Synroc's comments

Synroc | 7 years ago | on: M.B.A. Applications Decline at Harvard, Wharton, Other Elite Schools

While having considered it, for me, unless you are planning to move to Business org, it seems an MS in something technical is more valuable, even in engineering management, or Product Management, just looking at the degrees people at my company have in those positions.

Is it the same at other places?

Synroc | 7 years ago | on: Desperate for Data Scientists

The reason I’m considering it is because I’m trying to envision myself in 10-20 years and thinking who I would be happy to be.

Right now, I don’t believe what would make me happy is to be a principal/staff engineer somewhere necessarily.

Don’t get me wrong, I love programming, but I see it as me getting paid to solve problems, and not getting paid to write good code, and I think there are other ways to solve those problems. For example, I think the biggest problems in my organization are managerial and organizational rather than technical, and I feel like the type of training that would come with an MBA can help one solve those issues, including communication, planning, product validation, people management, etc.

That said, my entire reporting chain up to and including the CEO doesn’t have an MBA, so it’s not like it’s a prerequisite.

The other path I’m considering is an MS in CS/SE because while I’ve been an engineer for a few years, my undergrad is in Mathematics, and I’m worried it’ll be a limiter later on to not have a CS degree, but also only a BS.

Synroc | 7 years ago | on: Desperate for Data Scientists

Have you found it to be true? I guess in general have you found it to have been worth it.

One of my concerns is whether or not i’d be able to come back as an engineer as a fallback.

Synroc | 7 years ago | on: Desperate for Data Scientists

Is there any difference in terms of curriculum between the EMBA and the MBA? As in would people consider the EMBA a "lesser" MBA so to speak?

I'm an engineer looking at MBAs right now too, but it seems like a huge investment.

Synroc | 7 years ago | on: Ask HN: Who is hiring? (August 2018)

Dropbox | San Francisco, New York, Seattle, Reston | Full-time | Site Reliability Engineer | https://www.dropbox.com/jobs/listing/1074004

Contact me at [email protected]

Site Reliability Engineers are mission-critical for Dropbox success. The SRE team has major impact inside of Dropbox engineering through optimizing web services and building our in-house multi-exabyte storage system, Magic Pocket. Check out the Dropbox Tech Blog to learn more! The Site Reliability Team consists of hybrid systems and software engineers who are responsible and take ownership for management of large scale infrastructure while improving reliability and automation. SREs are integrated within the infrastructure team, and we're looking for engineers who want to be a part of developing infrastructure software, maintaining it, and scaling it. You will be part of a small family within Dropbox that has a huge impact on the world.

Synroc | 9 years ago | on: Next Iteration of “The Rust Programming Language” Book

I had tried running Rust for a few months now, but it didn't really clicked until I went through this book.

Thanks to the great explanations of the concepts of rust, the helpful exercises and examples, I have not only since been able to contribute to the RustLang, but also am in the process of a PR for Servo, created a website using rocket.rs, and started using Rust at work.

It's definitely true that the initial hump of learning Rust was more intense than other languages such as Python, but this book helped to alleviate a lot of the initial pain.

Thanks carols10cents & steveklabnik!

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