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2024.06.08 21:32 Nice-Locksmith-8474 Chance student who locked in junior year for Law/International Relations

I am in my junior year and am trying to see how my resume stands up and what to add, change, or potentially drop for my applications to some selective colleges as well as my chances of success. May have forgotten some things but this should be everything. ED EA RD advice for colleges would be great too.
Should be done by application time: *** (Key)
Demographics:
Gender: Male
Race: Asian (Indian)
Region: Midwest, fairly competitive area
Type of school: Public
hooks (URM, first generation, legacy, athlete, etc.): N/A
Intended Major(s): International Relations/Law/Finance?
ACT/SAT/SAT II: 1530 SAT, 36 ACT*** (Still have to do the act but I am getting 36's on the practice tests. If I do get a 36, should I submit my SAT score too?)
UW/W GPA and Rank: UW: 3.950, (4.0 without A-'s, don't know if that matters). The school does not rank.
Coursework: 14 APs, 5 Honors, 1 CIS (College in School)
Senior Year Courses: AP Macroeconomics, AP Microeconomics, AP Lit, AP Psych, AP Stats, AP Physics C, CIS Spanish 5
Awards:
Extracurriculars (Not Ranked in Order):
  1. Secretary General (President) and cofounder of a Model UN club with 60+ signed-up members. Hosted simulations within the school already and planning to attend a real conference in the fall.
  2. Two research papers are currently being written, one is aimed at the future evolution of marketing in AI and I am interning with a Healthcare services company to write a research paper under the guidance of a mentor. The paper is being written to advise said healthcare company. Not sure if I can publish/enter into competitions.*** The other is by myself regarding an international policy topic that I plan to have published or admitted into competitions. ***
  3. Interned over 9 weeks in a reelection campaign for a National Senator where I will be responsible for campaign finances. Will facilitate thousands of dollars of cash flow in campaign funds and will receive experience in electoral organizing tactics. (Haven't done this yet so I don't know too much of the general information)***
  4. Volunteered 100+ hours, plan to volunteer at least 50 hours this summer and more in the fall. Various locations but focused on a few quality spots. (STEM Camp, Religious site, Food Scarcity organization)
  5. Varsity soccer for school
  6. Took collegiate-level coursework in International Relations***.
  7. Leaders Invested in Community - Acclimatized incoming high schoolers and helped develop decision-making abilities. Each year I lead my group of ten students in preparatory activities alongside other mentors.
  8. Teen leadership organization across regions of 2 states where teens determine initiatives to rectify issues in the community. Examples include Vape testing kits manufacturing to park cleanup. I plan to apply for Co-President***
  9. National Honors Society, Investment Club, Recreational Piano
Some things I am looking into, less concrete:
  1. Internship in the fall geared around international relations or law
  2. Regional leadership position for Business competitions
  3. Writer for an alternate-history mod for a video game I play
  4. More Awards
Schools: List of selective colleges, I am also applying to my state school which I will get into
Georgetown
UPenn
Cornell
UMichigan
Berkeley
UCLA
Northwestern
Brown
UCSD
Johns Hopkins
Duke
Columbia
submitted by Nice-Locksmith-8474 to chanceme [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:25 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to EngineeringStudents [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:25 FancyPeanut6864 My manager gave me a PIP without any Probation Reviews in 11 months

Story started from July, 2023. I started my role as an international student well-being advisor in a British University. It’s not an entry-level job, but they didn’t require any well-being/ psychology background. I am a young professional, with a literature master degree and 2 years experience in telemarketing. But luckily, I got the job.
I am Chinese, used to be an international student in the UK. Getting this job means a lot to me. I feel like I am in the position to help students who are probably experiencing my previous challenges.
But after I joined, I realized that my division is going through a restructure. My role is a product of this restructure, because my role is a new role in the new established Student Wellbeing Partnership Service.
Of course, things are unsettled— our service is established, but the head of service hasn’t been recruited. The Disability Service’s manager temporarily covered the role and became my first LM, let’s call her A. If I look back, my induction back then was quite rubbish. As you can possibly imagine — she just lost 3 disability advisors (redundancy), and that was a lot to sort out for her. So I didn’t receive enough training or guidance at all.
As someone who was new to the role and new to HE, I tried really hard by observing, asking questions, and doing shadowing sessions. No one really told me what 1 year probation means — I looked up online and asked several people at work. They told me that I will be discussing my objectives based on my initial PDR, and there should be one 4 months review, and a 8 months review, then the final one.
I suggested A to have a look of my probation the end of October, 2023. Unfortunately, A broke her wrist badly and didn’t really go back to work until February this year. So, Mental Health service manager B covered A’s role with the support from the head of department C. Obviously, this means very little management for me and my whole team because they were just too busy with their own work.
I suggested B and C to have a look of my 4 months probation at the end of Nov, 2023 again. Due to their busy schedules — my first probation review didn’t happen until this year January. B and C attended to the meeting, we had a brief conversation about my initial PDR and my recent work updates. They told me that they are quite happy about my work. That’s the end of my “probation review”, no feedback on my attendance, work quality, teamwork, no probation review report to be signed. All these issues only came back to me very recently, because until last week, I didn’t know what does a proper probation review look like. That
Hearing the positive feedback from both B and C was a relief. My new manager, so as my current manager D started this February. I thought she was a good manager, because we finally had someone and she seemed to be very professional and experienced. I trusted her 100%. I was super open to talk about my challenges, my mental health and physical health problems at work. I told her that this year February I had a break up with my first boyfriend, and I have to go do several medical check ups ( didn’t impact my work/ attendance because there was no symptoms, related to HPV). I also told her that I feel like other people in the team are better than taking initiatives than me in the teams meetings, and I would like to do my job well, but I am not very experienced so a lot of missions, values, strategic plans sounds a bit abstract for me. I have more confidence in practical works.
I reflected other things, like I think I should be more active in the group chat because I don’t say as many morning and goodbyes as other people. Because I go to the office nearly every day, and I prefer talking to people in person. Which I did, as the youngest and the only unmarried person and the only international person( they are all white British females) in the team, I tried my best to chitchat and do small talks with the others.
My manager D first referred me to EAP, that makes sense, they she referred me to occupational health and encouraged me to test my potential Autism syndrome. This felt a bit weird to me, but I grew up in a country with limited neurodivergent awareness, so I called occupational health the beginning of this month (June). I didn’t relate this referral to my performance at all. ( I googled it, found out it’s more related to low attendance, but my attendance is great so I didn’t think much). She also mentioned development plans/ improvement plans several times, but I thought they are just some general development things everyone has to do in the uni every year. As for improvement, I thought that is just related to staff development in general given the fact that my role is a new role.
The occupational health therapist told me that my manager put “poor performance ” on the referral form. I was very surprised — but again, I thought that might just be a mistake, or because my attendance is great, and she has to select something to make the referral. I had a meeting with D the next day, and I reported back to her. She said that’s great, she would like to see the report. I said sure, after I reviewed it the therapist will send it to you.
Then I realized, I haven’t had any probation reviews since mid January, and now is June. So I mentioned it to her, and the next sentence from her was “ oh we will have to extend it because you are under the improvement plan”. I was in huge shock. Then she just opened a document and started typing the PIP.
I saw her put things like boundaries, social communication, teamwork, facilitation, etc. I was very confused, because some of it are based on my self reflection that I told her recently. Also things like boundaries, she gave me some examples, but I said I didn’t know those boundaries before, after she told me what not to do, I have never done it again.
It was a long night for me. I couldn’t understand why the last comment on my PDR made in Feb from my previous manager was “you settle down well””great start”, and then 4 months later my probation is getting extended.
The next day, I arranged a meeting with head of department C. I told her my shock and distress about this decision. She seemed to be on D’s side, and she forgot that she did the “probation review” in Jan with me. She asked me”did A and B have the probation in Jan with you?” I said, “no, it was you”.
Anyway, I requested a 3 people’s meeting with C and D later to talk things through. It was a difficult meeting — I realized that a lot of concerns of my performance coming from my manager D are based on her assumptions. She never double check with me, never communicate with me, never did the 8 months review with me, never even mentioned the word “probation” with me. D thought she gave me enough signals by mentioning “improvement plans” “it’s inappropriate to pick up call on teams after work hours” I told her I misunderstood her because any of that was raised in a probation context, and I thoughts those boundaries things I will pick up as I learn at work.
D made a decision to extend my probation without checking with my previous probation reviews with my previous managers, or checking the previous reports. Those reports won’t exist because no one showed to me before, non of those things had been discussed with me, no one never signed any. Therefore, I don’t even know the probation process very well. D mentioned her concerns to C several times, based on what C told me, but C even forgot her “probation review ” with me! That was just a PDR review!
I don’t even know what to say now. 11 months, no PR, no negative feedback, now my probation is getting extended. This has destroyed my trust in this workplace, in those managers, as well as my confidence at work. I was proud of myself about settling in down well with limited resources, and finishing some big student projects done.
D told me the decision without considering the timing too. She just told me after I suggested the probation, she shows zero consideration of my mental health, physical health struggles, and struggles being an international worker whose visa, accommodation, everything is tied to this job.
Now, not joking, I feel like this has been too traumatic for me. I don’t know what I should do next — I am having the final probation review soon. I told them that I will make an appeal if I have to. But C and D told me to not “burn the bridge”. They still want to extend my probation, as the induction I should have had in the beginning. I admit that I do havé a lot to improve on, but god, why is everything so unfair?
How should I protect myself? Getting another visa sponsored job will be almost impossible due to the new tightened immigration policy. I feel so hopeless,and I have no one to talk to.
submitted by FancyPeanut6864 to probation [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:24 Zealousideal_Plum533 Do you feel sometimes you aren't good enough or just not important?

Growing up my Dad was strict on me and talk about being better then other kids. The whole model minority stereotype of being Vietnamese American or Asian American. I was horrible at school and my grades were okay. 3.2 GPA. I wasn't honor roll or anything. Just normal classes.
Wanted me to get out more so he sign me up for Boyscouts at age 12. Earn my Eagle Scout at age 18. Wanted my college resume to look good. The World turn's it back on me and I did the same to it when at I was younger. My old scout troop though I couldn't do it and harass me about it. I join a new Scout troop and prove to them I could.
I sign myself up for Hung Gar Kung Fu classes at age 18 and it took me 9 years to earn my black sash. My old school the Master didn't bother to teach me and I join a new school. I compete in a competition and won a fair match against one of his students. He was shock and just left.
As a kid I have to live up to my Dad's expectations and I was afraid of letting him down. I made amends with him in my early 20s and now he is nicer.
As for college I got a bachelor's degree in coding and programmer. Lately been promoted to Senior Software Engineer. Got my own office and name plate in gold. For Asian Americans any other job then Doctor, Lawyer, Engineer, Nurse, and Pharmacist ain't going to cut it with strict Asian parents. Sorry if it sounds like I am bragging and being a jerk. It is just I grew up around toxic relatives and this whole toxic environment of status with degrees.
Lately, though I am separating myself from toxic relatives. Except for my Dad. We hang out a lot and enjoy family time.
I have to work my way up from the bottom to where I am now. Lately, I been talking with my therapist who has experience with autistic adults. I talk to her about my anger issues and how I am a narcissist. I am not perfect and I am flaw. But I am working on my issues. I am doing my best. My relatives brag about their kids having PHDS and MBA degrees. Makes me feel less important. But my cousins are divorced and jobless even with degrees.
Being these things don't define me as a person. I am more then that.
I am not defined by my achievements or labels.
I had a okay childhood, but I guess it made me tougher in the long run. But being yell at and made to sit in timeout. Beaten with hand hurts. I was a misbehaving kid. Now I am okay with it. I address it with my Dad years ago. We had a hear to heart talk. My Dad is nicer now then he was back then. I forgive him and myself back then. Making amends and having heart to heart talks is hard since many Asian Americans don't want to.
submitted by Zealousideal_Plum533 to autism [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:23 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to careeradvice [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:22 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to careerchange [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:22 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to CSEducation [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:21 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to Career_Advice [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:13 double-xor Winning ICD Diagnosis Codes?

Hi,
Recent Rx for Wegovy (BMI 29, prior bariatric surgery, now gaining weight [thanks, menopause...]) was denied with ICD E66.3 (Overweight).
The denial letter says Wegovy is only covered (specific to this case) for B) An initial BMI of 27 kgm/2 to 30 kg/m2 with one or more weight-related health conditions
What are all the weight-related health conditions / applicable codes? The common ones are often listed but then it typically ends with "... or other applicable health conditions". Does prior bariatric surgery 'count'? If none of the common ones apply, what might be one that does?
This is through BCBS CA (CVS Caremark) and a bariatric (surgery & meds) doctor.
Thanks.
(Helping out a friend. I'm still in the cagrisema trial and doing very well)
submitted by double-xor to Semaglutide [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:13 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career?

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to careerguidance [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:13 Various-Medicine-634 Social Media Marketing courses in Kolkata

In today's digital age, social media marketing has become an essential tool for organizations and professionals looking to succeed in a highly competitive environment. With over 4.7 billion active social media users globally, sites like Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn, and TikTok have altered the way marketers communicate with their audience.
Here’s a list of top social media marketing courses in Kolkata:
  1. IIDE: Asia’s Leading Institute for Digital Marketing IIDE provides an online Social Media Marketing course which includes a combination of high-quality video lectures and trainer-led live sessions. The video lectures are recorded to ensure you can watch them at your own convenience. The live sessions are reserved for demonstrating tools and doubt-solving.
- Access to Video Lectures for 30 days
- Practice Tests & Assignments
- Dedicated Q&A Support & Help
Course Duration & Fees
The duration of IIDE’s social media marketing course (online) is approximately 29 hours. The course fee is INR 11,200. After looking over the highlights of the course, you’ll see that the price is reasonable.
Course Highlights
By the end of this extensive online Social Media Marketing course, you will know the technical aspects of how to run and create social media marketing campaigns, both organically and paid. IIDE’s certificate serves as a testament to the knowledge and skills you have gained.
  1. KDMI (Kolkata Digital Marketing Institute): The course covers all major aspects of social media marketing including Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube marketing, content creation, and online reputation management.
-Comprehensive coverage of social media platforms.
-Hands-on learning with live projects.
-Placement assistance and career support.
-Personal guidance and mentorship.
  1. Seven Boats Academy: Course name: Diploma in Digital Marketing
This course includes modules on social media marketing, SEO, content marketing, PPC, Google Analytics, WordPress, and CMS development. The course duration is 6 Months.
Course Highlights:
-Over 500 global projects completed.
-Training for 25,000+ students.
-Recognized certificates and awards.
-Placement assistance and career guidance.
These courses offer a comprehensive curriculum, practical learning experiences, and strong support for career placement, making them excellent choices for anyone looking to excel in social media marketing in Kolkata.
submitted by Various-Medicine-634 to u/Various-Medicine-634 [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:12 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to GradSchool [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:11 sparklwei help me finding this song pleaaseeee

hi! i'm looking for a song that i just remember the cover of the album on spotify ☠️
it was a rap song (by a male artist) and in the cover was a little illustration of the rapper and i think a dog? maybe a dobberman or something like that idk (if i'm not crazy, i'm not sure) — i used to listen in 2019-2020
i'm pretty sure that the name of the artist or the name of the song have the letter K in it
i remember the illustration of the rapper very clearly, he had a beard and was using a black shirt and a golden chain
submitted by sparklwei to WhatsThisSong [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:10 wompr [Canada] I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB (ABET). Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to ComputerEngineering [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:09 SanderSo47 Directors at the Box Office: Ang Lee

Directors at the Box Office: Ang Lee
https://preview.redd.it/3ey3xk1cce5d1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=013619527a9526a4c1a28fce38d2b1320c6e7192
Here's a new edition of "Directors at the Box Office", which seeks to explore the directors' trajectory at the box office and analyze their hits and bombs. I already talked about a few, and as I promised, it's Ang Lee's turn.
Lee's father, a respect principal, was hoping that his son would become a professor. But he was disappointed when his son failed his high school exam twice, forcing him to attend a less privileged university. Seeing Ingmar Bergman's film The Virgin Spring was a formative experience for him. After finishing his mandatory military service, he moved to the United States to complete his studies. He wanted to become an actor, but his struggle with English made him move into directing. After finally meeting a few contacts in the industry, he started working as a director.
From a box office perspective, how reliable was he to deliver a box office hit?
That's the point of this post. To analyze his career.

Pushing Hands (1991)

His directorial debut. It stars Sihung Lung, Lai Wang, Bo Z. Wang, Deb Snyder and Haan Lee. It follows a Chinese tai chi master living in New York, who struggles to find his place in the world. The film shows the contrast between traditional Chinese ideas of Confucian relationships within a family and the much more informal Western emphasis on the individual.
Lee graduated from New York University Tisch School of the Arts in 1984, but had failed to find career opportunities since, working almost full-time as a house-father. During the intermediate six years, he became interested in martial arts, specifically tai chi, after reading the wuxia novel Jianghu qixia zhuan. This motivated him to write a screenplay, which brought the attention of Hsu Li-kong, a recently promoted senior manager in a major studio who had a strong interest in Lee's unique style and freshness. He invited Lee to make his directorial debut.
It had a very limited release, and it was reported that it made just $152,322 domestically. But it received acclaim in the United States and Taiwan. And that allowed Lee to finally get a chance to expand his horizon.
  • Budget: N/A.
  • Domestic gross: $152,322.
  • Worldwide gross: $152,322.

The Wedding Banquet (2023)

"You are cordially invited to a wedding where everybody wants to kiss the bride... except the groom."
His second film. The film stars Gua Ah-leh, Lung Sihung, May Chin, Winston Chao and Mitchell Lichtenstein. The story concerns a bisexual Taiwanese immigrant man who marries a mainland Chinese woman to placate his parents and get her a green card. His plan backfires when his parents arrive in the United States to plan his wedding banquet and he has to hide the truth of his gay partner.
Neil Peng approached Lee with the idea in 1986 by revealing to Lee that one of their mutual friends had moved to the United States and was in a same-sex relationship without the knowledge of the man's parents. Lee and Peng began writing the screenplay two years later and were soon joined by James Schamus. Schamus wrote that the film was "first drafted in Chinese, then translated into English, re-written in English, translated back into Chinese, and eventually subtitled in Chinese and English and a dozen other languages."
The film was critically acclaimed, and became a sleeper hit, earning $23.6 million against a budget of just $1 million. Lee was on the rise.
  • Budget: $1,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $6,933,459.
  • Worldwide gross: $23,633,459.

Eat Drink Man Woman (1994)

"It's hard to tell where sex stops and food begins."
His third film. It stars Sihung Lung, Wang Yu-wen, Wu Chien-lien, and Yang Kuei-mei. It follows four members of the Zhu family as they navigate the challenges of love, life, tradition and family. This film deals with the transition from tradition to modernity. It is Lee's first (and to date, only film) to be shot entirely in his native Taiwan.
Like his previous films, another critical and commercial success. Lee quickly made himself a household name.
  • Budget: N/A.
  • Domestic gross: $7,294,403.
  • Worldwide gross: $24,294,403.

Sense and Sensibility (1995)

"Lose your heart and come to your senses."
His fourth film. Based on the novel by Jane Austen, and it stars Emma Thompson (who also wrote the screenplay), Kate Winslet, Hugh Grant and Alan Rickman. The story follows the Dashwood sisters, members of a wealthy English family of landed gentry, as they must deal with circumstances of sudden destitution. They are forced to seek financial security through marriage.
In 1989, producer Lindsay Doran suggested adapting the novel to her colleagues. She was a lifelong fan of the novel, and vowed to make a film adaptation if she ever made it into the industry. Looking for a writer, Doran read screenplays by English and American writers until she came across a series of comedic skits, often in period settings, that actress Emma Thompson had written and decided that that was the direction she wanted for the film. As they were working on the film Dead Again, Doran hired Thompson to write the film, even though she never wrote a feature-length film before.
Thompson spent five years writing and revising the screenplay, both during and between shooting other films. Believing the novel's language to be "far more arcane than in [Austen's] later books," Thompson sought to simplify the dialogue while retaining the "elegance and wit of the original." Despite Doran's confidence, studios were reluctant to pick up the film, as Thompson never wrote a film. Columbia Pictures executive Amy Pascal supported Thompson's work and agreed to sign as the producer and distributor.
In 1993, Lee was hired to direct, basically for his work in The Wedding Banquet. Even though he was not familiar with Jane Austen, Doran felt that Lee's films, which depicted complex family relationships amidst a social comedy context, were a good fit with Austen's storylines. Viewing it as a "director for hire" job, Lee spent six months in preparing for the film, as it would have his largest budget ($16 million) by that point. Doran and Columbia asked Thompson to play Elinor herself.
The film received widespread critical acclaim, and was included on more than a hundred top-ten of the year lists, as well as one of the best Austen adaptations. It was a huge box office hit, earning $134 million worldwide. It received 7 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture and Best Actress. Thompson won Best Adapted Screenplay, making her the only person to have won an Oscar for both her writing and acting (she won Best Actress two years prior). However, Lee was not nominated for Best Director, a decision that was criticized by many as Hollywood's racism against Lee and Chinese cinema in general. Lee sought to avoid turning his omission into a scandal and specifically asked the Taiwan state media not to make it a "national issue", explaining that he endured more pressure when forced to act as his country's representative.
  • Budget: $16,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $43,182,776.
  • Worldwide gross: $134,582,776.

The Ice Storm (1997)

"The American Dream was over. But the hangover was just beginning."
His fifth film. Based on the novel by Rick Moody, it stars Kevin Kline, Joan Allen, Tobey Maguire, Christina Ricci, Elijah Wood, Katie Holmes, Glenn Fitzgerald, Jamey Sheridan and Sigourney Weaver. Set during Thanksgiving 1973, it follows two dysfunctional New Canaan, Connecticut, upper-class families who are trying to deal with tumultuous social changes of the early 1970s, and their escapism through alcohol, adultery and sexual experimentation.
The film ended Lee's winning streak at the box office, but it was still critically acclaimed.
  • Budget: $18,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $8,038,061.
  • Worldwide gross: $16,011,975.

Ride with the Devil (1999)

"In a no-man's land between North and South, you didn't fight for the blue or grey, you fought for your friends and your family."
His sixth film. Based on the novel Woe to Live On by Daniel Woodrell, it stars Tobey Maguire, Skeet Ulrich, Jeffrey Wright, Jewel, Simon Baker, Jonathan Rhys Meyers, James Caviezel, Thomas Guiry and Jonathan Brandis. Set during the American Civil War, it follows a group of men who join the First Missouri Irregulars, also known as the Bushwhackers — guerrilla units loyal to pro-Confederacy units of the state — and their war against Northern Jayhawkers allied with the Union army.
Despite commanding a $38 million budget, the film had a very limited three-day run, making less than $1 million. It also received mixed reviews from critics.
  • Budget: $38,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $635,096.
  • Worldwide gross: $635,096.

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)

"A timeless story of strength, secrets, and two warriors who would never surrender."
His seventh film. Based on the Chinese novel serialized between 1941 and 1942 by Wang Dulu, it stars Chow Yun-fat, Michelle Yeoh, Zhang Ziyi, and Chang Chen. Master Li Mu Bai, a warrior, is about to retire and gives his sword to his lover Yu Shu Lien to keep it safe. However, the sword is stolen and now an embittered Li embarks on a mission to find it.
The stunt work was mostly performed by the actors themselves and Ang Lee stated in an interview that computers were used "only to remove the safety wires that held the actors" aloft. "Most of the time you can see their faces," he added. "That's really them in the trees." The film specifically targeted Western audiences rather than the domestic audiences who were already used to Wuxia films. As a result, high-quality English subtitles were needed. Ang Lee, who was educated in the West, personally edited the subtitles to ensure they were satisfactory for Western audiences.
Whatever were the expectations for this, the film exceeded them by a large margin. After a limited release, it earned $8 million in its first wide domestic opening weekend. But the crazy thing was how insane were its legs; it didn't hit a sub $4 million weekend until its 12th wide weekend, and it even increased from some weekends. It closed with a colossal $128 million domestically, becoming the highest foreign-language film in United States, a record it still keeps, and it's twice as much as the second place, Life Is Beautiful. Worldwide, it earned $213.9 million worldwide, becoming a worldwide phenomenon and Lee's highest grossing film.
The film was widely acclaimed across the world, hailed as one of the greatest films of the century. The film led to a boost in popularity of Chinese wuxia films in the Western world, where they were previously little known, and led to films such as Hero and House of Flying Daggers, both directed by Zhang Yimou, being marketed towards Western audiences. It received 10 Oscar nominations (the most for a foreign film), including Best Picture and Best Director for Lee. It won four: Best Foreign Language Film, Best Art Direction, Best Original Score, and Best Cinematography. To this day, one of the most iconic foreign titles. Lee made history.
  • Budget: $17,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $128,530,421.
  • Worldwide gross: $213,978,518.

Hulk (2003)

"Unleash the fury."
His eighth film. Based on the Marvel Comics character created by Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, it stars Eric Bana, Jennifer Connelly, Sam Elliott, Josh Lucas, and Nick Nolte. The film explores Bruce Banner's origins. After a lab accident involving gamma radiation, he transforms into a giant green-skinned humanoid with superhuman strength known as the Hulk whenever stressed or emotionally provoked. The United States military pursues him, and he clashes with his biological father, who has dark plans for his son.
Since 1990, Avi Arad and Gale Ann Hurd were working on a Hulk film, but Universal was struggling in finding the right script. Hurd brought her husband Jonathan Hensleigh as co-producer the following year, and Universal hired Industrial Light & Magic to create the Hulk with computer-generated imagery. Joe Johnston was hired as director, but he eventually left to work on another film, while Zak Penn was brought to rewrite. Hensleigh subsequently rewrote the script with J. J. Abrams. Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski were also brought on board to rewrite, with Hensleigh deciding to direct the film himself despite not having directed before. By 1998, Universal put the film on hiatus due to its escalating $100 million budget and worries of Hensleigh directing his first film. $20 million was already spent on script development, computer animation, and prosthetics work. Hensleigh immediately went to rewrite the script to reduce the budget.
In 2001, Lee and his colleague James Schamus signed for the project, after Lee chose not to direct Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines. He was dissatisfied with the script and commissioned Schamus for a rewrite, merging Banner's father with the Absorbing Man. Lee cited influences from King Kong, Frankenstein, Jekyll and Hyde, Beauty and the Beast, Faust, and Greek mythology to interpret the story. Schamus said he had found the storyline that introduced Brian Banner, allowing Lee to write a drama that again explored father-son themes. Schamus admitted to feeling pressure after the release of Spider-Man.
Eric Bana commented that the shoot was "Ridiculously serious... a silent set, morbid in a lot of ways." Lee told him that he was shooting a Greek tragedy, and that he would be making a "whole other movie" about the Hulk at Industrial Light & Magic. An example of Lee's arthouse approach to the film was taking Bana to watch a bare-knuckle boxing match. Bana would later disfavorably reflect on his experience making the film as the majority of the time he was working indoors while the rest of the cast interacted with a CGI recreation of the Hulk, somewhat limiting his screen time.
After the colossal success of Spider-Man, Universal mounted an extensive marketing campaign, which also highlighted Ang Lee's involvement. The film opened with a huge $62.1 million in its first weekend, the biggest June debut and the 16th biggest ever. However, the film had absolutely no legs at the box office. In its second weekend, it dropped a colossal 69.7%, which was the biggest for a film that opened above $20 million. In its third weekend, it fell another steep 56.3% and it kept falling until it left theaters, becoming the largest opener not to earn $150 million. It closed with $132 million domestically and $245 million worldwide. Good enough to be the 15th highest grossing film of the year and Lee's highest grossing film, but not a hit given its $137 million budget.
If Spider-Man was an immediate crowd-pleaser, Hulk was the exact opposite. It received polarizing reviews; while its ambition and style was praised, a lot criticized its CGI and very limited action ("too much talking and not enough smashing"). In subsequent years, some have praised the film as an ambitious film that deviated from the superhero formula, although it's still not widely considered as a beloved film. Lee admitted the challenges of the film, but stood proud of the film and its fans.
  • Budget: $137,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $132,177,234.
  • Worldwide gross: $245,285,165.

Brokeback Mountain (2005)

"Love is a force of nature."
His ninth film. Based on the short story by Annie Proulx, it stars Heath Ledger, Jake Gyllenhaal, Anne Hathaway, Michelle Williams and Randy Quaid. Its plot depicts the complex romantic relationship between two American cowboys, Ennis Del Mar and Jack Twist, in the American West from 1963 to 1983.
Screenwriter Diana Ossana discovered Annie Proulx's short story in October 1997, just days after its publication. She convinced writing partner Larry McMurtry to read it, who thought it was a "masterpiece". The pair asked Proulx if they could adapt it into a film screenplay; although she did not think that the story would work as a film, she agreed. The big challenge wasn't the script, it was about getting the film made in the first place.
Gus Van Sant attempted to make the film, hoping to cast Matt Damon and Joaquin Phoenix as Ennis and Jack, respectively. He also considered Leonardo DiCaprio, Brad Pitt, Ryan Phillippe and Josh Hartnett. Damon, who previously worked with Van Sant on Good Will Hunting, told the director, "Gus, I did a gay movie (The Talented Mr. Ripley), then a cowboy movie (All the Pretty Horses). I can't follow it up with a gay-cowboy movie!"
James Schamus, who was now the CEO of Focus Features, optioned the film rights in 2001. Pedro Almodovar was approached, but he felt he couldn't get his artistic freedom respected. At Ossana's request, Schamus showed the story and screenplay to Lee. Lee decided instead to make Hulk, and that film's experience left him exhausted, to the point that he considered retiring. When he was offered Brokeback, he changed his mind and agreed to direct. He was particularly drawn to the authentic rural American life and repression depicted in the story.
Ossana and McMurty suggested Heath Ledger, but the film studio thought he was not masculine enough. Regardless, Ledger got the script, who thought it was "beautiful" and put himself forward. Gyllenhaal reacted to the script positively and signed on for the role; he also did not want to miss the opportunity working with Lee and friend Ledger. Lee met with Mark Wahlberg for a role in the film, but Wahlberg declined as he was "creeped out" by the script. Gyllenhaal admired Ledger and described him as "way beyond his years as a human". Other actors were considered for the leads but Lee said they were too afraid to take on the roles.
You have to consider that while the world progressed a lot in the past years, 2005 was a very different era, so a film like Brokeback Mountain had a tough hill to climb. Some countries refused to play the film, while others censored it. LGBT films weren't big at the time, so it felt like there wouldn't be a big audience here.
And they were proven wrong.
The film debuted with $547,425 in 5 theaters, a huge $109,485 per-theater average. It had fantastic legs, eventually closing with a huge $83 million domestically. But the big surprise is that it was bigger overseas; it made $178 million worldwide, becoming Focus Features' highest grossing film. The film received universal acclaim on its release, touted as one of the greatest films of the century. It received 10 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. It won three: Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, and Original Score. In a shocking decision, it lost Best Picture to Crash, a decision that has been reviled ever since. We'd like to say it's a polarizing decision... but let's face it, there are no Crash fans nowadays. Or at least, none that prefer that to Brokeback.
But at the end of the day, it doesn't matter; Brokeback may not have won the Oscar, but it won over the general public.
It wasn't the first LGBT film, not even close. But it might have been the most influential and a huge landmark.
  • Budget: $14,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $83,043,761.
  • Worldwide gross: $178,064,141.

Lust, Caution (2007)

"The trap is set."
His tenth film. Based on the novella by Eileen Chang, it stars Tony Leung Chiu-wai, Tang Wei, Anupam Kher, Joan Chen, Wang Leehom and Shyam Pathak. The film is set in Hong Kong in 1938 and in Shanghai in 1942, when the city was occupied by the Imperial Japanese Army and ruled by the puppet government led by Wang Jingwei. The film depicts a group of Chinese university students from The University of Hong Kong who plot to assassinate a high-ranking special agent and recruiter working for the puppet government by luring him into a honey trap.
The actors who played university classmates, spent six months of preproduction in Hong Kong just to get into character and understand the period before filming. During this period the group of actors, including Tang Wei and Wang Leehom became very close friends. Both Tang Wei and Tony Leung Chiu-wai were asked whether the sex scenes in the movie were unsimulated. Tang Wei responded, "In the movie, we are just doing what we should do to have a baby." As for Tony Leung, he responded, "When the bodies collide with each other, it is indeed like a fake show!" The film was rated NC-17 in North America for its explicit sex scenes, and Lee made it clear he would not re-cut the film. Despite that, the version released in China was cut by about seven minutes (by Lee himself) to make it suitable for younger audiences, since China has no rating system.
The film won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival, where it received critical acclaim. Due to the rating, it only earned $4 million domestically. But it was much bigger overseas, where it earned $67 million worldwide, becoming the highest grossing NC-17 film (a record it still keeps).
  • Budget: $15,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $4,604,982.
  • Worldwide gross: $67,091,915.

Taking Woodstock (2009)

"Take the trip."
His 11th film. Based on the memoir by Elliot Tiber and Tom Monte, it stars Demetri Martin, Paul Dano, Dan Fogler, Henry Goodman, Jonathan Groff, Emile Hirsch, Eugene Levy, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Imelda Staunton and Liev Schreiber. Elliot's parents own a motel in Catskills, New York. To overcome the family's financial crisis, Elliot offers the organisers of the Woodstock music and art festival boarding and lodging in the motel.
The film received mixed reviews, and bombed at the box office.
  • Budget: $30,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $7,460,204.
  • Worldwide gross: $9,975,737.

Life of Pi (2012)

"Don't lose hope."
His 12th film. Based on the novel by Yann Martel, it stars Suraj Sharma, Irrfan Khan, Tabu, Rafe Spall, Gérard Depardieu and Adil Hussain. The storyline revolves around two survivors of a shipwreck who are on a lifeboat stranded in the Pacific Ocean for 227 days. One is a sixteen-year-old Indian boy named Pi Patel and the other is a ferocious Bengal tiger named Richard Parker.
Fox 2000 Pictures executive Elizabeth Gabler acquired the film rights in February 2003. M. Night Shyamalan was attached to direct, and he was expected to film it after The Village. But he dropped to instead make Lady in the Water, "I was hesitant [to direct] because the book has kind of a twist ending. And I was concerned that as soon as you put my name on it, everybody would have a different experience." Other directors considered were Alfonso Cuarón and Jean-Pierre Jeunet, both of which declined.
In 2009, Lee was hired, but the film was stuck in development hell when he asked for a $120 million budget. But the revival of 3-D motivated Fox in greenlighting the film under Lee's terms. As Lee started casting, one of the actors involved was Tobey Maguire, who would play a reporter. But it was later reported that Lee chose to cut his scenes, feeling he wanted to emphasize an entirely international cast. His scenes were re-shot with Rafe Spall.
Fox mounted an extensive marketing campaign selling the film as "the next Avatar" in terms of visuals and 3-D. And it fucking killed it at the box office. It earned $124.9 million domestically, which was considered a soft performance. But the real money was in the rest of the world; the film broke records in countries like China, United Kingdom, India and Mexico. It earned a colossal $609 million worldwide, easily becoming Lee's highest grossing film. An absolutely insane performance.
The film also received critical acclaim, praised for its CGI and 3-D. It received 11 Oscar nominations, including Best Picture. And it won four: Best Cinematography, Best Visual Effects, Best Original Score, and then Lee himself won his second Oscar for Best Director, becoming the first Asian to win the award twice. And just like that, he cemented himself as one of the greatest filmmakers of our era. And here's how he celebrated it; going to In-N-Out.
  • Budget: $120,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $124,987,023.
  • Worldwide gross: $609,016,565.

Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk (2016)

"To walk the path of a hero, you have to see how it all began."
His 13th film. Based on the novel by Ben Fountain, it stars Joe Alwyn, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart, Vin Diesel, Steve Martin, and Chris Tucker. After a horrifying battle in Iraq, Private Billy Lynn and his fellow comrades are brought home for a victory tour. Soon, he recollects the harsh realities of the war and struggles to cope with life.
The film used an unprecedented shooting and projection frame rate of 120 frames per second in 3D at 4K UHD resolution, which Lee terms the "whole shebang". It is the first feature film ever to be shot in such a high frame rate, over twice the previous record (Peter Jackson's The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, shot at 48 fps) and five times the standard speed of 24 fps. Lee undertook such a bold step after reading the book since he wanted the film to be an "immersive" and "realistic" experience of the reality and emotional journey of soldiers.
Due to the complexity involved in shooting at a very high frame rate, Lee could not afford to do many takes even for a single scene. Every shot was difficult and at the same time precious. He would rehearse every scene beforehand and would conduct regular morning meetings with the key crew members to highlight things they needed to be alert on. Shooting close-up shots in 3D with such high resolution meant the cast could not wear make-up and could not deliver less-than-authentic performances. Since no make-up was allowed, make-up artist Luisa Abel spent months of preparation on their skin tones. Throughout filming, the production team had to rethink everything, including different approaches to lighting as the camera needed extra lights due to the higher frame rates.
Due to the complexity of the film's unprecedented high frame rate and the cost of installing equipment capable of projecting the film in its intended format, only five theaters globally were equipped to show it at its highest resolution and maximum frame rate: two in the United States (one at a theater in New York City's AMC Lincoln Square where the film had its world premiere and the other in Los Angeles's the ArcLight Hollywood), and one theater each in Taipei, Beijing, and Shanghai.
The film opened in 2 theaters (New York City's AMC Lincoln Square and Los Angeles's the ArcLight Hollywood's Cinerama Dome), which were the only ones in the country to play the film at 120fps and the ticket prices at both locations running $20 or higher. It made a pretty great $114,129, which made for a fantastic $57,064 per-theater average (the third best of the year). But when it hit wide release, the film was dead on arrival. It made just $901,062 in 1,176 theaters, which was one of the worst wide debuts ever. And then, despite having its second weekend fall on Thanksgiving, it collapsed by 77.3%. It closed after just 3 weeks with only $1.7 million domestically. It fared better overseas, where China made colossal $23.7 million. Worldwide, it made just $30.9 million, making it a box office flop. Reviews were mixed, and people were polarized over the high-frame rate; some deemed it immersive and impressive, while others found it distracting and flat.
  • Budget: $30,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $1,738,477.
  • Worldwide gross: $30,930,984.

Gemini Man (2019)

"Who will save you from yourself?"
His 14th film. It stars Will Smith, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Clive Owen and Benedict Wong. The film follows a retiring Force Recon Marine scout sniper who is targeted by a much younger clone of himself while on the run from a corrupt private military company.
In 1997, Darren Lemke sold his pitch for Gemini Man after impressing Don Murphy with an unproduced spec script. Warner Bros. Pictures pursued the project, but Walt Disney Pictures ultimately won out and Tony Scott would become attached to direct. Complications soon arose when the studio were planning how to make the film. The producers toyed with the idea of an actor play both roles through the use of visual effects, but Scott moved on from the film before any progress could be made.
The project was stuck in development hell, and saw many actors considered, such as Mel Gibson, Harrison Ford, Chris O'Donnell, Nicolas Cage, Sean Connery, Clint Eastwood and Jon Voight. Many directors were also considered, before Lee finally signed in 2017, with Smith also joining. Like his previous film, the film was shot digitally at an extra-high frame rate of 120 frames per second (fps), modified for 3D, this time on modified ARRI Alexa cameras mounted on STEREOTEC 3D Rigs.
Again, due to the requirements needed, only 14 theaters in North America could show the film at a 120fps 2K 3D high-frame rate (two in Los Angeles, two in Chicago, and one each in Miami, Orlando, New Orleans, Denver, New York, San Francisco, Atlanta, Las Vegas, Baltimore and Houston). Even then, the film was shot at 120fps 4K 3D, which means no theater showed its intended vision. Lee said that 120fps 2K 3D felt like the necessary avenue to make “Junior,” Smith’s digital avatar, a soulful character who could also appear to beat the living crap out of a real actor in the film’s many fight sequences.
The film received negative reviews, particularly for its CGI and story. And like his previous film, the high-frame rate received polarizing reactions. Despite the presence of a big star like Will Smith, the film flopped with just $173 million worldwide, against its $138 million budget, and losing an estimated $111 million for Paramount. Lee's attempt at high-frame rate was just not clicking with the public.
  • Budget: $138,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $48,546,770.
  • Worldwide gross: $173,469,516.

The Future

His next film, as confirmed in November 2022, is a Bruce Lee biopic. The lead actor will be Mason Lee, Ang's son. And he suggested he's not done with the 120fps high-frame rate, claiming he would continue using it in his next film for action sequences.

MOVIES (FROM HIGHEST GROSSING TO LEAST GROSSING)

No. Movie Year Studio Domestic Total Overseas Total Worldwide Total Budget
1 Life of Pi 2012 20th Century Fox $124,987,023 $484,029,542 $609,016,565 $120M
2 Hulk 2003 Universal $132,177,234 $113,107,931 $245,285,165 $137M
3 Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon 2000 Sony $128,530,421 $85,446,864 $213,978,518 $17M
4 Brokeback Mountain 2005 Focus Features $83,043,761 $95,019,405 $178,064,141 $14M
5 Gemini Man 2019 Paramount $48,546,770 $124,922,746 $173,469,516 $138M
6 Sense and Sensibility 1995 Sony $43,182,776 $91,400,000 $134,582,776 $16M
7 Lust, Caution 2007 Focus Features $4,604,982 $62,486,933 $67,091,915 $15M
8 Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk 2016 Sony $1,738,477 $29,192,507 $30,930,984 $30M
9 Eat Drink Man Woman 1994 The Samuel Goldwyn Company $7,294,403 $17,000,000 $24,294,403 N/A
10 The Wedding Banquet 1993 The Samuel Goldwyn Company $6,933,459 $16,700,000 $23,633,459 $1M
11 The Ice Storm 1997 20th Century Fox / Disney $8,038,061 $7,973,914 $16,011,975 $18M
12 Taking Woodstock 2009 Focus Features $7,460,204 $2,515,533 $9,975,737 $30M
13 Ride with the Devil 1999 USA Films $635,096 $0 $635,096 $38M
14 Pushing Hands 1991 Lionsgate $152,322 $0 $152,322 N/A
Across 14 films, he has made $1,727,122,572 worldwide. That's $123,365,898 per film.

The Verdict

Despite his past two films getting two of the worst reviews in his career, Lee has proved himself to be a very reliable director.
Something impressive about him is the versatility in his resume. A comic book film, a survival film, a LGBT film, a wuxia film, a sci-fi film, a post-war film, a Jane Austen film, a noir film, an erotic NC-17 thriller, a Western, and some romantic comedies. Even if some don't fully work, there's still some good and interesting aspects in him. And of course, the first Asian director to win 2 Oscars for Best Director. So if he wants to continue with the controversial 120fps high-frame rate, let him cook. Hopefully in more and more theaters worldwide.
Hope you liked this edition. You can find this and more in the wiki for this section.
The next director will be Zack Snyder. Oh boy. This is where the fun begins.
I asked you to choose who else should be in the run and the comment with the most upvotes would be chosen. Well, we'll later talk about... John McTiernan and Rob Reiner. Whaaaaat? Two posts for the price of one? You're welcome! It was a very tight race, and it was tough to choose one or the other. The former has the dishonor of going to director jail and real jail, while the latter had an incredible run before completely crashing with one of Roger Ebert's most hated films.
This is the schedule for the following four:
Week Director Reasoning
June 10-16 Zack Snyder RIP Inbox.
June 17-23 Tony Scott Action films have not been the same ever since his death.
June 24-30 Roland Emmerich The King of disaster films.
July 1-7 John McTiernan & Rob Reiner The rise and fall of two once-great directors.
Who should be next after McTiernan and Reiner? That's up to you.
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2024.06.08 21:07 wompr I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB. Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
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2024.06.08 21:06 kacey_9 State OKs authority to sell Saint Rose campus

State OKs authority to sell Saint Rose campus
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NEWS // EDUCATION State OKs authority to sell Saint Rose campus By Kathleen Moore, Staff Writer June 8, 2024 Massry Center for the Arts building at The College of Saint Rose in Albany, N.Y. is one of the unusual buildings that the authority might keep open as a performing arts venue. Massry Center for the Arts building at The College of Saint Rose in Albany, N.Y. is one of the unusual buildings that the authority might keep open as a performing arts venue.
Lori Van Buren/Times Union
ALBANY — The state Legislature has authorized the creation of an authority that could take over the sale of The College of Saint Rose campus.
The Senate passed the act Tuesday and the Assembly passed it later Friday.
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ACT NOW The Albany County Pine Hills Land Authority could issue up to $80 million in bonds to acquire the former college campus and then maintain it while developing a plan for its uses.
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ADVERTISEMENTSCROLL TO CONTINUE WITH CONTENT “The preservation and safeguarding of facilities at risk of being underutilized and becoming blighted is a matter of vital importance,” the sponsors wrote in the bill.
It will require coordinated operation to ensure the Pine Hills neighborhood does not wind up with dozens of vacant or underused buildings, the bill said.
The campus includes about 90 buildings in along Western and Madison avenues in the heart of Albany. Saint Rose had once operated with 22 buildings there. But from 1999 to 2015, the college trustees tripled the size of the campus, purchasing nearly every building in an effort to create an urban campus.
It was expensive: The college spent more than $12 million to buy the properties and $100 million to renovate and build new facilities on that land. Before that work was completed, in 2014 the college reported on its IRS forms that it was operating at a loss. From that point, there were only two years in which the college was in the black as it struggled to pay back more than $48 million in debt while enrollment rapidly declined.
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On Nov. 30, the trustees voted to close it at the end of the school year.
That led to immediate crises for students and employees. But now that the school’s work is winding down, officials are focusing on the long-term problem: what to do when several blocks in the middle of the city are vacant this summer.
The bill suggests that parts of the campus that would be hard to reuse — such as the Massry Center for the Arts performing hall — should be kept as they are now.
“The economic well-being of the county and the general welfare of its people require adequate and accessible performing arts centers, athletic fields, educational facilities and residential facilities,” the sponsors wrote in the bill.
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The goal of the authority would be to “stimulate and promote a health economy” through developing a plan to reuse the buildings.
The authority would be made up of seven appointed members: four chosen by the Albany County executive, two by the Albany County Legislature’s chair and one by the Albany mayor.
The authority would repay the bond from revenue related to selling or reusing the buildings.
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It’s not clear how much the college owes and would need to sell its properties but it refinanced $48 million in debt in 2021. As collateral it used much of the campus, which was assessed at $78 million at the time.
June 8, 2024 Photo of Kathleen Moore Kathleen Moore STAFF WRITER Kathleen grew up in Glenville and now lives in Schenectady. She has covered the Capital Region for various newspapers since 2000, focusing on the interesting people who breathe life into their towns, villages and cities. She is the Times Union’s education reporter. You can reach her at Kathleen.Moore@timesunion.com or 518-918-5497.
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2024.06.08 21:06 Keppi1988 Rent increase

Received a letter from the landlord that they want to increase our rent by 16% from next month onward. We live here since 4 years and this is the first increase. They quote the reason that they did a renovation of the windows 2 years ago, however, it was already promised in the original contract that they'll do it so feels not a reasonable argument. Also, I read online that they need to give 3 months of notice to increase and not immediately from next month, is this right?
Interestingly they now break out Nebenkosten as part of the rent, which was not the case before, as before it was purely a base rent split between house and garage. We cover most of the Nebenkosten ourselves like utilities, the only exception is the trash that I'm aware of which the landlord pays, but 35 eumonth for that seems steep. I'll definitely ask what is included in the Nebenkosten. Of course for the utilities we have been paying much more than when we moved in, both gas and electricity went from 35 eumonth each to 175 and 110 eumonth, but we manage these contracts ourselves with the providers so it's not a concern for the landlord.
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2024.06.08 21:04 wompr I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role. I have done my research from the university's website and came up with these programs that seem enticing to me.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB. Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to uwaterloo [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:03 Winter-Pudding-7184 Trying to get out of lease at a Student Accomodation, have i found a loop hole? Will this work?

I am stuck in a lease currently for this September 2024 - July 2025, I found a break clause, I am a first year right now, if I applied for another University to enter first year, got an acceptance/rejection letter even though I do not intend to join, does this work is this legal?
Am I able to execute this break clause without having to actually leave my current University? If I apply and get a rejection can I use this? Does me being a first year student already stop me from being considered a "Prospective first year undergraduate student" ??.
I can show the rest of the break clause, but I really want a way out of this agreement, I simply can not afford it and they refuse to cancel my lease since they never fill their rooms.
So I have thought of
I don't want this to affect my current course, I just want out of this any advice or suggestions are greatly appreciated!
2.2 If the Tenant is a prospective first year undergraduate student and the Tenant's offer of a place at the University is withdrawn for one of the following reasons:
2.2.1 by the University as a result of the Tenant not having achieved the required entry grades; or
2.2.2 if the Tenant chooses to go to a different University as a result of having exceeded the Tenant's expected grades; or
2.2.3 the Tenant's place at the University is withdrawn as a result of the Tenant's student visa being denied; the Tenant may be eligible to be released from this Booking (and the Tenancy Agreement, if completed) provided the Tenant supplies the Landlord with the following evidence:
(a) in respect of clause 2.2.1, a copy of the written rejection letter from the University or a screen shot of the Tenant's CAO offer document which confirms that the required results were not achieved for the University;
(b) in respect of clause 2.2.2, a copy of the proof of acceptance of your new University; or
(c) in respect of clause 2.2.3, a copy of written rejection letter from the University which confirms that the Tenant does not have the relevant Visa and a copy of the relevant Visa rejection correspondence.
submitted by Winter-Pudding-7184 to LegalAdviceUK [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:02 wompr I got a B.Eng in Electrical, but I want to pursue Software or Analyst in the industry with only 2 YOE. I have questions about doing Master's to help my career.

Hi All,
Academic Background: I majored in Electrical engineering with a specialty in electronics. My majoring institution was not a well-known university and I will ask about that in one of my questions. Not to bore you, but I fell out of love with electrical engineering (still graduated though), and decided to pursue software engineering as my career. I am what you can define as a jack of all trades, master of none. I did co-ops in various positions in various companies (2 of which are very notable in the industry), never gaining experience in 1 particular field in software.
Work Experience: My first job out of college was in Data engineering - they provided all the training material and were patient, but got laid off due to lack of work. It took me 5 months of daily job applications - with the help of GPT4 and bard (back then) to do cover letters, write tailored resumes - and only got 1 interview which scored me my next job. My second job was at a very famous Canadian company working for their DevOps team. After a 6 month probation, I got terminated due to lack of skill. All amounts to 2 YOE, excluding Co-ops.
Why I think Masters: I think Master's would be good because it would serve as an official solution to my experience-and-background gap. A 3-in-1; it would bridge the knowledge gap between EE and Software or Analyst, it would be higher than a bachelor so better job hunting, and it will specialize my skills in one particular field. I also believe (but cannot prove) that the influx of immigrants with a software background usually also take the graduate studies route and after just a year or 2 working in Canada, are eligible for 95% of Software jobs leaving the rest of us benched. I am also interested in asking about a Master's because unlike other traditional engineering routes, software is one that you can easily forgo doing a masters and take some coursers online from udemy or coursera and improve your job - so I need assurance that it is indeed a good choice to spend lots of money and time on. After all, I don't want to spend 5 months looking for work, or spend 6 months and get the boot.
My plan: To go further into Software, specializing in Data Science or Software Engineering. Or get into a business analyst role. I have done my research from the university's website and came up with these programs that seem enticing to me.
  1. Coming with an academic background in Electronics, will a masters in comp sci or software or comp eng, help get me hired?
  2. As you may know, Engineering in Canada is accredited by the CEAB. Ontario colleges are not known to have CEAB accredited engineering degrees. However, Conestoga College in Kitchener does and I graduated with my Bachelor of Engineering in Electronics Engineering from there. The program was accredited in 2014 and I think I was part of the 7th cohort. I have heard some success stories about people graduating and working at Silicon Valley. Would that be worrisome if I were to apply and they doubted that I actually have a Bachelor's in Engineering given that fact ?
  3. Same as above but for Business analyst ?
  4. I don't want to get into research or PhD. Is project-based more suited to a better return to industry, compared to Thesis or coursework ?
  5. What if I can't make the minimum average cut-off, but I REALLY want to get into this program - what can be done ?
  6. Comp Sci is normally the most competitive and usually in their admission criteria, says that you need to have a background in it. If I can't meet that background because I am EE, would Comp Eng fulfill the necessities ?
  7. I have heard that Master of Computer Science is the one to get (in the U.S.) but it's a very rare title in Canada. Instead, it's MEng for project or course-based, Msc/MAsc for thesis or research (usually). I have heard from some of my friends in software that MEng has lower prestige than Msc/MAsc. Is there any truth to that?
  8. Finally, is Masters overkill for Data Analyst or Business Analyst and if I decide those paths, shall I go for some coursera certs instead ?
Thank you all
submitted by wompr to yorku [link] [comments]


2024.06.08 21:00 aw1219 Professional Simple Resume Template With Free Cover Letter & Tips - Etsy

submitted by aw1219 to homebasedmommie [link] [comments]


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