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Just Chat! / Re: How to contact a scientist?
« on: Today at 13:50:41 »
Can you present yourself? Essential. There is no point in discovering, measuring or inventing something if you can't explain or sell it to others. Writing, lecturing and face-to-face communication is vital.
What subjects are you studying / did you study and why did you choose to work in this field? Physics, with a bit of chemistry, mathematics and biology. These are the fundamental tools and knowledge bases of all sciences.
What are your achievements and publications? Few publications, but I built a national primary measurement standard and designed about a thousand medical imaging facilities.
What are the biggest challenges that you faced during your scientific career? Consensus, and official inspectors with severe Kruger-Dunning syndrome. "Proof by assertion" is not science.
How and why did you become a scientist? Can you present your studies and motivations? Total fascination with how things work, from a very early age. Too short-sighted to become a test pilot, too bored by biochemistry to be a doctor.
Is money a real problem when conducting projects for instance experiments? The problem in the UK is "raising the first million". Small project funding isn't too difficult and banks will lend against the security of your house. Major investors (pension funds and the like) want safe investments in the tens of millions. The gap needs filling by venture capital but VCs are always chasing fast growth and a quick sale, not clinical trials and flight testing. American investors and German banks are better, which is why innovation flies abroad.
Do you have to deal with deadlines or are you ''free'' with your work? There are no open-ended funds but I can propose delivery dates. Sticking to them is good for the reputation.
What do you plan for the future / what are your new goals? To see corrupt officials burn in Hell.
Eventually, would you advise students to become scientist? The closer you look, the more there is to see. If you have a hint of skepticism, an ounce of self-confidence, and a ton of curiosity this is the career for you. With any luck you may use science to improve the lives of others: civil engineers save more lives than anyone else on the planet, and doctors and nurses appreciate an occasional improvement in their equipment.
What subjects are you studying / did you study and why did you choose to work in this field? Physics, with a bit of chemistry, mathematics and biology. These are the fundamental tools and knowledge bases of all sciences.
What are your achievements and publications? Few publications, but I built a national primary measurement standard and designed about a thousand medical imaging facilities.
What are the biggest challenges that you faced during your scientific career? Consensus, and official inspectors with severe Kruger-Dunning syndrome. "Proof by assertion" is not science.
How and why did you become a scientist? Can you present your studies and motivations? Total fascination with how things work, from a very early age. Too short-sighted to become a test pilot, too bored by biochemistry to be a doctor.
Is money a real problem when conducting projects for instance experiments? The problem in the UK is "raising the first million". Small project funding isn't too difficult and banks will lend against the security of your house. Major investors (pension funds and the like) want safe investments in the tens of millions. The gap needs filling by venture capital but VCs are always chasing fast growth and a quick sale, not clinical trials and flight testing. American investors and German banks are better, which is why innovation flies abroad.
Do you have to deal with deadlines or are you ''free'' with your work? There are no open-ended funds but I can propose delivery dates. Sticking to them is good for the reputation.
What do you plan for the future / what are your new goals? To see corrupt officials burn in Hell.
Eventually, would you advise students to become scientist? The closer you look, the more there is to see. If you have a hint of skepticism, an ounce of self-confidence, and a ton of curiosity this is the career for you. With any luck you may use science to improve the lives of others: civil engineers save more lives than anyone else on the planet, and doctors and nurses appreciate an occasional improvement in their equipment.
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