by Arlos » Fri Feb 02, 2007 3:54 pm
The other question is, of course, whether I really wish to get back into network engineering. I constantly found that the IT department was treated as the red-headed stepchildren of the company, with never enough people or budget to really get stuff done like we wanted to, and no understanding on the part of upper management what our job required and entailed, thus getting hit with crazy and unrealistic instructions or restrictions. I remember one time at Oracle, we had a network outage planned for 6 weeks, so we could do some absolutely necessary firmware upgrades on every one of the routers, and it was canceled an hour before go time because Larry Ellison was going to be in his aircraft hanger that evening, and didn't want to miss out reading some email. Then there was the doomed project of trying to use AOL as dialin to the Oracle network, before VPN existed, and none of the AOL engineers grasping the concept that we wanted some actual security and encryption on connections from the internet into the corporate backbone....
I'm taking a bunch of directed courses towards a Bioinformatics certificate, and that's actually sounding kinda interesting. The main extra thing I need to pick up is some more database type skills. One of the things that most appeals to me about the bioinformatics is that it's a reall cross-genre type of position: you're helping out with pure research, plus you have to do sysadmin stuff (cause you're likely the only computer-related guy in the group), you have to do coding, you have to do database work, etc. Also, as you're a dedicated part of a research team, you're part of a potential profit center, rather than just a painful but necessary expense. And hell, I've always loved science more than anything, and while it's not Astronomy, it's still interesting as hell...
-Arlos