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Unknown
Editor
August 2001
Welcome, students, to the Microwaves101 classroom. I am your professor.
Why am I hiding my face? Is it because I am on the witness protection
plan? Or because I havent quit my day job for this gig?
None of your business, pal.
This months editorial topic is new hire engineers.
Because of the prosperity bestowed upon us by Mr. Clinton, Mr. Gates,
Mr. Greenspan and others, most microwave companies are experiencing
a period of growth unparalleled in history. In order to staff
every program, we all must complete for the same pool of talent,
which seems to be getting shallower and more fetid each year.
Four years of engineering college now entitles the graduate to a
job at $50K+, a new Pentium III computer, a cube with a view of
the water cooler and restrooms, a huge ego, and the right to whine
about how he/she is being mistreated. Since I am not in the process
of hiring any of you, let me set you straight: most of you are overpaid,
whiney, lazy bastards that dont know s**t from Shinola.
That being said, Microwaves101 is here to help. By the way, Shinola
is shoe polish, and seasoned microwave engineers can tell the difference
with one whiff.
In my day, if you were not in the top fifth of your graduating class
you didnt even get a job offer from a real engineering company.
And you didnt get a computer in your office, you were lucky
if you had a rotary-dial phone. Fax, pager, cell phone, Razer
scooter, we didnt have any of that. Computer-Aided design?
You and your Radio Shack TRS-80 were on your own.
Let me give you some examples of how desperate the engineering community
is. Once upon a time, we had high standards, we actually hired
only graduates with BS degrees. As we got more desperate, we started
to hire math majors, that seemed to work. Later, we started to
hire astronomy majors (hey, there must be microwaves in space, right?)
The last straw was when someone in H.R. confused astronomy with
astrology. Next thing you know, we are talking about the relationship
between Gemini and Aquarius instead of the relationship between
gain and noise figure.
You want to be a real microwave engineer? Book mark this site!
I realize that 90% of it is under construction, but we are kind
of busy here doing real work, so be patient! Be sure to post your
need/gripes on the message board, where we will "get on them
right away". Or not.
For a poignant view from another "professor", check out
blowmeuptom.com. Tom
Leykis may not know microwave antennas, but he is an expert on "frontal
lobes"!

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