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Zander said:Everone else,
Sorry about this OT post.![]()
How dare you post an OT post in the OT forum! Let the flogging commence!

Zander said:Everone else,
Sorry about this OT post.![]()
Aside from (drumroll) reality. Really, you're not doing yourself any service by drastically underestimating how big of an effort that is. I've seen dozens of people do exactly what you're doing (oh, but if I do this and this, and get this exception, and work 100 hours a week for two years, and I heard some friend of a cousin of mine did it while working as a circus juggler...), and 9 times out of 10 they really mess themselves up. Ask anyone else who really has finshed a PhD (there are a lot more "PhD students" around than PhDs, you'll find) and they'll tell you exactly what I'm telling you. It's not a part-time gig that you can do on weekends and between 6 and 10 in the evening. An MS, sure, it's just a fluffed up bachelors degree, but most schools look at PhD programs like Jedi training, and whatever rosy picture the catalog paints takes a back seat to whatever the faculty, and especially your advisor (a.k.a. Yoda), deems to be an appropriate level of committment.Endur said:And, as I said before, I really think a rule like that does not matter in the greater scheme of things. When the average full time Ph.D. program takes 4+ years, a 1 or 2 year full-time requirement is relatively minimal in the greater scheme of things. Especially since there is nothing to stop you from working full time while taking classes full time for that one or two years residency requirement.
der_kluge said:I find there to be a diminishing return on salary. Like, the jump from say, $30k a year to $50k a year is probably huge, the jump from $50k a year to $70k is probaby hardly noticable at all. Anyone else feel this to be true?
Zander said:Tatsu,
If you don't mind me asking, which one?
I was a student in Tokyo for six months as part of my doctorate.
Everyone else,
Sorry about this OT post.![]()
We get free tea and pop too.Barendd Nobeard said:Are we supposed to include the cost of benefits? My employer has to add in 51% of our salary to the budget for benefits. So people making 10,000 here actually get 15,100 if you count all the benefits (vacation, sick leave, paid holidays, health insurance, life insurance, employee assistance programs, dental insurance, etc.)
Nope - that's the difference between "salary" and "compensation" - at least in my corporate doublespeak.Barendd Nobeard said:Are we supposed to include the cost of benefits?
I wouldn't know. It's a PhD in Mechanical Engineering from Case Western Reserve University, so it's not an easy degree from a no-name college. Make whatever assumptions or judgements you want.tarchon said:My guess is that he also had a very nice committee chair and an unusually laissez-faire department.
Sorry, this is exactly what my friend did. It destroyed his time with friends, family, wife and kids, but he did it. And, given that CWRU is 90+ minutes away, he also did a fair amount of traveling, too. Granted, his superiors at his full-time engineering job helped by not signing him up for projects that would have required tons of overtime during the last couple of years he was working on it, but they didn't let him slack off or do school-related work on the job either. We work at the same company, in the same building, so I'm very sure about this part.tarchon said:It's not a part-time gig that you can do on weekends and between 6 and 10 in the evening.