What do you do for a living?

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I was there in summer of 1989 or 90 with American Institute of foreign Studies. i stayed in a dorm In Leningrad Polytechnic in the outskirts of what was then leningrad. I have some crazy stories. Country was so corrupt anything was possible. You could fly accross the country for 2 dollars once you bribed your way on the plane. government subsidized everthing. A loaf of bread was 1/16 or a penny once you converted dollars on black market. Amazing I survived. After our program the country collapsed, walls came down and they cancelled all programs for years. We had some extraordinary meals in USSR thru the connections we made with mafia types that took good care of us during our stay. I did eat mcDonalds in Moscow while there.....long lines. We just bribed some locals and got the food in minutes!!

Wow sounds like you had a much more 'real' experience than our group did, ours was a more controlled trip with our gov't provided Guides/minders taking care of us 24 hr/day. I did get heavily reprimanded (by university tour leader) though for sleeping with one of the (very hot) Guides, who sadly was replaced after our mini-scandal. McDonald's hadn't opened yet in USSR while we were there; overall the food was the lamest I'd ever had (mostly ate in our 2-3 star hotels), I survived on bread rolls, it was the easiest to stomach lol.
 
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I'm a sales rep for an electrical cable company. Used to be an electrician but wasn't my thing so made the switch.
Nice variety of jobs people have out there I must say.
 
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I really hate to talk about myself so I'll keep this very short.

I've been retired for a couple of years now but I worked in manufacturing and structural engineering and was mostly a professional computer bum.

My father was a radar man and computer programmer in the Air Force. He taught me about mechanics and electronics. I used to fix broken TVs and radios I picked up off street corners when I was a kid.

I had three working televisions by the time I was 14, and a monophonic record player with 6 mismatched speakers mounted into a fancy maple 1950s television cabinet I had rescued.

I built my first primitive hardwired computer in 1968. It had Flashlight batteries and an alarm clock motor you had to wind up by hand.

I was building engines at the Quality Engine Exchange and fixing cars and working as an industrial mechanic at Pepperidge Farms when I went to college. Everyone said that I should study engineering. I was accepted to attend General Motors Institute but I went to Utah State instead.

I was a year and a half ahead of my class in mechanical engineering school when I dropped out to take a job writing code.
I spent a lot of time in the structural and architectural engineering business, doing mostly public schools, churches and public buildings, but my very first job involved prefabricated walls and Factory built roof trusses for tract houses, one of which I live in today.

I specified parts and built computer systems and networks and taught engineers and professional people to operate and program and repair computers.

I used computers to solve production, manufacturing, and Engineering problems, and to produce parts on numerical control machinery & in semi automated production lines.

I programmed machines that burn, cut, welded, bent, stretched, punched, formed, forged and finished things.

I am completely retired now except that I sometimes volunteer to teach Marksmanship at the local rifle range. I repair old guns, and make parts for antique guns from scratch.

See? . . . I told you I hate to talk about myself.
 
Currently working as a geologist for a large mining company. I do a fair bit of custom acrylic work on the side. I do pretty much anything that makes money. I play with stocks a little in sectors I know. Have a couple thousand tied up there. I use a cash investment account as I don’t want to split profit. Have never lost yet. I’m partnered in a boat rental business with a friend which does well during summer.

I flip all sorts of things. Aquariums, equipment, fish, boats, cars, anything that can make a profit. I plan to get into real estate as well. Hoping to have a few rental homes in different areas.
 
I do warehouse maintenance at one of home depot's larger distribution centers. Basic stuff like painting, concrete, and electrical and more advanced stuff like forklifts, hydrogen fuel cells and people's stupidity.
 
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I'm a reo designer

I started working in the high tech jobs in 1997...around the same time America started shipping high tech jobs to China and other cheap countries. So, when our economy starts to tank. Companies first start to axe these high tech jobs by sending them to the cheap countries. The economy has to return to 'full status' before these types of jobs return in some form. So, your first thought is correct. I was making about double the base salary(say $14 per hour; in 1997). Where they could pay a China person $5 USD per hour for the same job.

I feel for you. Our main company that bought us forces us to send a certain percentage of work out of the country. I get in trouble if I don't use them even if I have to redo 80% of what comes back.
 
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the company I work for makes stages for big name acts.....Beyoncé, Taylor Swift, Bon Jovi....etc....have a lot of other projects for the entertain industry
 
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