weapons systems are the only place where R&D funding is going up in the government, are you sure this is pure tinfoil hat? Here's a prime example from just this past week. Witness the drooling dweeb's recent visit to colorado where he was going to be touting the new "war on the addiction to oil". RIGHT BEFORE he got there they were laying off alternative energy researchers. Sensing a PR disaster they quickly rehired them, but...they still have cut funding for the entire department there.

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2006/02/20/AR2006022001717.html

    The loons in his admin only have serious money for the war machine and halliburton and KBR to buid new "relocation camps" and to keep on data mining to surveil the population. Do you have any idea what they pay grunting jock mercenaries in iraq? They call them "security contractors". How about upwards of a grand a day? For what, look at Iraq now, it's a total disaster. Bungled to start with and they have gone downhill since then. BUT they admit to 200 BILLION a year and some researchers estimate it could hit two TRILLION before long in over all expenses.

    Look at what they do and where the money goes, the parent post is a lot closer to reality then your lame "tinfoil hat" comment.

  42. Inflated figures? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

    I just recently complete an M.S. in Electrical Engineering at Rutgers University.

    Despite being a state school where New Jersey residents get *DIRT CHEAP* tuition (thus nullifying the cost/reward argument some people have made against graduate school), the graduate engineering programs at Rutgers (at least EE) are utterly dominated by foreign students. In many of my classes, I was the *ONLY* U.S. citizen out of 10-20 students in the class. Figures of enrollment in U.S. graduate schools are most definately not inflated by any means. The author clearly has no clue - he's been looking at papers and studies (probably finding ones biased in his desired direction), he hasn't actually experienced first hand the sad state of non-foriegn enrollment in U.S. graduate programs.

    Even though I feel that Rutgers' program was substandard (I got what I paid for), the increase in starting pay from having my M.S. at my new job will pay for the costs of my M.S. within 4-5 years.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Inflated figures? by jhp64 · · Score: 2

      Two comments:

      1. Even having free tuition doesn't "nullify the cost/reward argument": you need to take into account the wages you would have earned had you been employed full-time instead of being in school. (This is probably more of an issue for PhD candidates, since they're typically in school longer than those pursuing an MS, and it is also probably more of an issue for people who want to enter academic careers in which the salaries are lower than in industry, especially since some people can get a job as an "engineer" at a computer company with a BA and make more than lots of professors. It could still be an issue for you, though: you need to run the numbers.)

      2. How do you know that your experience was typical? It can be a big mistake to generalize from one data point. Maybe your department is at one extreme, and the papers and studies are accurate. Here's a different example: I teach in a math department at a public university, and about 70% of our new PhD students are from the US. Should I generalize from my observations? Maybe we should just trust the NSF on this one...

      --
      This is the way Bi-Coloured Python-Rock-Snakes always talk.
    2. Re:Inflated figures? by Kohath · · Score: 1

      graduate engineering programs ... are utterly dominated by foreign students

      I think this is because of immigration, visa, and residency rules. The foreign folks have to stay in school or leave the US. It would be harder to job-hunt from overseas, so they really need to get a good job before they can even think about leaving school. US citizens don't share this incentive.

    3. Re:Inflated figures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just recently complete an M.S. in Electrical Engineering at Rutgers University.

      Should of paid attention in your single English class.

    4. Re:Inflated figures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should have as well.

    5. Re:Inflated figures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At the graduate school I recently graduated from, the admissions committee seemed to discriminate against US students. I was very noticable that most of the bottom half of students were foriegners. There were two aspects to the rational of the admissions committee:

      1. Once admitted to the program, the foreigners won't leave almost regardless of how bad they are treated. Thus getting a foreign student was like acquiring another slave.

      2. On paper, many of the foreigners looked really good. It was sad that the admissions committee didn't figure this one out after year after year. Perhaps there isn't much of a way to distinguish the great from the OK students from translated transcripts.

    6. Re:Inflated figures? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of a typo?

      (Yeah, even before your post I noticed that as soon as I reread my post.)

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  43. Can't buy your own cyclotron by Marko+DeBeeste · · Score: 1
    Bach had a lifelong battle with the church, got thrown in jail by them once. But they were the only ones with a pipe organ.

    You can't do anything of any significance in a vacccum

    --
    Faith: n. -- That human impulse that drives them to steal appliances when the power goes out
    1. Re:Can't buy your own cyclotron by Maximum+Prophet · · Score: 1

      Several have come up on eBay, including one whose description included the phrase, "...produces god awful amounts of lethal radiation..."

      And of course, the physics geeks will tell you that many experiments require a good, hard, vacuum.

      The point is, joking aside, you can produce science without the support of a big organization.

      --
      All ideas^H^H^H^H^Hprocesses in this post are Patent Pending. (as well as the process of patenting all postings)
    2. Re:Can't buy your own cyclotron by Marko+DeBeeste · · Score: 1
      It would require a radically different model, and the junking of most local and federal laws even remotely relating to anything perceived as dangerous.

      Dear Sir;

      Per your request to rent time on our virus incubator/gene splicing apparatus/remote manipulation fissionable lab....

      --
      Faith: n. -- That human impulse that drives them to steal appliances when the power goes out
  44. Then they can get all the engineers and... by ergean · · Score: 1

    scientists they want!!!! For free! No, there is no wage for the slaves. Muhahahaha...

  45. getting a house by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My sister and BIL got a house relatively easy and paid off within a few years. How? Two incomes,so they lived on one income,and used the other to build their own house. They bought raw property where they wanted to live, then rented the absolute cheapest place they could find nearby. Then they went to work on a pay as you go deal. Every month they would decide how much they had to spend and where, once the land payment and taxes were deducted. Right down the line, water and septic went in first, then power to the property. Then the foundation, then the floor, then some walls, then wiring, then plumbing, etc,etc. They did all the work themselves in the evenings and on the weekends (I helped them build on weekends). When it was roughed in enough to move in, they dumped the rental unit and moved in,and finished it off during the next year. Only took a few years total, ALL paid off, no long term mortgage, and very little money went to pay interest on anything, just the land payments that they double downed on with the principle to get it paid off as quickly as possible, and they did it owner financed. MUCH cheaper that way than going through the banks and getting a 20 or 30 year note. And it's a nice house, too, two stories, comfy.

  46. Commercial Science Lives / Public Science Dies by cyranose · · Score: 1

    I know many people who do basic open science research and the number of students isn't the issue--funding is. US public funding in biological research has, according to their estimates, been cut in half over recent (Bush) years. Where the top 15-25% of grant proposals were funded not too long ago, only the top 10% are funded today (and don't even ask how they're scored...). That means most of these new students may ultimaely wind up having no choice but to take limited industry jobs or find other lines of work. Forget about high-paying salaries (which are already lower for non-commercial scientists), this is about basic survival in their field of choice, and the benefit we get from their hard work.

    What's so bad about commercial research vs. public? Obviously, the profit motive cuts both ways. Drugs and therapies are developed which will make the most profit, not necessarily do the most good. It's viagra vs. a cure for AIDS. They find lots of treatments, but not a lot of cures. Why is that?

    And we, as consumers and tax payers, pay for it on both ends -- welfare (tax breaks) for big pharma, plus higher health care costs and "prescription drug benefits" that benefit the drug companies bottom lines. Prices keep rising as we keep paying.

    Also consider that science works through openness and peer review. But if scientists can only function inside for-profit companies and those companies are better served by keeping everything a trade secret? We're back to the days of alchemy. The un-scientific revolution.

    1. Re:Commercial Science Lives / Public Science Dies by dbIII · · Score: 1
      It's viagra vs. a cure for AIDS
      Viagra was a cheap and unexpected spinoff of a cheap but spectacularly effective high blood pressure treatment. You can't compare that to the hard problem of curing AIDS.
    2. Re:Commercial Science Lives / Public Science Dies by FooAtWFU · · Score: 1
      Drugs and therapies are developed which will make the most profit, not necessarily do the most good. It's viagra vs. a cure for AIDS. They find lots of treatments, but not a lot of cures. Why is that?
      Reality check. Cures are hard. Very hard, probably several orders of magnitude harder than treatments. No one has cures for viruses! They never have. Right now, medical "cures" still mostly fall into Vaccines (for viruses- and they need to be administered beforehand) and Antibiotics (for bacteria, and a few similar substances for funky other stuff).

      The Star Trek-like notion that medicine should be able to trivially cure any disease is surprisingly pervasive, but Medicine is not up to the task yet. It's not even close. So don't blame a conspiracy by evil evil drug companies because the doctor can't give you a pill to make you grow a new kidney.

      --
      The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
    3. Re:Commercial Science Lives / Public Science Dies by cyranose · · Score: 1

      The point is that drug companies will choose to chase the profits, as is reasonably for a private for-profit entity.

      That isn't the same as doing the best thing for society. If pure capitalism can't solve certain problems, we have other mechanisms, not the least of which is putting some restrictions on the R&D tax credits to promote R&D in the public good.

      Not saying Viagra is bad, just not the most critical issue to solve. How many companies are investing in vaccine work? (legal issues notwithstanding)

      Do companies really have incentives to offer cures when long-term treatments might be more profitable?

    4. Re:Commercial Science Lives / Public Science Dies by cyranose · · Score: 1

      FYI, for some anti-viral medications, see: http://www.netdoctor.co.uk/medicines/effect/infect ions.shtml

      But the main point is: Yes, cures are hard. Exactly. And that means they're not good investments for for-profit companies, since the R&D is so high compared to, say, ADHD drugs.

      And that's why we need public science. We didn't wait for a private company to go to the moon, or even to build a bridge to Brooklyn. We do public work in such big, public-service areas, and that's what's failing.

      I'm not saying there's no place for commercial science. But right now, Bush is in "privatize" mode and the result will be fewer cures and much less science, since so much is proprietary.

      The short-term solution, IMO: attach strings to the R&D tax credits for drug companies to encourage more long-term benefit to society (it's corporate welfare, might as well make it work-fare). And increase public science budgets to restore US leadership in the sciences. The means are there if the will exists.

  47. Yes, it is fictional by caudron · · Score: 1

    As I've said in the past, the gap in US engineers and scientists is not actual, and studies suggesting otherwise are often biasesd and based on shady statistics.

    --
    -Tom
    1. Re:Yes, it is fictional by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      I think studies either way confuse diplomas with education.

      There are plenty of certified folks... but not enough folks who are capable of doing the thing they're certified for.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

  48. More individual patents and cheaper by linzeal · · Score: 1
    If you have a good idea, motherfucking patent it. Even the most complex of patents only runs to about 10k dollars. That is easy money if you set aside for it. I have 3 robotic systems I have modelled in Inventor, Solidworks, I-Deas and Matlab since attending college that I think have marketability, besides the control software or a working prototype which I couldn't afford these things are complete. They will cost me about 30k total to patent and I think they will be worth it when I can afford, so long as no one else patents something similiar beforehand.

    One thing I would like to see is some serious expert systems at the patent office allowing cheaper patents. Anyone see that coming or think they got the brains to do it?

    1. Re:More individual patents and cheaper by msuarezalvarez · · Score: 1

      Great idea!

      In fact, I'm going to go around spreading the word to my fellow mathematicians right now. Thanks!

  49. Take some time to get some economic reality. by Inoshiro · · Score: 1

    "You can be virtually guaranteed a decent (50-80k) paying job"

    Woah up there, buddy. When you say stuff like a decent (decent) income is 50k to 80k, you are doing a great disservice and illustrating the terrible gap in the US.

    A decent paying income is one that gets you 30k a year. On 30k a year, you can live like any other person easily. If you're a one-person household, you can probably like on 22k and still be pretty fine -- you'll always have food; shelter; clothes; and, with the way credit is available, you can buy a car or a house.

    About 50% of the US population makes less than 30k a year. If you want a lot of money, form an economic alliance (family). Most 4-person US families make about 70k a year (see these US Government statistics).

    50-80k is great. You're upper-middle class the moment you make that. If you hit above 90, you're into upper-class. Of course, 1 high-end family makes 20 times what a low-end family makes, so there's still plenty more for you to strive for.

    OTOH, I'd look at what exactly causes crime in the US and other social problems, and see if there was a relationship to income level.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
    1. Re:Take some time to get some economic reality. by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 1

      good point about using the word "decent", what I was trying to get across was that and engineering ed doesnt make you Bill Gates, but it is far from being shabby either - at least in the US.

    2. Re:Take some time to get some economic reality. by Omaze · · Score: 1

      30k/year is fine if you live in an area where you can walk and take a 20 minute public transportation commute to work and housing is cheap. Most large scientific employers are located in areas where 30k/year would barely pay rent and leave you enough money to nibble on soda crackers while living the live of an urban recluse.

      I'd like to be a scientist... with a life. I have the energy for it. I go stir crazy staring at four bare walls and that single light bulb hanging from the ceiling.

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    3. Re:Take some time to get some economic reality. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you hit above 90, you're into upper-class.
      Eh... depends how you define upper-class.

    4. Re:Take some time to get some economic reality. by MayorDefacto · · Score: 1
      A decent paying income is one that gets you 30k a year. On 30k a year, you can live like any other person easily.

      Minus student loan payments, minus car insurance/maintenance/fuel to get you to work (assuming that you live in the 90% of the country that isn't adequately served by public transit and that you own your car outright-- add a car payment to the list if that's not the case), minus other assorted debt (again, if you didn't rack up debt in college, good for you. You must never had had to fly home for a grandparent's funeral or replace a stolen bike, or make any other number of emergency payments that life throws at you).

      Once you then subtract rent/mortgage, food, and taxes, you're looking at a pretty slim amount left in a month. Want to go out once in a while or maybe take a small vacation to ensure that the grinding drudgery of cubicle-slavery doesn't drive you to suicide? Now you're living paycheck to paycheck.

      $30K sucks unless you live in rural Oklahoma.

  50. Seems like a cohesive policy to me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're not cynical enough. It has already been DECIDED that these high paying jobs will be shifted overseas. It is a done deal.

    The only thing needed is for foreign governments and corporations to continue lining the pockets of Republicans and some Democrats, who in turn will MAKE THIS HAPPEN:

    * Cut funding for US students (this has already had an effect improving US military enlistment rates)
    * Cut interest subsudies for US students
    * Bash "science"
    * Campaign against stem cell research (let other countries corner this market)
    * Actually FUND company moving costs to shift jobs overseas. Your US tax dollars at work
    * ALLOW 'multinationa' companies to contribute to US elections (and trust me, they don't grease US politicians interested in restoring competitiveness)
    * The 20-60K tax writoff for US Humvee owners is DESIGNED to stimulate more oil consumption. The tax credit for hybrid gas-electric vehicles pales. Note to FoxNews-addicted flag wavers: Bush signed this giant welfare check for Saudi Arabia AFTER September 11, and ask yourself who benefits?
    * Bush White House bias towards letting a country with official ties to 9-11 run US ports. Before the dip in polls, some people were saying the 2-term limit should not apply to a wartime president. Maybe the transfer of our nations ports will make a convenient excuse to keep him in power (not that he's the real power, but he's a popular public face for the multinationals who bribed their way into the GOP and are raping the US Treasury).
    * Intelligent Design? The US looks like a bunch of fucking idiots. Where would YOU locate cutting edge research that opposes god's official messengers on earth? This industry is heading to Singapore, South Korea, Japan and even CUBA... fast!

    These agents are not incompitent [sp], they're traitors.

  51. Slightly skewed quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In mother United States, science fiction reads you.

  52. Why are universities allowed to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How come universities can recruit like crazy cults to get naive kids into fields like EE when they don't have any responsibility afterwards to find you a job? How come they have budgets in the billions, still ask for more money? How come the textbook industry can get away re-selling the same book every two years for inflated prices?

    1. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by bsquizzato · · Score: 1

      What do you mean? I'm a student majoring in engineering at NC State and there's all kinds of programs, career fairs, etc. and people here to help you get employed while you're here and set up some contacts for when you leave. It's all your responsibility though to take some initiative, they aren't going to spoon feed you a job. There's hundreds of employers interested in hiring students from this school for internships. This area gives kids in the tech field a great opportunity to get internships because we're so close to Research Triangle Park. I'm sure many other schools that are big into science and tech offer the same programs.

    2. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Word to the wise: That only exists at the end of college. The opportunities get less and less the further out you go. Also, all those college jobs are really just bitch-work jobs. Good to improve skills, I suppose; however, they are not quality jobs you will go into, grow in, and improve your career skills.

    3. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Internship = Company gets professional labor for free. Employee gets no credit.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    4. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While there may be many opportunities at nc state that is not necessarily the norm. Graduating in the spring of 2001 from a well respected program there were literally 2 companies available at the career fair of my college for ChemE with a graduating class of 30. One of those companies was looking for someone who wanted to leave the discipline to become a manager.

      Currently companies are more interested in hiring new students, but in an economic downturn they don't look at smaller colleges. Career fairs and internships are universities spoon feeding students jobs. Large, stable companies don't want to hire people from a resume. They want someone who has a connection to there company, and even if you have a connection you don't necessarily get hired.

    5. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pssst! Hey, mr university genius! Check your sig, YOU CAN'T SPELL FOR SHIT. Uh, it's called a spell checker.

    6. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by Embedded2004 · · Score: 1

      Not all internships are non-paid.

      I am on internship now in cali, and it's definitely paid. Heck, some of my class even got internships in NYC for 80k a year. Not bad for undergrads...

    7. Re:Why are universities allowed to do this? by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Not all internships are non-paid.

      Good. No internship should be unpaid. Unpaid internship is called volunteering, and there are places far more in need of volunteers than Cubicles Inc.

      Unpaid internships and temp jobs (with no benefits, of course) are reasons why young adults can't find a salary any more.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
  53. For the same reason teachers make sub-50k. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just as much (actually, more probably if you count the student teaching, etc) work to become a teacher as it is to get an MS in engineering. Some people, apparently not you, do jobs because they want to, because they're good at it, because it fulfills them, because they enjoy the work, because they like working with the type of people that they'll encounter in that job, because that job is particularly in demand where they are (try being an engineer in the middle of a corn-field a two-hour drive from a town with more than 20k people).

    Raise the wages for teachers and you'll just end up flooding the market with people like you who say "for 7 years work, I can mkae 100k and that's about what a person of my stature deserves" and suddenly all these people who actually WANT the job are flooded out by people who want the money.

    Think of how many kids went into coputer science when the tech bubble was around, simply because there was so much oney for only x number of years. And then they got out and realized that there weren't nearly enough jobs, at least not at the level many of them were hoping for, to satisfy them so a bunch went for jobs in other fields, a bunch went for jobs that DID make them happy (and not becuase they made X ammount a year) a bunch wasted their time hanging aorund waiting for the "job market" to get better, a bunch got lowly jobs as tech-support and "that-guy-that-networked-the-computers" and a few, a genuine few, got those high-faluting jobs they were suckered into the field for anyways, the jobs with free Mountain Dew and foosball tables... oh, ok, those jobs don't really exist either, but they got something close.

    And sometimes, just sometimes, some people can't quite do the job. Lawyers may have the potential to make tons of money, but there's a huge chunk of the world that quite simply wouldn't be able to handle law school. Doctors may have the potential to make a lot of money, but there's a lot of people that would not make good doctors. Some people get expensive business degrees and go on to be CEO's of high power companies. Others get expensive business degrees and are lucky when they 50k management positions at Staples.

    Come again when you've got a better theory than "Techies should get more cash!" Sounds like you're just mad because you took all those classes in programming BASIC in college only to find out your best chance at a career is to change your name to Shakti and move to Pakistan. But hey, I'm hiring a secretary at 50k... maybe I'll look at your resume.

  54. Notice most of the gain is Bachelor's degrees by gansch · · Score: 1

    According to the article, the number of Bachelor's of Science degrees has increased greatly, which means we have a lot more techs, not scientists as the article is claiming. Although there has been an increase in graduate degrees, the author does say the majority of them came from foreign countries, with a modest increase in U.S. enrollment since the 1990s.

    As everyone has already pointed out, we don't need more techs; we outsource those. So realistically, we are facing a surplus of "scientists" with tech-level skills and a deficit of scientists able to carry out intensive research.

    1. Re:Notice most of the gain is Bachelor's degrees by mbius · · Score: 1

      According to the article, the number of Bachelor's of Science degrees has increased greatly, which means we have a lot more techs, not scientists

      Damned insightful. Your 4-year degree(s) in microbiology or chemistry or botany or genetics doesn't make you a scientist. It's a permission slip to work at LabCorp or Glaxo or similar starting at $16/hr + benefits.

      --
      you can have my violent video games when you pry them from my cold, dead hands.
      Prime UID Club
    2. Re:Notice most of the gain is Bachelor's degrees by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      According to the article, the number of Bachelor's of Science degrees has increased greatly, which means we have a lot more techs, not scientists as the article is claiming.

      The degree reads "Bachelor of Science" not "Bachelor of Tech"

      As everyone has already pointed out, we don't need more techs; we outsource those.

      Leaving the college graduate with no job. Yeah. That's a winner.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    3. Re:Notice most of the gain is Bachelor's degrees by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Your 4-year degree(s) in microbiology or chemistry or botany or genetics doesn't make you a scientist. It's a permission slip to work at LabCorp or Glaxo or similar starting at $16/hr + benefits.

      Yeah? Well perhaps they should say so before someone shovels six figures into a worthless degree. They should announce "when you graduate you won't be a scientist!" in the 101 class. See how much tuition they collect after that.

      And the social contract just keeps circling the bowl.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    4. Re:Notice most of the gain is Bachelor's degrees by slowbad · · Score: 1
      we are facing a surplus of "scientists" with tech-level skills and a deficit of scientists able to carry out intensive research

      Try visiting a good teaching hospital these days, where you can observe "medical science" in practice.
      While you can't see behind-the-scenes research, you can see various statistical trials being conducted.

      For every person with a science background there were 10+ who probably never even took an AP test.

      I consistently saw no difference between hospital workers and those at McDonalds or WalMart -- other
      than employees being paid $50,000 per year with an accompanying much lower turnover rate.

      With everywhere becoming a KwikLube or Tires'R'US with fancy machines, you don't need science.

  55. Proper Level by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    Supply and demand sets the proper level. I know of no pre-defined way to know which job is the most valuable other than what people are willing to pay.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  56. Lack of Ambition by quanminoan · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I believe I can add something to this discussion.

    I'm currently an undergraduate at a small science/tech school majoring in physics. Since there are only a handful of people in my field of major the professors know each of us on a first name basis. What I'm getting at is I often speak with the professors about their research and interests.

    If there is a deficit of science and engineering majors I doubt that is the true issue. I don't exactly believe the argument the quality and motivation of the graduates has decreased either - but rather ambitious research isn't what it used to be.

    Just recently we had a story on the discovery of CCDs. The scientists had an idea, deviated from whatever project they were working on, an tested their idea which led to a new technology and market. This is where the problem lies - in the present industry there is little incentive for ambitious or abnormal projects. Funds are allocated for very specific projects, and if some side discovery is made with that funding it may very well be frowned upon (did I ask for a CCD chip!?). In the academia there is a similar attitude of "publish or perish". Why research cutting edge technologies involving complex quantum mechanics, nanotechnologies, and so on if there's a chance of failure? You don't, because if you failed you'd be done. So, many scientists are studying basic things that can be guaranteed results. The professor I know well here has toyed with the idea of testing the EPR hypothesis with entangled atoms or particles. Unfortunately that's difficult, and after much funding he could very well fail. So most likely he'll never try, which is a shame because if he succeeded it would be one for the textbooks. Instead he's studying something practical, such as wetting of surfaces, that can assure a solid review and published papers.

    It's really unfortunate people aren't taking chances due to this attitude.

    1. Re:Lack of Ambition by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      It's really unfortunate people aren't taking chances due to this attitude.

      Then there's the other half of the problem where business says "it'll never work" when it's a guaranteed winner. Western Union could have owned AT&T for $100,000. Disney passed on the Lord of the Rings trilogy ($6 billion box office, 17 Academy Awards). The amounts of money (and jobs) this is costing our economy is astounding.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    2. Re:Lack of Ambition by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1
      Then there's the other half of the problem where business says "it'll never work" when it's a guaranteed winner. Western Union could have owned AT&T for $100,000. Disney passed on the Lord of the Rings trilogy ($6 billion box office, 17 Academy Awards). The amounts of money (and jobs) this is costing our economy is astounding.

      Two thoughts:

      Hindsight is 20/20.

      It is doubtful that Western Union would have made a successful phone company. Nor is it likely that Disney would have produced a "non-Disneyfied" LOTR; one which would have been anywhere near as successful as the version which was made.

      And how did either of these cases actually end up costing the U.S. economy again?

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    3. Re:Lack of Ambition by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      It is doubtful that Western Union would have made a successful phone company.

      That's not the point. Whether Disney would have made a "non-Disneyfied" LOTR isn't the point either. These were guaranteed winners that were ignored. There are dozens upon dozens upon dozens of other examples like this throughout business, including technology.

      Twelve publishers passed on Harry Potter.

      actually end up costing the U.S. economy again?

      Hollywood told George Lucas that science-fiction had no mass market appeal. How much would it have cost the economy if Star Wars had never been made?

      Entrepreneurs have to spend an inordinate amount of time and money persuading businesses that control the capital to put that capital to work in productive enterprises. If the project ever does get started (and begins to employ people), they have to spend more money and time persuading the business that controls the capital not to cancel the project. Example: The Sims. Electronic Arts made three attempts to cancel the Sims during development, which delayed the project and increased costs.

      These are not "hey I've got a great idea" projects. These are guaranteed winners. Thousands of projects like this are ignored, never get funded and never employ people. Then everyone complains wages and innovation have stagnated.

      Innovation hasn't stagnated at all. It's sitting in the lobby waiting for funding.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    4. Re:Lack of Ambition by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1
      Unless you are currently one of the richest people on earth, you are only arguing from hindsight.

      It is doubtful that Western Union would have made a successful phone company.

      That's not the point. Whether Disney would have made a "non-Disneyfied" LOTR isn't the point either. These were guaranteed winners that were ignored.

      It is precisely my point. There are many investments which, in the right hands, are "guaranteed winners" that I pass on every day. Why? Because I have neither the time nor the skill to make them "guaranteed winners".

      <CheapShot>Hell, if it is so easy and they are guaranteed winners, YOU should have produced LOTR and Star Wars!</CheapShot>

      [how did this] actually end up costing the U.S. economy again?

      Hollywood told George Lucas that science-fiction had no mass market appeal. How much would it have cost the economy if Star Wars had never been made?

      But it was produced! You forgot to prefix your sentence with "Some people in Hollywood told George..." because, in the end, Star Wars was a Hollywood movie.

      I understand the point that you are trying to make but, in the wrong hands, Star Wars would have been horrible! Not only that, Lucas wasn't a known quantity in the mid-70s. His only successful movie up to that point was American Graffiti. How were producers going to judge his likelyhood for success at SciFi? I postulate that the producers that turned George down did the right thing under their circumstances, and that the movie would not have been the success is was with the wrong set of producers.

      There is no guarantee that LOTR would have been successful under Disney. In fact there are a couple of attempts at LOTR that were just awful. I firmly believe that a Disney version of LOTR would not have been successful. (Just as that fixer-upper house down the street is a good investment for my neighbor, but not for me.)

      There is no guarantee that Western Union executives would have managed to acquire the anti-trust exemption and universal access mandate that AT&T received from the US Government. And there is no guarantee that Lucas would have made the same Star Wars under a different set of producers (they all tend to meddle in different ways).

      As I said at the top, you are arguing from hindsight. But worse, you are not taking into consideration all of the aspects of what made each of these things a success. George Lucas + Star Wars != Success. For my proof, see the last three episodes produced; AOTC would have been a failure had the first three episodes not created an instant audience.

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    5. Re:Lack of Ambition by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      Lucas wasn't a known quantity in the mid-70s. His only successful movie up to that point was American Graffiti. How were producers going to judge his likelyhood for success at SciFi?

      They would have had to take a risk. That's the part of capitalism that business no longer understands. Capital is stationary risk.

      I postulate that the producers that turned George down did the right thing under their circumstances, and that the movie would not have been the success is was with the wrong set of producers.

      So incompetence is the justification for being wrong?

      There is no guarantee that Western Union executives would have managed to acquire the anti-trust exemption and universal access mandate

      Western Union was offered the patents to the telephone for $100,000. They turned them down because it was "too expensive."

      Businesses often declare themselves "experts" in their particular business. Twelve publishers stated with certainty that Harry Potter would fail because if they believed it would succeed they would have offered a publishing deal. No business is going to turn down guaranteed revenue. It was stated with certainty there was "a limited audience for the fantasy adventure genre" when commenting on Lord of the Rings which is arguably one of the most profound literary works in the last 200 years. That "limited audience" bought six BILLION dollars worth of tickets at the box office.

      It was stated with certainty that "2D animation is obsolete." Meanwhile 2D animation is making billions in Japan. There are individual television series that, without international distribution, are making $30 million a month in merchandising in Japan. Japan now owns our animation market. OWNS it. Same as they own the automobile industry.

      These experts then go on to become obstacles to people who could create jobs and economic opportunity for millions by ignoring or depriving project after project of capital. The amounts of wealth this is costing the economy are incomprehensible.

      But worse, you are not taking into consideration all of the aspects of what made each of these things a success.

      Capital + entrepreneur = success. It's that simple.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
  57. Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advantage by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just don't see how sci/tech/math can be our nation's comparative advantage. The laws of math and physics are the same in low-labor-rate countries. Apples fall down there too. Thus, it makes economic sense to do R&D there.

    Some cite "innovation", but it is a myth that only western countries/peoples have innovation. Most of the "innovations" that come out of the US of late are marketing or legal innovations, not really technical ones.

    For good or bad, consumer marketing is our comparative advantage because we consume more than any other country. Face the new music and prepare for the new dance. Sci/tech/math is dying or stagnant here because our cost of living is too high.

  58. You pounded the nail on the head! by woolio · · Score: 1

    There is a lack of qualified journalists in the US, not scientists, and that is where the real problem lies.

    Amen!!!!

    The entire news industry has major problems, but since they report the news, most people won't know!

    I recently read a Ziff-Davis publication that gloated over a quiet "fanless" computer. The article's photo prominently showed a large fan on it (and yes, it was the correct photo). The article writer who appeared to have "reviewed" this product wrote the article entirely without ever seeing it. It was just a thinly disguised advertisement.

    While this is not of a political nature (and is really minor), it illustrates what kind of deception may be (in)advertently caused by apathetic "journalists".

    Another problem is that most news companies are afraid to tackle truly controversial issues. (Funny how the topics in PBS's "extreme oil" video are never mentioned on local or national news). Instead, most news companies take mundane issues and harp on them enough to stir the public into a frenzy. (Janet Jackson, etc). They know they can do this safely and greatly increase their circulation/profits/etc....

    I live in a major US capital city. What is the main topic of the local news? They seem to spend about 1/3 of the time talking about weather records, forcasts, etc. This might make sense if this area's (or state's) main industry was agriculture, but it is NOT. And besides, the weather here is fairly moderate, its not like it is going to snow one day and be scorchingly hot the next...

    Coverage of international issues is virtually absent from all US news sources -- unless a single American is somehow involved. Some might say, well what would be the point?

    Well, US-based companies are doing some pretty questionable things in other parts of the world. (soft-drink companies, pharmacuticals,etc) I think the US public would be interested to know what that the companies they support by buy products/services are doing to others... Whether or not the US public actually cares is highly irrevelant. It is the responsibility of journalists to make things *known*.

    In another example, the US news seemed to entirely miss upon the point of the poor design used for the electronic voting machines. They easily could have interviewed a few "experts" that could relate in laymen's terms of how easily preventable/avoidable such design flaws are. Something to the effect ("they built the equivalent of a bank with no walls, etc")

    A few years ago, I went on a cruise ship... I noticed that the side of the ship stated it was built in "Monrovia". Me, being a dumb American, figured that was somewhere in Europe. (Most of the crew were from poor areas in eastern europe). Last night, I watched "The Lord of War", whose plot included Monrovia (or the area). Needless to say, I was shocked...

    Well, one thing is now clear to me: There were multiple levels of exploitation involved in the construction and operation of that ship. Had I known that in advance, I wouldn't have done the cruise.

    Truly, how ignorant are we?

    In the words of D. Rumsfield, these types of issues fall into the "unknown unknowns" of the public, with a small minority knowing them as "known unknowns", and a very tiny few as "known"

  59. Real estate by wytcld · · Score: 2, Informative

    The median real estate broker makes about the equivalent of minimum wage. The ones that make the big bucks are a small minority in the profession, and they generally bring personal assets that aren't common, and aren't the product of "a few months' night classes." The pay distribution is pretty similar to that of writers -- sure there are a few writers who make millions of dollars for what's for them pretty easy work, but the median income for writers from their writing similary is not even a living wage. The ones who make the big money in writing, like the big money real estate brokers, may have gotten a minimal education in their craft which helped, but the main thing is a natural talent for it.

    The difference with engineering is that those without a real aptitude for it, if they work hard enough and pursue enough years of education, can still get decent-paying work in the field. Still, even in engineering it's the people with natural talent who take most of the big financial rewards -- often rewards in the same ballpark as top realtors and writers.

    --
    "with their freedom lost all virtue lose" - Milton
  60. Employment, Religion, and Politics by Omaze · · Score: 2, Interesting

    They always say that there are two things you don't talk about at work, religion and politics, because it always degenerates into an argument where both sides are utterly convinced that they're correct and usually end up doing little more than slinging mud. Productive conversation comes to nil very quickly.

    I'd like to say that, outside of work, there is one thing you shouldn't bother talking about and that's work. Why? Let's profile it the same way we would profile religion or politics. There are two sides. There is one side that has it good (whether because they were born into it or they got lucky) and one side that does not have it good (whether because they were born into it or because they didn't get lucky). Let's get one thing straight. How hard you work has nothing to do with it. Zero, zilch. Let's get another thing straight. How smart you work has nothing to do with it. Zero, zilch. Plenty of people will claim that they made it to success through hard work and perserverence but that is simply not true. It is a correlation and causation disconnect. Those very same people could claim, with the same statistical accuracy, that they made it to success because the weather had been just right on the day they hit their promotion, or their hair was exactly 2.5 inches long, or because they had eaten turkey the night before. Let me reiterate: the only two factors that affect the separation of the two groups are birth and luck.

    So now that the two groups are defined, let's look at how the conversation will inevitably go. This is the same way that employment conversations have gone on this board, and many others, and in many pubs, and around many lunch tables, for years.

    Person A is the person who has it good. Person B is the person who does not.

    Conversation 1:

    Person B: "My job sucks."
    Person A: "You're an incompetent fucktard who can't do anything right and doesn't concentrate on your job."
    Person B: "Fuck you."
    Person A: "You're a loser."

    Conversation 2:

    Person A: "My job is great."
    Person B: "Mine isn't."
    Person A: "You're an incompetent fucktard who can't do anything right and doesn't concentrate on your job."
    Person B: "Fuck you."
    Person A: "You're a loser."

    Conversation 3:

    Person B: "I'm not getting paid enough."
    Person A: "You should be happy just to have a job! There are people starving in China!"
    Person B: "Fuck you."
    Person A: "You're a loser."

    Conversation 4:

    Person A: "I just bought a new car!"
    Person B: "I wish I could afford one."
    Person A: "You should be happy just to have a job! There are people starving in China!"
    Person B: "Fuck you."
    Person A: "You're a loser."

    And that's how it always goes. Why do we even bother anymore? Nothing ever gets resolved. Person A is always self-satisfied and, usually, doing nothing but trolling B. B is always frustrated and looking for that lucky break and wishes A would quit needling them, for just once, and offer some real advice.

    Who wrote this script? It's getting old.

    --
    The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
    1. Re:Employment, Religion, and Politics by smoker2 · · Score: 1
      I'll give you some advice
      Person A: "I just bought a new car!"
      Person B: "Big fucking deal"
      Person A: "You're a loser."
      Person B: "You know, you're right. Let me look at why I'm unhappy with my situation, and see if I can do something to change it."

      Therefore, my advice is, fuck what everybody else [ has | does | buys ] - deal with your own life and quit bitching. If you don't end up with a $200k car then you obviously didn't really want one.

      Why anybody would want to pay $200k for a piece of shitty metal and plastic that is only going to cost more in the long term is beyond me anyway.

      It seems to me that persons A & B in your example are just at opposite ends of the consumer food chain. Maybe it's time to get off the damn treadmill, and just aim to have enough !

      Greed and jealousy, it's what makes the corporations rich ... and the rest of us sad.

    2. Re:Employment, Religion, and Politics by Omaze · · Score: 1

      > deal with your own life and quit bitching

      You've proven my point nicely. Troll, troll, troll your boat...

      --
      The government itself is not stealing your liberties. Their new programs are enabling criminals who will.
  61. Why bust your hump getting MS or PhD in one of .. by vandelais · · Score: 1

    Why bust your hump getting MS or PhD in one of the hard sciences/engineering, only to land a job making less than 80k??...

    THE BABES!!

    --
    Game: Player 'Donald J Trump' now has AI skill level 'experimental'.
  62. There's no Chinese or Indonesian science students. by Simonetta · · Score: 1

    There are no Chinese or Indonesian science students. No American, Japanese, Russian, or French ones either.

      Studing science in serious way puts the student into a category that transcends nationalism. Especially today as the amount of global scientific knowledge has become so vast. Mastering a speciality to the point where one can add to the knowledge base puts one into a mind-space that goes beyond the limits of nationalism.

        The purpose of creating nation-states is primarily to wage war on other nation-states. Nation-states also need to create a political and economic elite in each country that will facilitate the collection of taxes and the other functions needed to define the state. This was an effective means of organizing societies out of tribes and into effective economic wealth generating entities in the industrial age (1750-2010).

        But it is passing now. And scientists and science students are in the forefront of the new era - the information age. Nationalism and its collolary, citizenship, will become less and less important to the new transnational elite with each passing year.

        So it is becoming more absurd to classify serious science students by nationality. In turn, serious science students have an obligation to their new elites status to NOT engage in destructive behavior like designing omnicide technology (omni-cide being the destruction of all human life through technological means). That means refusing to design things like hydrogen bombs, super-long half-life radioactive poisons, genetically-engineered diseases with no accessable cure for most people (like smallpox varients), and newer technologies like earthquake generation that remain secret and speculative. When scientists do research on omnicide technologies for reasons primarily focused on nationalism or religion, they must be denied access to the most advanced scientific research by the other scientists themselves who have joined and formed the new information-age scientific elite.

        So, yes, realistically there are no Chinese or Indonesian science students any more. There are only science students.

  63. Americans invent. by JRHelgeson · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Hard work, imagination and business practices also matter.

    Not to mention a patent system that allows people to innovate without getting their @$$ sued off for the innovations they come up with. These patent holding companies are killing our innovativeness. All they do is come up with an idea, patent it, then wait for someone else to come up with the idea, do all the hard work of design and implementation, then they sue because "it was my idea first!".

    It has been said that "Americans invent as the French paint, or the Italians sculpt." If we are to stay ahead in our technical prowess, we need to remove the chains of thought that hold our top engineers back.

    There's a quote that I particularly like from Jane Jacobs in Death and Life of Great American Cities which reads: "Old ideas can sometimes use new buildings. New ideas must come from old buildings."

    This holds true for nearly all innovations. We take steps advancing ourselves from the progressions made from our forefathers. We had to invent the airplane before we could invent the jet engine. The automobile begat airbags. If some SciFi writer of the 1930's had invented a fanciful (yet at that time impossible) design for some type of internally jet propelled engine, then sued the first person(s) to come actually come up with a working plan of that idea; we may be living in a different era today.
    --
    Good security is based upon reality and common sense. Common sense is a function of having common knowledge.
  64. This article doesn't address future graduates by Vegemite · · Score: 1

    This article gives figures of present graduates, but fails to address present enrollments. From what I understand, this is a four year pipeline, and that pipeline is drying up. Over the last two years enrollments have dropped dramatically in the field of computer science and it will be two more years before we see the full effects of this drop.

  65. Most people aren't single minded. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Money AND interest motivate most people. And while it is the case that an extremely high level of interest may drive some towards a PhD, and that this PhD might be somewhat more productive, that's not to say that people that want money and an interesting day job aren't worthwhile. Most research isn't groundbreaking, revolutionizing summaries and great big New York Times progress. It's a paper that gets cited by a few people and contributes, minimally but effectively, to the knowledge of man.

    The romantic notion of who a professor is is not helping any more than the stereotypical geek notion. Oh, wait, they're the same.

  66. We're Doomed by Master+of+Transhuman · · Score: 1

    "Hard work, imagination and business practices also matter."

    When was the last time the US excelled in any of that?

    --
    Richard Steven Hack - This sig is TOO GODDAMN SHORT TO DO ANYTHING USEFUL WITH! MORONS!
  67. Sorry white nerd man, you have no future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ARmy of Brown peoplpe come to steal your jobs while WHITE MAN sits idly around and plays his video games, and complains about why
    his country pisses away money bombing sand niggers! ha ha ah you are so dumby people.

    in 20 years amerikkka is a land of nothing but janitors and Ceos !
    lololol you cannot compete with us proud brown warriors, lazy white man

  68. Here is another reason not to study... by stonewolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I spent the time and money to get a MSCS. After going through 2 other majors I found I simply love computer science. I love learning. I love solving problems. And, I really get a charge out of seeing products I worked on selling in stores or being used in offices.

    Troule is, the older I got, the more grey there was in my beard, the harder it got to find jobs. No matter what kind of training you have, in the US there is a serious bias against old people. Many people, (most people?) assume that if you are over 40 you can't possibly know anything about technology.

    So, after getting the graduate degree, spending thousands of dollars every years for books and training, and shipping I don't know how many commercial products, not to mention writing and publishing many articles; I can't *buy* a job in technology. I was laid off on my 49 birthday in 2001 and I have not been able to find anything since then.

    Once in a while I get an interview... It ends as soon as they see that I am "old"...

    So, I am training to be a high school teacher. I teach part time at the local CC, but I can't get on there full time. There are so many people like me out there that I am actually under qualified to teach at a community college. In my neighborhood there are a half a dozen of us. We live on savings, part time jobs, and our wives incomes. It seems you can't get away with treating old women the way you can get away with treating old men.

    So, if you want to go into science and technology, please do. The world needs you. But, plan on "retiring" by age 50 because no company needs you after that age.

    Stonewolf

    P.S.

    Forced retirement isn't all bad. At age 50 I took up a martial art and meditation. The result is that I can now kick ass on most (not all!) of my young students, but I don't want to. :-)

    1. Re:Here is another reason not to study... by Niet3sche · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Come to academia! I'm serious; you certainly sound proficient enough to blow through a PhD in a few years and then you can leverage your age (as this is a proxy for training) as a good thing. "Old" academics are treasured - even in tech, because an "old" academic can tell you all about the g(l)ory days of punch cards. "Young" academics, OTOH, are hard-pressed to get "street-cred" in the community. Not a troll, I just would like to see you employed and helping out here in academia.

    2. Re:Here is another reason not to study... by ShinySteelRobot · · Score: 1

      the older I got, the more grey there was in my beard, the harder it got to find jobs. <snip> Once in a while I get an interview... It ends as soon as they see that I am "old"...

      Here you go, this piece of technology might help you in your next interview. :)
      http://www.justformen.com/home.shtml

    3. Re:Here is another reason not to study... by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      Business doesn't hire old people because old people generally know their rights and won't accept poor working conditions and wages. The business knows that you are technically compentant, but they want to hire some youngster that they can abuse - work unpaid over-time, accept lower wages, etc...

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    4. Re:Here is another reason not to study... by stonewolf · · Score: 1

      Oh, there are a lot of reasons they don't want to hire older people. One of the big ones is the cost of health insurance. I like to work for small companies. I worked for a while at one that tried very hard to hire older people because we don't need to be trained, we show up for work when the company needs us to be there, we understand business, we get the job done, we don't show up hung over on Monday (or any other day) and we don't sneak out on Friday. Lots of very good reasons to hire older workers.

      But, the next year their health insurance costs tripled. Older workers take more prescription drugs, we see the doctor more frequently, and we have families who are also covered on the companies health insurance. All things that young people don't have. The added health insurance costs nearly sunk the company. Forced them to go out for another roundof venture capital nearly a year earlier than planned. And, it kept them from being able to hire to meet customer demand. It killed their growth for the year.

      Needless to say, they stoppe hiring older workers and all of us were gone within 6 months of the insurance rate hike.

      Stonewolf

    5. Re:Here is another reason not to study... by stonewolf · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the words of encouragment, I really appreciate it.

      I thought a lot about going back to academia for a Ph.D in computer science. I also thought a lot about going back for a law degree. I have become very interested (and fairly knowlegable) about IP and civil rights law. I know one fellow in my predicament who is in law school right now.

      Here are the problems I ran into. I live in the Austin, Texas area. The only law school and the only Ph.D computer science program are at the University of Texas. An excellent school, or so they tell me. It is very expensive and very difficult to get into. In other words I can't get in there and I can't afford to go there even if I could.

      I don't want to move to another location. My wife has a real career here, she makes good money and is well respected. My kids are in college here and what little I make helps to pay their tuition and the mortgage. Speaking of mortgages, I have only a couple of years left on the mortgage and then we will own the house free an clear.

      To go back to school I have to abandon my family and home and spend a lot of money that I don't have in the hope of getting a job far from my family and home.

      OTOH, I am doing exactly what you suggest. I am back in school the cheapest way I can find. I am paying for it with what I make teaching at the local CC. And I hope to find a job teaching in a local high school.

      Do you have any suggestions on how to get a Ph.D or a law degree that doesn't require me to leave my family? I have looked at online schools. But, I haven't ever seen any reason to believe that a local college would take a degree from one of those seriously enough to hire me as an instructor based on such a degree.

      Stonewolf

  69. Empty gaps in the Pipeline - not enough people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The need for more and better scientists, researchers, engineers, and medical doctors continues to grow.

    New discoveries create new areas of study - think of nanotechnology, biotechnology, tissue engineering, regenerative medicine, medical technology, pharmacology, etc. There are no old scientists to retire in fields that didn't exist 20 years ago.

    The lead time for some technical products can take up half the life time career of some scientists, especially in drug research and genetic research.

    The aging U.S. population, depletion of fossil fuels, and deteriorating environment are going to require more resources. While hospitals are full of the old and the sick, declining birth rates and poor pay means less nurses to take care of baby boomers.

    The people simply are not there.
    Not only are 'bulk smart guys' lagging, the number of top performing brilliant scientists has always been slim.

    Also grossly underestimated is the world's need for social growth and development. The poverty, crime, war, violence, deteriorating morals, drugs, broken families, economic inequality and poor condition of human souls and lack of spiritual development continues to rot away at the core values of human society.

    People need Jesus (Confucius, Buddha, God, Ethics, Generosity, Gratitude, Prayer, Meditation, Love, Kindness) more than ever, but we can do without the bigoted Intelligent Design crowd banning biology and burning books.

    Public schools have a hard time teaching class when they keep going into Lock Down mode for students shot by other students, drug busts on school property, or trying to teach when people break into the school at night and steal all the equipment they can carry. When science teachers can leave the schools and go work for three times the pay in industry, it is hard to keep good teachers from leaving education altogether.

  70. Don't confuse technology with science by xtal · · Score: 1

    They're related, but very different animals. I notice a LOT of people on this thread are making this mistake.

    The key to success in any field, managerial or technical is being able to network and work with people. The manager types know this. A lot of the technical people don't. The difference between someone who's a wildly successful engineer, and someone who is (an) engineer is likely to be how they interact with people.

    PhD's are a different problem; it's quite possible you need to spend 45 years working to understand one problem enough to solve it. That is why we have universities, government grants, and corporate research labs. The problem is all three of those are subject to wild political influence.

    --
    ..don't panic
  71. They are going to school somewhere by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Inflated counts of Chinese and Indian students have created the myth of the U.S. science gap

    Lets hope the Chinese or Indians resolve the linearity of food growth, with their exponential population growth disaster.
    There are now more people in those two countries than the entire earth population of just 75 years ago.

  72. Sure there is a framework for odd ideas by xtal · · Score: 1


    This is where the problem lies - in the present industry there is little incentive for ambitious or
    abnormal projects.


    It's called a startup.. you find investors, build a prototype, sell some, go after venture capital. I've been involved in a half dozen projects like that. Some work, some don't. Just like science experiments.

    The more important distinction to make is between those project who have immediate practical benefit and those who do not. You can get funding if you want to work on a quantum computer from private industry, men in black vans, etc. You can't if you want to research the pioneer gravity effect.

    Usually, when the science is ready, discoveries will happen. What might be different is they might happen in China, not here.

    --
    ..don't panic
  73. Re:Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advanta by hgh · · Score: 1

    Your point about it being in the US' national interest to have a lower number of scientists and let countries where wages are lower do more science is false.

    Having science pursued abroad is in the US' national interest only if it can fully absorb and take advantage of the discoveries made abroad. That can kind of work if US companies are doing scientific operations abroad, but what will happen is that those foreign scientists will eventually stop working for American companies and found their own companies and such. The discoveries those scientists then make will benefit foreign interests over American interests. Further, scientific and technological advances in one company/industry typically cause spillover effects that benefit other companies/industries. These positive effects have the most impact in the economy where the advances are made.

    It's definitely in a country's interest to pursue strong science and technology programs at home for the military and economic, and thus political, advantages they provide.

  74. Scientists aren't Engineers? by tyrione · · Score: 1

    Show me ten Ph.D's in Physics and I'll show you ten Ph.D's in Mechanical/Material Science Engineering or Electrical Engineering and let's compare notes on what makes a Scientist and what makes an Engineer.

    Simple: One knows both theory and how to apply it to create products and services the World uses; and the other continues to expound upon theory and teach it under the guise of adding some breakthrough the World will eventually utilize. Of course this research is a requirement for both types of titles.

    Care to choose whether that is the Scientist or Engineer?

    We had a saying in Engineering disciplines:

    If you can't do Chemical/Mech-Mat/Electrical you do Civil/Environ and if you can't do Civil/Environ you do Mathematics and if you can't do Mathematics you do Physics.

    The reason for such a broadly sweeping generalization that clearly isn't an immutable truism was due to the countless observations in undergraduate programs that all the top math and physics students applied to engineering schools and their various disciplines. I recalled fondly my Heat Transfer examinations where the curve actually hurt you and then compared a friend of mine who had dropped Chem. Eng. for Physics proudly displaying his 60% A+ exam and stated the rest of the class was in the low 40%. He had no problem freely admitting in Vector Analysis that his grades skyrocketed after he left Chem. Engineering. We both agreed that it was a combination of effects. The quality of competition and his renewed vigor and focus kept him focused. The competition was always steep in engineering and continues to be, not because most professional engineers can even remember a PDE or ODE but because the profession doesn't allow for such padded curves. Factors of Safety and real world regulations that deal with design against lawsuits, etc., shows that outside of the bubble of theory, practical application demands many more concerns, the foremost being human safety trumping any theoretically cool, new breakthrough.

    My apologies for the generalizations but if the Newsweek journalist believes this country doesn't have a gap in available engineers to fill in the gap then perhaps he should write about how hundreds of thousands of engineers having to switch careers because these noble professions don't keep one afloat is where companies should look. I became an engineer for the chance to work in a profession that is always challenging and peaks one's interests. When reality trumped fantasy I switched professions.

    1. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by cubicledrone · · Score: 1

      on what makes a Scientist and what makes an Engineer.

      Scientist = Degree says "of Science"
      Engineer = Degree says "Engineering"

      Wow, and I did that without taking a single course in engineering and only one science. Thank you.

      --
      Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
    2. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reason physics classes have such low test scores compared to engineering classes is because the physics tests are much much harder. Put a physics student in an engineering class and they will think the engineering tests are ridiculously easy.

    3. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a engineer, you might not be aware of how rigorous the study of mathematics actually is. I assume you know some calculus, however, do you know why all of it works so well? Do you know how limits and integrals are formally defined? When was the last time you had to prove or disprove a theorem? I'm not trying to say that what you have learned is inferior, but it is certainly different. I would also caution you against saying that mathematics is any easier, unless you have taken a significant number of courses that are intended for mathematics majors. The study of mathematics at the university level places a great deal of emphasis on proving theorems as well as solving problems, rather than simply demonstrating proficiency at performing calculations (although we do lots of that too). In fact, some of the physics majors who share our courses wax envious at the engineering students, and its not because they want to be challenged more than they already are.

      A preview of what mathematicians do:

      Question: How many prime numbers are there?

      Theorem: There are an infinitely many primes.

      Proof: Assume that there are a finite number of primes: p1,p2,...,pn. Since any natural number (greater than 1) can be uniquely factored into a product of primes, then p1*p2*...*pn + 1 can be uniquely factored into a product of primes. Since (p1*p2*...*pn + 1) mod pi = 1 (where i is between 1 and n inclusive), then pi is not a factor of p1*p2*...*pn + 1. But, this is a contradiction since we assumed that there were a finitely many primes, and yet p1*p2*...*pn + 1 cannot be factored by those primes. Therefore, thre are an infinitely many primes.

      This sort of reasoning and argumentation is what I have to produce on a weekly basis for my professors. The above example is what I would consider a "simple" proof. It is, in fact, a classic. Anyway, you might want to consider who developed the mathematics and science your profession so enjoys, before bashing them.

      Regards,
      James

    4. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by rajsamir · · Score: 1

      Are you crazy? I don't know what school you went to as an Engineering student, but your statements aren't generalizations, they're simply absurd. Some of the most profound discoveries in the "applied sciences" have been solely and firmly based on foundations laid years before in pure mathematics, such as Reimannian Manifolds in Einstein's theories, or limits and functional analysis in the development of calculus. Alan Turing's development of the Turing machine was similarly (arguably) based on discrete mathematics.

      Pure scientists conduct research for the sake of research...but to say their accomplishments only have vague consequences, or they study under the "guise" that their work will be applicable, is ridiculous.

      And the saying around your hallways about the engineering disciplines vs. the sciences is absurd at best. Comparing averages or class curves and grades at some unknown time at an unnamed university is meaningless. A quick history lesson or academic profile of the capacity of engineers and scientists at top tier universities will tell you precisely the opposite. Ask a CS major or Boeing engineer to expand upon the theories that've helped them build their vehicles. You'll find most can't comprehend a introductory level PDE's course.

      Somehow, I fail to believe, despite Samuelson's research, that there is no problem. Graduate mathematics at UCLA is over 60% foreign, with top honors in recent years going to foreign students. Samuelson does have a skewed political slant that would prevent him from accepting a "Department of Education" let alone funding for greater scientific research.

    5. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by swordgeek · · Score: 1

      Translation:

      "I'm an engineer, therefore engineering is better! Research scientists are weenies. Neener neener!"

      It's a pity that engineering still has brainless twats like you to maintain its bad reputation.

      --

      "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
    6. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by Jim_Callahan · · Score: 1

      A Chemical Engineer, a physicist and a mathematician sleep in separate rooms of the same hotel. During the night, a fire breaks out.
       
      The physicist runs outside, finds a water hose, calculates the appropriate trajectory, and sprays the fire through the window, saving most of his belongings.
       
      The Chem E, immediately relating the problem to an oxygen consumption rate, grabs a fire extinguisher and puts out the flame, saving all of his belongings.
       
      The mathematician rises from his bed and looks at the fire, then looks out the window and sees the hose, then looks by the minibar and sees the extinguisher. He ponders for a moment, then proudly declares "a solution exists!" and goes back to bed.

      ... neener neener. :-P

      --
      ...it's really a sad day for America when we require a goddamn ACT OF CONGRESS to make our DVD players work properly. ~
    7. Re:Scientists aren't Engineers? by tyrione · · Score: 1

      I don't know what university you went to but mine included Mechanical Engineers who studied vector analysis, combinatorics, advanced matrix analysis, advanced diffeq of ODE/PDEs, manifold design, etc.

  75. Gap?? No way!! by serutan · · Score: 1

    Now that we have Battlestar Galactica how can there possibly be a science fictional gap?
    We rule.

  76. Not too sure about that. by Inoshiro · · Score: 1

    I live on roughly 8-11k a year. I'm attending University. My tuition is taken care of by student loans. All the rest (books, rent, food, car plates, any cars, fuel, etc) are paid out of that 8-11k a year. If I get extra money (last year I had 3k extra), I do things like upgrade my desktop computer.

    I live a comfortable life. I have enough books and video games, eat a balanced diet, pay my credit cards, etc. I don't have a fancy new car, or own my house, but I'm not doing poorly.

    In my experience in visiting the states, I could live comfortably there on the same amount of money, excepting any possible medical care.

    --
    --
    Internet Explorer (n): Another bug -- that is, a feature that can't be turned off -- in Windows.
  77. Reality.... by pingveno · · Score: 1

    ...only to land a job making less than 80k

    Obviously you have a little bit of a skewed sense of reality. A minimum wage worker in Oregon (my home state) makes $7.50 an hour starting wage.

    $7.50 per hour x 40 hours a week x 52 weeks in a year

    That comes out to be $15,600. Pitiful. Oregon has the second highest minimum wage in the country (thirteen cents per hour less than Washington), so other states pay even less. These workers usually get pay raises every once in a while, but not much. I agree that lawyers, business executives, etc. are generally grossly overpaid, but that doesn't mean that S&E workers are underpaid. The next time you sit down to eat with another engineer at a local restaurant to talk about how much more business majors make than S&E majors, remember this: There's someone washing dishes in the back who wouldn't mind having even just half of your salary.

    --
    "it's not about aptitude, it's the way you're viewed" - Galinda
  78. Money Money Money by spmallick · · Score: 1
    Let me add an interesting angle to this debate.

    If you are born in the US, you see a lot of avenues of earning money. You can be a doctor, an engineer, a lawyer, an artist, a sports person, into real estate etc or none of the above and still make a good living. Scientific education probably plays a role in your money making ability -- but it does not play a critical one.

    If you are born in India ( I am an Indian in a US grad school; don't have enough insight into Chinese system ), and if you do good in your standard X examination, you take up science -- no questions asked. Now you have two choices -- you study engineering or you study medicine. If you cannot get through either of them, you do pure sciences.

    On rare occasions a good student goes for economics and arts. If you had bad grades and still want to show a degree in your matrinomial ads (damn! most marriages are still arranged), you become a lawyer.

    Some of this must have changed after the emergence of call centers but these new jobs are a recent phenomenon.

    There are much better job prospects if you are in the sciences than if you are in any other field. Without exaggeration, I can say that an average Bachelor of Technology would earn twice as much as an average Bachelor of Arts. Consequently, whether or not you are interested in Science, you end up studying science. No wonder, India produces so many engineers.

    But there is no free food -- People in science cannot run and jump. The Indian contingent, representing a billion people -- a sixth of humanity -- earned ONE silver medal in the last Olympics. Sports does not earn you enough money in India; unless you are one of the 11 men who make up the Indian cricket team.

    In summary, one cannot expect the masses to be suddenly interested in science ( in the US ) or sports ( in India ) if there is no monetary incentive.

  79. that was a while ago... by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 1

    Of my friends who got jobs at a major computer/software company, 3 of the 8 didn't have college degrees. But that was a long time ago. The last one to get hired with no degree was hired in 1995. They're all grandfathered now, once you have significant industry experience, no one looks at your degree.

    I am a manager now, I've hired 5 people in the last 3 years. Not a single one doesn't have a degree. I rarely even get resumes from people who don't have degrees.

    I do agree that you don't necessarily have to have a degree to be good in the computer field. But I would not recommend trying to enter the field of software or hardware development (as opposted to testing) without a college degree nowadays. Few hiring managers will take a chance on you.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  80. yep, thousands of resumes... by YesIAmAScript · · Score: 1

    But that doesn't mean they're qualified. I've had positions open for programmers for well over a month now. I get lots of resumes, and I phone interview a lot of people, but that doesn't mean they're qualified.

    I'm looking for people who are good at a slightly specialized software task. The industry is flooded with people who entered programming not because they liked it, but because in the late 90s (esp. the .com explosion) it was viewed as a lucrative job. I wish those people had just gone to business school instead and left my field alone.

    --
    http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
  81. S&E normally includes psych and social science by FishinDave · · Score: 1

    From TFA:

    (Note: These figures exclude psychology and social sciences, such as economics, that are often counted in S&E totals.)

    And we accuse Asians of inflating their S&E figures? :-)

  82. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn straight

  83. International (Well Almost International) View by $criptah · · Score: 1

    When I lived in the former USSR my parents knew that I was going to get an engineering degree because that was the only way to good life; well, at least according to them. Starting from the first grade I was told that the only way to become a well-educated human being was to get a Master's degree in a discipline related to science or engineering. It was almost expected that I would go to school for five or six years in order to get a degree and then become some dude who wears white robes at some lab... Well, that did not happen.

    After moving to the United States and talking to other immigrants from China, ex-USSR and India, I realized that most of us had the same bullshit pressure from our parents. That is how most of us ended up meeing each other in computer science classes. Well, to be honest with you, I liked computer science because of the possible career choices and due to my natural interest in technology. However, some of my foreign class mates could not see themselves doing anything but getting a Master's degree and going through all the schooling at once because they were told to do that. It was expected from them!

    Naturally, people who are born and raised in the United States see choices. It is not uncommon to graduate from high school, take a year off, travel, go to school, figure out what you want to do with life and then go back to graduate school when you are thirty. In other countries this may not be an option and that is why many people aim to get as much education in a specific discipline as soon as possible. The question is: Does it do one any good? As for me, I am not planning on going to a graduate school until later on. I have not figured out what I want to do with my life yet...

    Cheers!

  84. Re:Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advanta by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    It's definitely in a country's interest to pursue strong science and technology programs at home for the military and economic, and thus political, advantages they provide.

    What economic law says that subsidized sci/tech is a good thing? I don't necessarily agree or disagree, but am at a loss to provide evidence beyond "it seems so" (outside of military advantage).

    If comparative advantages seem to lead away from sci/tech because our labor rates are too high, then economic theory seems to say "let it go".

  85. Evaluate the source by randyjg2 · · Score: 1

    We are talking about a reporter that several months ago thought the American Association for Retired Persons is (and I quote) "America's most dangerous lobby." http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/artic le/2005/11/15/AR2005111501308.html I suggest you read his current article in terms of his credentials and roles within Newsweek. Then read some of his previous positions and decide whether you feel he is credible.

    I would like to pose this question to Slashdot readers. Whatever facts you dispute, there definitely will be a lot more Chinese and Indian engineers than American in the future. It is reasonable to assume they will use their native languages more and more as time progresses and non english speakers form the majority of their audience.

    What is your reaction if Chinese or Hindi replace English as the primary documentation language, or that the latest open source technologies may only be available to those capable of understanding Asian languages?

  86. Very funny by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So you're saying that instead of doing science, you should create meta-organizations to talk about engineering instead of doing it -- because that's what's in demand in America!


    Very funny, and no wonder the US is falling behind.

  87. Geek Gorgeous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some scientists - one in a thousand - will attract an "I love geeks" kind of woman.

    http://geekgorgeous.com/april.htm

  88. Exactly! by The+Cydonian · · Score: 1
    Must add, though, that in per capita terms, you can easily argue that India/China/Russia are actually worse off than the US when it comes to doing Masters; it's just that the middle, and upper middle, classes somehow have this notion that doing grad school in engineering (and engineering alone!) is the ticket to greater prosperity.

    Me? I'm in the same boat; loads of parental pressure to get back to grad school, but personally, I'd like to spend some time off and discover what I really want to do. The odds are definitely against doing a technical masters.

  89. Re:Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advanta by hgh · · Score: 1

    It's less an economic law and more of a political economy theory. Scientific and technological advances are the chief mechanism of long-term economic growth improvement. These fields also tend exhibit large returns-to-scale and thus be dominated by a few large firms (e.g. operating systems, pharma) and are relatively high-risk and can be capital-intensive. Further, sci/tech advances have spillover effects that improve the productivity of other firms within the economy as well. Advances diffuses across national lines, but they tend to benefit the domestic economy most, making domestic firms more competitive worldwide. Sci/tech advances have a big impact on maintaining a strong, advanced military.

    So, you could argue that is in a nation's political interest to promote a strong science and technology sector. Promotion could take the form of education incentives, direct subsidies, or other means, with varying degrees of efficacy.

  90. Re:Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advanta by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it is really those who can exploit the inventions, or extract profits from the inventions who make the profit. It may be a myth that direct tech is more "important" economically than other revenue sources.

    For example, India and China may excell at basic R&D, but US investement and IP law companies are the ones who end up reaping the economic benefits because India and China snub investement firms and IP law firms to persue technology.

  91. Re:There's no Chinese or Indonesian science studen by Tablizer · · Score: 1

    So it is becoming more absurd to classify serious science students by nationality.

    Horse wash. 60k USD goes a lot further in India than in the US. The cost of living between countries is huuuuge, and the borders are not going down any time soon (at least in Asia).

  92. Cut in half my ass by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    www.omb.gov

    How can you confuse "stopped rising" with "cut in half"? Holy partisanship, batman!

    1. Re:Cut in half my ass by cyranose · · Score: 1

      You're confusing budgets with the number and size of grants that are actually getting funded. Lots of money is going to WMD. How much to public science?

      Talk to scientists and see how many are leaving academia this year or next because funding isn't there.

  93. Re:Sci/tech/math canNOT be our comparative advanta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Sci/tech/math is dying or stagnant here because our cost of living is too high...

    You're assuming the cost of education in with cost of living.

    The US government will not prioritize education so long as it works to the satisfaction of foreign lobbyists.

    The US is vulnerable. Foreign governments are just using our system of bribes to their advantage. If you are looking for lobbyist money, you want to cut taxes for multinationals, and cut US education spending, and give tax breaks for outsourcing jobs. (and you probably want to retire in a walled community also since that'll be the only place not bound to walmart wages...)

    If school in the US were free (BASED ON MERIT NOT WEALTH), the cost of living would be LOWER, since you'd not have so many tech/science bubbles. This creates disparity.

    I work in a town that 10 years ago was a depressed paper mill town. Now you can't get a ranch on 1 acre for under $250k. Why? Supply and demand from all the 14-acre CEO estates and a shortage of land.

  94. I agree, the chances of grants getting by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    funded are falling. This is not because the pie is shrinking, but rather the number of starving people is skyrocketing.

    The federal government has really "#$"#ed up scientific research, particularly in biomed, by over-subsidizing the creation of scientists without creating jobs for them. Now countless young people are stuck in "temporary" post-doc land for years, while anyone with the sense to have avoided science is by that age making a comfortable or high salary as an engineer, doctor, lawyer, etc. Needless to say, fewer and fewer Americans are entering science. Go figure.

    The last thing we need to do is more business at usual at NIH. We need to quit funding grad students and start funding full-time researchers with real salaries and benefits. The government has it backwards - if they would create good jobs for American scientists, they will get American scientists. Creating scientists for whom there are no jobs is a recipe for disaster.

  95. Millionaire chemist by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

    My uncle is a chemist millionaire.

    He was born in north Mississippi in the 30s and lived in a shack with dirt floors.

    To my knowledge, he was the only one in his family who graduated from high school and was given a scholarship to Ole Miss Univ. He earned a BS and then went to work for Buckeye/Procter and Gamble. He also has his own firm.

    He currently holds 20 something patents and was the principle chemist that designed the absorbancy factor of Pampers and MaxiPads.

    He is a millionare, and has earned it.

    There is nothing wrong with using science to make money - in fact it is how society progresses forward (that and warfare technology development). Money is the driving force of innovation and invention. Don't beleive me? Look at Hughes, Bell, Edison, Ford etc...

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  96. let's do some Godwin by jesterpilot · · Score: 1

    In 1943 - 1945, the Germans tried to cheer themselves up by saying the Russians lost 6 soldiers for every German soldier wasted. Well...

    --
    Trust me, I work for the government.
  97. Mentifex AI News by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.advogato.org/person/mentifex/ has the latest Mentifex AI news.

  98. oh canada by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
    I've got family in edmunton who like it there, but the politics seem nearly as depressing as the US...in any case, I've sort of been thinking about canada.

    I'm assuming you make CA$100k each, that doesn't seem like very good pay. Taxes and the cost of living are much higher (at least my relatives complain about it) and there is no mortgage deduction. I don't really know though, it isn't comfortable to ask about their finances. How are my assumptions incorrect?

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
    1. Re:oh canada by udowish · · Score: 1

      It becomes difficult to compare, yes COL is slightly higher, but Rel Estate is usually much cheaper, and believe it or not, basice items are generally cheaper (except for the "sin" pleasures like smokes and alcohol, they tax the Sh!!t out of them). Everyone thinks that it is SO expensive here, but our standard of living is amoung the highest in the world, higher than the average in the US in particular. And as for the mortgage interest thing, your right, we can not deduct the interest from our mortgage on our taxes BUT we don't have to pay capital gains tax when we make a profit when we sell rel-estate either.

      This is a very simple and basic example (mabe over simplified but I state it to make my point) When I was in NYC last year, a rotten ronnies meal cost me $6.95 you know the combo meals. Here in Calgary, I get the same thing for about $5.85. Housing is MUCH cheaper in Calgary, than say NYC (ok, unfair comparision there, but if you compare Vancouver / TO to say LA and NYC same fact applies). So to put it in short a 200K combined income in Canada is JUST ABOUT the SAME as a 200K combined income in the US when it comes to overall financial health. Things that are cheaper here, are more in the US and vis versa is also true. It comes down to "what are your pleasures?" if you smoke and drink alot, then living in Canada will put you in the poor house. Where as I can buy a nice home for much less than its companion in the US. It gets really hard to compare in specifics....

      --
      when in doubt press enter and we'll figure it out later..
    2. Re:oh canada by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
      Thanks for a helpful post.

      I realize things differ greatly even within the same country - I've lived in Southern California, San Francisco, and now Denver, Colorado. Even the same city can be very different 10 years later.

      It sure makes comparison difficult when considering a move. I would have trouble comparing another city in the US to mine as far as financial viability, let alone another country.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!