Ask HN: Career for someone good at making time-sensitive critical decisions?
4 points| preordained | 2 years ago
My son is really clever, always has been. It really shines in an interesting way in games like Magic the Gathering or more complex board games which our family has always been into. He dominates these things in a way that seems preternatural for a kid. I say this as an adult and a decent programmer, and my wife was top notch in school, my son (15 now) makes us feel DUUUMMMB sometimes.
I can honest to God say that if he had the domain expertise he is the one I'd want to count on to defuse a bomb or do some risky surgery. That said, I only know of things that might be suitable for such an individual from the common tropes (brain surgeon!). Is there any thing lesser known that sounds worth thinking about?
_g0wg|2 years ago
Quite often with that tight of a schedule, something would go wrong in the supply chain and we'd be left trying to find an emergency solution. It sounds bad but it was a necessity of the industry we were in. It was often similar to a strategy game, having to plan several steps ahead and predict where the delays will come from, figuring out what you can change that will be faster to produce but will still fit within the customer's requirements.
Bostonian|2 years ago
JumpinJack_Cash|2 years ago
gtirloni|2 years ago
Time-sensitive critical decisions as a career sounds like guaranteed burnout.
akg_67|2 years ago
More than burnout, it was the boredom of "lulls" in between time-sensitive critical decisions that got me.
In my pre-sales/post sales system engineering roles, I was routinely approached by leadership and teammates to "put out the fire" as they used to say. I enjoyed those kind of challenges but such instances were not that frequent, may be once a month, and I found the time in between such cases incredibly boring. But the high of solving a pressing problem and then relaxing for a while was very addictive and rewarding.
I expect that I might have burnout if I was dealing with such cases everyday but a few cases a month might not be that bad.
VirusNewbie|2 years ago
Just encourage him to study a wide variety of topics so he can pursue his passion.
badpun|2 years ago
Most of jobs like these are more about being able to make decisions under pressure than about being super smart, though.
Desafinado|2 years ago
ttymck|2 years ago
syndacks|2 years ago
bhag2066|2 years ago
nprateem|2 years ago