OT : What do you do for a living?

I'm a freelance 'Mac Resource' (DTP operator, tech support & project admin) whoring myself out to whichever management consultancy wants me this month.

Basically I transform hand-written scribbled pages into Powerpoint, Word & Excel presentation materials for the consultants to show how wonderful their ideas are, and to help them explain why they need another 2 months & £200k to fix a problem that looked easy when they first tendered for the project.

The pay's quite good, I get to travel on expenses (the last year has been 3 months in Moscow, 8 months in Brentford and 3 months in Dubai - although I'm now back in Brentford) and I get to spend my pocket money on BMWs :P
 
I'm a freelance Graphic/Product Designer and a Technical Author for a major engineering company. Have you ever picked up a user manual and thought " The person who wrote this should get shot!" or " I swear to god this manual was written by a two year old with a set of worn out crayons" Well that's what I try not to do. I try to get illustrations and content bang on so it's a straight forward for the user to understand.
 
ish said:
I'm a freelance Graphic/Product Designer and a Technical Author for a major engineering company. Have you ever picked up a user manual and thought " The person who wrote this should get shot!" or " I swear to god this manual was written by a two year old with a set of worn out crayons" Well that's what I try not to do. I try to get illustrations and content bang on so it's a straight forward for the user to understand.

:x I'm the one normally tearing my hair out with some of these user manuals!!...............please, please please make it simple! :P
 
I'm an accountant working for Tesco - it's weird that I'm working at the company that I got my first ever job with over 11 years ago!! Thankfully on a bit more pay :)
 
cj10jeeper said:
Andrew, I'm prepared to offer my services free of charge for field testing of lingerie :roll: It would provide a welcom change to my role as banking consultant.

I don't think we need those mental images :thumbsdown: :poke:
 
Mr Whippy said:
Dreamer said:
Im in TV aswell working as an engineer. The one that used to play music videos.

LOVE the sound of getting into computer design like whippy/herminator! 8)

I played around with 3d studio max whilst i was in University about ten years ago and made a short video of a car driving through a city. I remember thinking how amazing it was that i could put a picture of Kelly Brook on a virtual bilboard! That was ten years ago now though!

Whats the best way into that industry and are there many jobs out of London (need to leave before i lose it on the northern line).

I'm no expert, but the best way in is example work, or ultimately your portfolio. When I went to uni there were no degree's in 3ds or games or anything like that, and a decade before those who really started the 3d/2d computer stuff off mainstream were either computer science people, or artists, or a bit of both :)

In my current job I got in on my portfolio of hobby work. Previously I was engineering/cartography disciplined, which I guess carries over in some areas, and I'd always been into computers/drawing/gfx from the age of five (commodore 64/128 drawing dinosaurs badly :) )


The core skills are ultimately more arts/experience based now as the computer science lot have written us nice programs to use. Can you visualise something and then reproduce it in your chosen digital media with your chosen application?
Of course, making sure the piece of work works for intended purpose is important, so practicing making models within certain criteria is key. Ie, make it from as few triangles as possible, or using only certain sized textures. Then you have the product visualisation people who make images to exacting standards, architecture types who make prospect buildings look real in video's of the location to build at, or people doing work just for arts sake... Some of the challenges that run actively on http://forums.cgsociety.org for example are a great place to understand the different needs of different work.

Alot of the contacts you may build up for jobs will be through places like cgSociety and so on. Several good people I know who worked on artwork for the PGR series and GTA series racing games I know through, and got jobs through, doing hobby work on games like NFS, rFactor, Racer etc over the years through such communities...


There is loads of work outside London. Team 17 (worms games) are in Wakefield, Rockstar North in Edinburgh (GTA4) Iirc, Yorkshire has one of the highest densities of game developers in the UK... sensible modern IT types you see. They go for geographical centralisation for convenience of travel, knowing that any other comms these days can be done digitally ;)
Quite a nice industry then, because it's new, and because it's changing so fast that by the time you have done a 'new' degree/course in it, things have changed again. Nothing like just jumping in and getting going as a hobby and then just slewing into a job and getting paid for it!



All that said, as Herminator pointed out, the pay isn't so great until you are managing teams/projects more, and that is true anywhere anyway, and doing it 5 days a week, or managing it too much, can drain the enthusiasm sometimes... as with all jobs I suppose.
Personally I'd like to do a different job every day of the week because I have so many interests and not enough time to do them all as in-depth as I want to!

Dave

Lots of jobs outside of London, there's a few around Newcastle, more around Liverpool, such as Bizarre Creations (Project Gotham) Evolution (Motorstorm) There's even one or two in Brighton. There's even the chance to work abroad, I've seen quite a few advertisements for jobs in Australia, which is tempting when I get a few more years experience.

The key to a job (other than experience) is a good portfolio. A degree holds a bit more significance than it used to but it's still not essential, for my the Uni course showed me what was possible and gave me a basis to work off. I chose to learn how to model cars as my final year project, it's different to character or environment modelling which are covered more by degrees. Lecturers are often from the industry but even after a couple of years they'll be out of date, you'll learn more useful stuff in your first 6 months in the industry than you will in 3 years of Uni.

Even if your models aren't totaly game suitable, accuracy and efficient/clean mesh will show if you have the right skills. I've seen plenty of ok models that fail terribly when it comes to accuracy of recreating a real car some people just don't seem to properly look at reference material :headbang:

I use 3ds Max and photoshop myself, many studios use Maya but photoshop is universal.
 
I am posted to the Royal Armoured Cores (RAC) Gunnery School in Lulworth, Dorset as a Gunnery instructor. Been there for two years and will return to my regiment "The 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards" in Germany around the latter part of July. We teach anything from small arms upto the 120mm Challenger 2 main gun, the variation is huge in what we teach because of the amount of vehicles we now have in service in Afghanistan and Iraq. For our American friends we have a couple of your equivilant colleagues posted here aswell and they are real good eggs. My unit is in Afghan as we chat and luckily have not had any fatalities, but there is still another 3-4 months left and only so long can your luck go on for. We have had guys lose limbs, get blown up and have lucky escapes so I'm not that unhappy not to be there! No doubt with a long term commiiiment to Afghan I'll be there in the future, beats Iraq as I have done that place to death and I've got some bad experiences from past tours.
Another nine and a half years and I will be a civvy and get out of greens for good. Only real downside is that I'll not be able to get anymore tax free cars from Germany. My Z4MC was tax free and saved me around 7 grand from new, that saving took care of the instant depreciation so that god for small mercys!
 
Mikey said:
I am posted to the Royal Armoured Cores (RAC) Gunnery School in Lulworth, Dorset as a Gunnery instructor. Been there for two years and will return to my regiment "The 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards" in Germany around the latter part of July. We teach anything from small arms upto the 120mm Challenger 2 main gun, the variation is huge in what we teach because of the amount of vehicles we now have in service in Afghanistan and Iraq. For our American friends we have a couple of your equivilant colleagues posted here aswell and they are real good eggs. My unit is in Afghan as we chat and luckily have not had any fatalities, but there is still another 3-4 months left and only so long can your luck go on for. We have had guys lose limbs, get blown up and have lucky escapes so I'm not that unhappy not to be there! No doubt with a long term commiiiment to Afghan I'll be there in the future, beats Iraq as I have done that place to death and I've got some bad experiences from past tours.
Another nine and a half years and I will be a civvy and get out of greens for good. Only real downside is that I'll not be able to get anymore tax free cars from Germany. My Z4MC was tax free and saved me around 7 grand from new, that saving took care of the instant depreciation so that god for small mercys!

:thumbsup: You guys deserve a damn sight more than just a bit of free tax! Massive respect for all our armed forces in conflict around the world.
 
*AL* said:
Mikey said:
I am posted to the Royal Armoured Cores (RAC) Gunnery School in Lulworth, Dorset as a Gunnery instructor. Been there for two years and will return to my regiment "The 1st The Queen's Dragoon Guards" in Germany around the latter part of July. We teach anything from small arms upto the 120mm Challenger 2 main gun, the variation is huge in what we teach because of the amount of vehicles we now have in service in Afghanistan and Iraq. For our American friends we have a couple of your equivilant colleagues posted here aswell and they are real good eggs. My unit is in Afghan as we chat and luckily have not had any fatalities, but there is still another 3-4 months left and only so long can your luck go on for. We have had guys lose limbs, get blown up and have lucky escapes so I'm not that unhappy not to be there! No doubt with a long term commiiiment to Afghan I'll be there in the future, beats Iraq as I have done that place to death and I've got some bad experiences from past tours.
Another nine and a half years and I will be a civvy and get out of greens for good. Only real downside is that I'll not be able to get anymore tax free cars from Germany. My Z4MC was tax free and saved me around 7 grand from new, that saving took care of the instant depreciation so that god for small mercys!

:thumbsup: You guys deserve a damn sight more than just a bit of free tax! Massive respect for all our armed forces in conflict around the world.
Well Said... :thumbsup: :thumbsup:
 
Wow, lots of talent and skills out there! I am a Representational Paralegal for the Federal Government, and trust me, there is NO check in the mail! 8 years away from retirement, and so MANY places I want to explore! Will use any excuse to take a drive!
 
Well I am a student of Year 5 IB programme on a private english school here in Prague. What I do: I manage to study, between all the parties we got goin on... :D :D :D
 
I work for Toyota Financial Services as an Area Manager. It's really a people development job, making sure the Toyota dealerships I have are doing a good job and keeping Toyota customers " completely satisfied" . Loads of paperwork, 40,000 miles a year, have to drive an Avensis for part of the year, ( hence the need for an interesting car) . It pays the bills, but lots of hours and not very inspiring.
 
Interesting thread guys, some pretty varied jobs there. And lots of I.T.!

I'm a civil engineer specialising the the design of highways. I'm employed by a large multinational engineering consultancy (one of the biggest) and work on major highway schemes in the United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland.

I graduated fairly recently and initially worked on water and wastewater infrastructure projects, before moving into highways and transportation. It's a pretty good line to be in; the pay is competitive, the work is sufficiently entertaining, there aren't many engineers about so it's quite secure, and there's a clear career advancement path.
 
Work as a territory sales manager for the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company here in Quebec, Canada. I cover our commercial truck and OEM accounts.
 
I am Software and Solutions Manager for a company that installs digital theatres and planetariums... I've been travelling around the world for 10 years commissioning display systems in domes and simulators for over 10 years now and get involved in multi-channel systems, image generators, audio systems, control systems, realtime and playback software and content generation.

Before that I was a technical author for 7 years at a professional audio company "up north" before moving to the South East where I continued as that for a couple of years at a simulator display company. The thing about writing manuals is that you talk to design engineers, manufacturing guys, software teams, installation and service people so you end up with quite an in-depth knowledge of the technology. Then you go on a couple of installs to "help out" and bang... you realise you know more than most people around you..!

Have to say I love it, but starting to not enjoy the travelling so much with a young familiy at home.

Also, I've only driven my car about 8 times after owning it for over a month so finding the RWD & 231bhp a little daunting in this weather..! I've gone from a deisel Land Rover Defender that I owned for 18 months straight into this..!

:driving:
 
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