The thing about 'never be afraid to waste the big man's time' is ~ even if the answer at this point in time is 'no', still, you've made an impression and it is amazing that sometimes somewhere in the future that contact can still come back to be quite valuable in a way you could never have foreseen.
As a student of Huddersfield University studying music I have to disagree with you, however, this is probably due to the time difference between our uni experiences (York uni's music course just sounded horrible and the campus was too far from anywhere, sorry).
"Ended up coming into the studio, poking things, oh that's broken, I'll fix it." That's pretty much how I got into Broadcast Engineering. To the letter, actually. One of the best thing I let myself get roped into, all things considered.
8 лет назад+217
Why do you always say: "We'll have to explain this to the American viewers"? I'm from Europe, but most of those things are new to me, too :)
+Anita Bedő Because the majority of our audience is American, surprisingly enough - and I've probably spent nearly a year of my life there, so it's close to my heart :) -- Tom
Omg yeah I have an American mate and she says sometimes I'll talk and shell be like *triple blinks* wanna do that again in English? And its like... I just said cottage pie dafuq XD
"Several thousand pounds of student debt" would also be true for many students leaving university here in the US also. Except here it is referring to the weight of the bills.
In Australia, we have a government-run hex-debt system, where you take a loan that covers the bulk of the cost and only have to pay back a little a week for the rest of your life
@@tomvarga5515 I guess the system here in the Netherlands works on similar principles; the government issues the loans, and what you pay back monthly is income-dependent and never all that much. If you still have any debt after 35 years, the government clears it, to stop you from going into retirement while still having student debt.
I work with people in high school and college, and this is just so _incredibly_ valuable to demonstrate how entering the "real world" actually works. Very few people leave high school, have a career plan, major in the thing for that plan, find a job before they graduate, and work in that field forever. The dominant narrative of how careers work bears _zero resemblance_ to the way that careers actually work. This is how careers work. You muck about, and you try stuff out, and eventually, something works, and then you're like "Oh, hey, wow, I have a career now."
+Matt and Tom While I was out of work I applied for a circuit designer job that I wasn't qualified enough for, they told me at the end of the interview that I wasn't qualified but created a position for me on the spot and gave me a technician job :-)
+Matt and Tom I can relate to the whole "I didn't know that was a thing people could do and get paid for but it's now my job and I like it" feeling. I was an unhappy person who had given up on dreams and had settled for whatever society had decided to throw on my plate. ..until I helped out at an event one day and realised I loved that! But I still thought it was just something you volunteer for and never considered that there are people who do this for a living. But I got asked to help out the next year at the same event, and an idea dawned on me.. I was still not ready to make the decision, but then a third edition of the event was coming up, I was asked yet again, and everything fell into place; I quit the toxic thing I hated, found a new crew looking for members, applied, got in, and am now a very happy roadie/event manager/crew member. I'm with one of the artists competing to represent Belgium at Eurovision 2016!
+Matt and Tom Going to university costs money in UK? I thought that was a US thing. I guess I'm lucky to live in Sweden, it doesn't cost money (apart from buying your own literature, food and housing).
VorpalGun I hear from reliable sources you do get what you pay for, which is to say not the highest quality of education, but then I study at the best university in the Netherlands (no really, surveyed and all).
+Matt and Tom how do you guys tell the future. So here I am thinking about responding to this job somebody contacted me about today. All the sudden here is park bench telling me to do the damn e-mail.
One of my Computer Science professors half jokingly said that the field of Computer Science has a -1% termination rate. People are needed so bad that if you show that you are in any way competent, you will get promoted. Guess it applies to getting a job too.
I'm not even half way through my degree and I'm a software engineer. It really is a matter of competency and what you learned on your own rather than what you did in school. School for me is about the opportunity for post graduate studies and research instead of getting work.
That's basically it. What is the hard part is just not giving up and keeping your spirits sufficiently high, so you don't go "naaah, that's bollocks, I'll just drown in misery". It ain't gonna be flowers, but eventually, you'll find something that suits you. At least it'll be more likely than when you do literally nothing.
The thing about not being afraid to waste the big man's time reminds me of the time I job shadowed. I knew the answer would be "No, you *cannot* job shadow in a major national laboratory." Well I was wrong, and that's how I job shadowed at ORNL.
16:00 I'm tempted to bookmark this and watch it every day. Just to build the confidence to try a shot at a new opportunity every day until something great happens.
Tom, how did you hook up with Computerphile? That's where I first saw you. Your bit on dealing with time zones had me laughing so much I looked up your channel and I've been subscribed over 2 years. I just checked and it's Computerphile's highest viewed video. In fact you've got the top three, all with over a half million views.
"Do not have Fraternities and Sororities" "I don't know what that even means." Good for you. It's better not to know. Those aren't the people normal people hang out with.
I *was* settled into a career at 25, a career I despised! I quit just after my birthday and then decided to do a job I liked instead, now I'm just working part time and free-lancing on the side.
+JonFawkes I'm 30 and just starting one. I mean literally. I'm applying for my first ever paid writing gig tomorrow, and in a weeks time I'm having someone help me find an online university I can get with income reliant deferred payments.
I literally have this video on one half of my laptop screen, and a window with my email open, waiting for me to send out a CV. Welp. I guess the last 40 seconds is made for such a person like myself. Thanks Tom!
"Never turn down a chance". I saw a cool video of a guy telling a story in a performance that won a story-telling contest, and the moral of his story was essentially that. In the story he was working as a security tester in Israel and his team had finished their job early when one of them noticed that the contract actually gave them permission to test PHYSICAL security in addition to their computer network. And they were working for a bank. So they technically had permission to rob a bank. And one of them made the persuasive argument that this was probably a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and they shouldn't let it slip by. What follows is a tale of a group of people who aren't very serious about it and have no idea what they are doing planning and executing an armed robbery of a bank, and it turning out to have been a whole lot of fun. Which is why, he explained, he quit his job the next day. Because he had received a once-in-a-lifetime offer to travel to the United States and study under prestigious people at one of the top universities in his field, and he'd been going back and forth for some time, but the lesson of the bank robbery was "say yes" when life gives you opportunities.
I started learning how to program games when I was 8, started taking formal classes over the summer when I was 10, and now I'm 18, going to my dream college in September, and developing an MMO with a group of friends over the summer for fun.
Me: Lecturing my little brother over making good friends, giving him examples of Matt and Tom Tom: Wow I never knew that! I just thought you did muuusic!
Request: When you say "we need to explain it to our US audience", you should say "we need to explain it to our worldwide audience". Think globally, explain things so anyone who watches it from any country would understand. And by the way, your description of student unions is perfect (like politics but nobody gives a s***).
I was going to say the same thing, but then it occured to me that there is a chance they're doing it on purpose, as a tongue-in-cheek reference to the famed ignorance of people from the US, and if that is the case, I think I actually rather like that...
I don't know if this will get a response but... I feel like sharing the gist of my 'story so far'. I went and did a degree in Music Composition and Technology, about 7 years ago. Since completing that, I've been doing odd bits of freelance, I've done a film score, I release on a label and do all sorts of projects and voluntary work. I still feel like I haven't made it, I'm not in a comfortable place financially, and I hate it. I'm 27 and haven't got it 'figured out'. I'm trying to find proper work of some kind in something relating to my field, but as a composer, producer orchestrator and mixing engineer, finding a job outside of hunting down freelance work to be paid a fraction of what I invoice... I envy people who have it figured out.
@@Bagofnowt In a better place financially, I got out of freelancing, away from jobseekers allowance and earned some freedom to find my own way. I have a partner now who is very supportive, I'm working on becoming a full time musician on my own terms, and we both have a backup plan of moving away and opening up our own business together should our big dreams fail. It's not brilliant but I'm doing a heck of a lot better than I was. Thanks for checking in :) I hope you are well
@@mirzaahmed6589 *Only if you're ordinarily resident. You don't need to be born in Scotland, you just need to stay for around 3 years, it has nothing to do with nationality.
5:00 you payed your university costs by building web sites and web games for people. But how do you start? How do you find a company that wants a website / web game that's small enough so it fits in your university schedule, unimportant enough that they are willing to give the project to someone with almost no experience and hopefully is for money? edit: i do get some offers from startups just by studying for computerscience but most offers are like: We have this completely unoriginal idea, we need someone to do all the work for free. We have this project, but we need someone for a half to full time job (so no time). We have this project, we need someone who already got their masters degree (why that they send it to the students still working on their bachelors, I don't know)
+samramdebest Yep, that was pretty much it. Word of mouth - I made some projects that got a bit of attention, volunteered to make a couple of projects, and worked my way up form there! -- Tom
+samramdebest "How do you find a company that wants a website / web game that's small enough so it fits in your university schedule, unimportant enough that they are willing to give the project to someone with almost no experience and hopefully is for money?" You're hunting for a unicorn, my friend! May you find one! Get involved with some open source projects that interest you. Do some charity work. I designed portions of an alert system the local police department uses to this day. Several hours, not a dime, but it got me recognition. You need to show potential employers solid work that you have done to get ahead. Otherwise you offer nothing more than your fellow CS classmates as someone without a degree.
dowRaist and how did you get started on that police system? Because I would think the police wouldn't risk their software to have bad security by trusing it to someone without a degree.
You are absolutely right. I did records entry for the same police station later on and the certifications and vetting required to even get close to that data is very stringent. Was not applicable in this situation. No certification or special data handling rules required; It was to be used as part of their community outreach programs and was hosted on a off-site VPS. Securely hashing phone numbers, emails, and passwords is fairly elementary with PHP. Service was completely opt-in and you can opt-out whenever. Few legal disclaimers "XX Police Department, State of Minnesota, etc not liable" and we're good to go. I got started by being involved in the Community Emergency Response Team for my local chain of cities. Bunch of volunteers that can act as reserves who know first aid and basic crisis management in the event of an disaster like hurricane Katrina (program started after Katrina leveled New Orleans actually!)
God dammit Matt & Tom I've had all your videos playing in a row and now I have to email a friend of the family to ask for advice on buying phones internationally. You men and your great hair.
I just read Cal Newport's book "So good they can't ignore you", which gives career advice. It disapproves of the advice "follow your passion" and instead teaches something along the lines of "keep getting better at doing something, and you'll find people and opportunities turn up and give you chances to use those skills in a way you enjoy". Both of your stories sound like examples of that ethos.
I have to say I'm very impressed by your knowledge of digital security. I recently graduated from my computer science master (no specialization in security), and yet I have the feeling we are on about the same level in this respect even though for you it was/is only a hobby.
I have a question: how old were you guys when you "figured it out." Or even, how old are you guys now? (By "figured it out," I mean knew what you wanted to do and started doing it).
the most annoying thing is telling someone you have no idea what you want to do, and saying you're good at maths and being told "engineering" and nothing else 🙄
Your advice to never turn down an opportunity couldn't be truer. My job/education path has been like this: census enumerator>factory worker>inventory taker>hospital housekeeper>began studying journalism while working>moved to South America to be with wife with cancer (long story) with the help of leftover pel grant funds>journalism internship>launched online games journalism project, which lasted less than a year, but netted me industry contacts>community manager>games marketer>volunteered to a local English theater group>English teacher. Basically in the end I was saying "yes" to every opportunity that I saw, some were enjoyable, many were not, but the experiences I gained and the people I met along the way have been so valuable. I'd have to say that teaching English to people in South America has been the most enjoyable job I've had yet, and the whole reason I have this position is because I volunteered to help out a local theater group. I was kind of unsure about it at first, but I did not want to turn the opportunity, so I did it, and I met someone who coincidentally was from the same small U.S. town as me, who offered me a teaching position despite me having no formal education as a teacher. So with that said there are definite potentially life-changing benefits to accepting opportunities, no matter how much you think you might hate them. Naturally there are some opportunities that are rather dubious. I remember one time I stooped down to searching for work over Craigslist and I happened upon a listing where someone was asking for an "erotic model for a graveyard shoot". I think you can safely pass on those ones...
I know I'm late watching this and commenting but your thing about not missing a chance/opportunity is something I agree on very much. I won' t tell the full story here but an opportunity arose which I turned down. Because I turned it down, it was offered to someone else who has now become a very well known RUclips personality and has had a hell of a lot of great experiences because of it.
"Never turn down a chance" sounds like something I heard David Sedaris say. Someone said to him "Your life is so much interesting than mine," and he said "That's because I say 'yes' to opportunities."
I do work with computers and there's equal measures of people who got there along a direct path and those like me who have meandered our way to where we've got. Interestingly, I watched this with RUclips's auto comments on and despite the bleep on the audio, the caption system was happy to transcribe the underlying word.
My family had a phrase ‘just open the box.’ It came about because we would often hesitate to start some project for our home because we weren’t sure how to do it but once we just open the box and got started we figured it out and it came out great so the moral is donut do something because you’re afraid just try.
Hi Tom, in your honest opinion what made you decide that you no longer wanted to become a Journalist? I'm going on to do a degree in Journalism in September and I just wanted to get your proper take on it. Love the videos guys, cheers!
I’ve really been procrastinating doing a lot of things and specifically sending a tweet to that one person so I can get help on Music things and HELL TO IT LETS GO
Tom doesn't work *with* computers. He works _against_ them.
Yeah, I can relate.... CrashSafari.com :/
But uses them to work against them?
Rei you know the saying when you can’t beat ‘em...
@@elmondo-s1e join ‘em!
The thing about 'never be afraid to waste the big man's time' is ~ even if the answer at this point in time is 'no', still, you've made an impression and it is amazing that sometimes somewhere in the future that contact can still come back to be quite valuable in a way you could never have foreseen.
I nearly spit tea all over my laptop when Tom did his Shia impression.
It was very mathsey, very theorysey. Me, watching this while procrastinating from revising for a uni maths exam in 2 days
thanks tom for the motivation. it worked.. i applied for a scholarship
I'll do Wrexham. Going there for Collage next year to do Music Production and Sound Engineering. Would love that job 😂
Do the Thing!
I mean, technically speaking Tom is a freelance journalist
Where are Gary and Chris??
As a student of Huddersfield University studying music I have to disagree with you, however, this is probably due to the time difference between our uni experiences (York uni's music course just sounded horrible and the campus was too far from anywhere, sorry).
Tom keeps mentioning a video he's working on, but I can't find it anywhere on his channel. Anyone know which one he's talking about?
A fellow Niven reader!
Tom, what's your current job? I've always wondered... I'm guessing talks?
Awwwwwww I should have watched this a week ago
It was all well and good, till he dissed Huddersfield.
Agreed.
"You're editing this one, aren't you?" -- Tom Scott
Best quote ever
I like how the joggers have become a... /running/ joke.
Well done.
I'd like to tell you to leave, but that was subtle so well played...
👏👏👏
Badumm tsss
Two drums and a syllable fall off a cliff.
"Ended up coming into the studio, poking things, oh that's broken, I'll fix it."
That's pretty much how I got into Broadcast Engineering. To the letter, actually. One of the best thing I let myself get roped into, all things considered.
Why do you always say: "We'll have to explain this to the American viewers"? I'm from Europe, but most of those things are new to me, too :)
+Anita Bedő Because the majority of our audience is American, surprisingly enough - and I've probably spent nearly a year of my life there, so it's close to my heart :) -- Tom
I'm from the UK but haven't heard of a lot of the uni things because I'm not there yet.
+Thor the Norseman More like " *oi*, Mu'uh cre'uh crick'n'epuh innit *mate*? HAHAHAHAHAHA!"
Omg yeah I have an American mate and she says sometimes I'll talk and shell be like *triple blinks* wanna do that again in English? And its like... I just said cottage pie dafuq XD
@Don Romano's Music you learn to desphypher British people of you live in this hallowed place
"Several thousand pounds of student debt" would also be true for many students leaving university here in the US also. Except here it is referring to the weight of the bills.
Oof
In Australia, we have a government-run hex-debt system, where you take a loan that covers the bulk of the cost and only have to pay back a little a week for the rest of your life
@@tomvarga5515 I guess the system here in the Netherlands works on similar principles; the government issues the loans, and what you pay back monthly is income-dependent and never all that much. If you still have any debt after 35 years, the government clears it, to stop you from going into retirement while still having student debt.
Yeah, something similar. It's a nice program though
@@rjfaber1991 Similar to what happens in Ontario as well
I work with people in high school and college, and this is just so _incredibly_ valuable to demonstrate how entering the "real world" actually works. Very few people leave high school, have a career plan, major in the thing for that plan, find a job before they graduate, and work in that field forever. The dominant narrative of how careers work bears _zero resemblance_ to the way that careers actually work.
This is how careers work. You muck about, and you try stuff out, and eventually, something works, and then you're like "Oh, hey, wow, I have a career now."
Preach!
Linguistics exams are so funny everyone is just talking to themselves
It's been a busy week for us, but we had time to get a Park Bench video made too. I'm not sure we're really the best career advisers, though... -- Tom
+Matt and Tom
While I was out of work I applied for a circuit designer job that I wasn't qualified enough for, they told me at the end of the interview that I wasn't
qualified but created a position for me on the spot and gave me a
technician job :-)
+Matt and Tom I can relate to the whole "I didn't know that was a thing people could do and get paid for but it's now my job and I like it" feeling. I was an unhappy person who had given up on dreams and had settled for whatever society had decided to throw on my plate. ..until I helped out at an event one day and realised I loved that! But I still thought it was just something you volunteer for and never considered that there are people who do this for a living. But I got asked to help out the next year at the same event, and an idea dawned on me.. I was still not ready to make the decision, but then a third edition of the event was coming up, I was asked yet again, and everything fell into place; I quit the toxic thing I hated, found a new crew looking for members, applied, got in, and am now a very happy roadie/event manager/crew member. I'm with one of the artists competing to represent Belgium at Eurovision 2016!
+Matt and Tom Going to university costs money in UK? I thought that was a US thing. I guess I'm lucky to live in Sweden, it doesn't cost money (apart from buying your own literature, food and housing).
VorpalGun I hear from reliable sources you do get what you pay for, which is to say not the highest quality of education, but then I study at the best university in the Netherlands (no really, surveyed and all).
+Matt and Tom how do you guys tell the future. So here I am thinking about responding to this job somebody contacted me about today. All the sudden here is park bench telling me to do the damn e-mail.
How do you guys, when imitating the "Dang!" end title sound, manage to do that at the exact correct pitch?
Sheer luck! -Matt.
Also experience editing
I somehow got myself into a webdev job with a degree in chemistry.
My friend is an iPhone app developer with a degree in political science.
One of my Computer Science professors half jokingly said that the field of Computer Science has a -1% termination rate. People are needed so bad that if you show that you are in any way competent, you will get promoted.
Guess it applies to getting a job too.
I am a web dev and digital marketing consultant. I studied Audio Engineering and Sound Production....
I'm not even half way through my degree and I'm a software engineer. It really is a matter of competency and what you learned on your own rather than what you did in school. School for me is about the opportunity for post graduate studies and research instead of getting work.
@@hellterminator i don't see the disconnect
It seems like your advice distills into something like; try something, if it sucks, try something else.
That's basically it. What is the hard part is just not giving up and keeping your spirits sufficiently high, so you don't go "naaah, that's bollocks, I'll just drown in misery".
It ain't gonna be flowers, but eventually, you'll find something that suits you. At least it'll be more likely than when you do literally nothing.
That's it, I'm emailing that executive at that production company I want to work at. No more stalling. Thanks, Tom.
Did it work?
@@tobymassoom Nah but at least a rejection email is better than nothing
Hope you're doing well
What you doing now
@@brumsgrub8633 still emailing production companies but Hollywood is absolutely falling apart so nothing is going anywhere
Something nice about Huddersfield? It's not Bradford, there we go.
The thing about not being afraid to waste the big man's time reminds me of the time I job shadowed. I knew the answer would be "No, you *cannot* job shadow in a major national laboratory." Well I was wrong, and that's how I job shadowed at ORNL.
whos wishing we got that uk education video
The joggers really add another dimension to these videos. Keep up the good work fellas.
What ever happened to the "long video" Tom was working on about UCAS forms?
16:00 I'm tempted to bookmark this and watch it every day. Just to build the confidence to try a shot at a new opportunity every day until something great happens.
13:00 and 14:23
Tom, how did you hook up with Computerphile? That's where I first saw you. Your bit on dealing with time zones had me laughing so much I looked up your channel and I've been subscribed over 2 years. I just checked and it's Computerphile's highest viewed video. In fact you've got the top three, all with over a half million views.
"Do not have Fraternities and Sororities"
"I don't know what that even means."
Good for you. It's better not to know. Those aren't the people normal people hang out with.
“25 and in a career” cries in med student
Tom, I know you see this differently, but you are kind of a journalist.
"25 an settled into a career" makes me really depressed that I'm not at that point yet
+JonFawkes Don't feel bad, I'm 30 and not at that point yet.
+BlobVanDam Ditto
I *was* settled into a career at 25, a career I despised!
I quit just after my birthday and then decided to do a job I liked instead, now I'm just working part time and free-lancing on the side.
+JonFawkes I'm 30 and just starting one. I mean literally. I'm applying for my first ever paid writing gig tomorrow, and in a weeks time I'm having someone help me find an online university I can get with income reliant deferred payments.
+JonFawkes 27 and just getting started.
Matt getting sassy. Even if it takes 5 minuste he's gonna talk about the subject he wants to talk about!
I literally have this video on one half of my laptop screen, and a window with my email open, waiting for me to send out a CV.
Welp. I guess the last 40 seconds is made for such a person like myself. Thanks Tom!
"Go with the option that makes for the best story"
the light on Tom's face is a e s t h e t i c
Telling me to email someone to meet up while I watch this at 2:30AM
See this is exactly my dilemma right now xD
"Never turn down a chance".
I saw a cool video of a guy telling a story in a performance that won a story-telling contest, and the moral of his story was essentially that.
In the story he was working as a security tester in Israel and his team had finished their job early when one of them noticed that the contract actually gave them permission to test PHYSICAL security in addition to their computer network. And they were working for a bank. So they technically had permission to rob a bank.
And one of them made the persuasive argument that this was probably a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and they shouldn't let it slip by.
What follows is a tale of a group of people who aren't very serious about it and have no idea what they are doing planning and executing an armed robbery of a bank, and it turning out to have been a whole lot of fun.
Which is why, he explained, he quit his job the next day.
Because he had received a once-in-a-lifetime offer to travel to the United States and study under prestigious people at one of the top universities in his field, and he'd been going back and forth for some time, but the lesson of the bank robbery was "say yes" when life gives you opportunities.
Could you link that? :D
Best ending of a park bench video yet!
I started learning how to program games when I was 8, started taking formal classes over the summer when I was 10, and now I'm 18, going to my dream college in September, and developing an MMO with a group of friends over the summer for fun.
BtheDestroyer That's awesome, wish you all the best!
1:58 It is been a year, I don't think your making it anymore. That or it is taking a LONG time to make.
still hoping !
ending of this video was absolutely adorable :) I don't even care if it was planned or not - loved it anyway :D
Since I started watching these videos I swear Matt is a familiar face now I find out you took a job in wrexham 🤔
I'm really enjoying these Park Bench vids and the chemistry between Tom and Matt!
Me: Lecturing my little brother over making good friends, giving him examples of Matt and Tom
Tom: Wow I never knew that! I just thought you did muuusic!
Request: When you say "we need to explain it to our US audience", you should say "we need to explain it to our worldwide audience". Think globally, explain things so anyone who watches it from any country would understand.
And by the way, your description of student unions is perfect (like politics but nobody gives a s***).
I was going to say the same thing, but then it occured to me that there is a chance they're doing it on purpose, as a tongue-in-cheek reference to the famed ignorance of people from the US, and if that is the case, I think I actually rather like that...
+Gilad Teller They'd spend the whole video explaining just one thing then.
Trying to explain things universally would be ridiculous
They have a larger US audience than anywhere else
I don't know if this will get a response but... I feel like sharing the gist of my 'story so far'. I went and did a degree in Music Composition and Technology, about 7 years ago. Since completing that, I've been doing odd bits of freelance, I've done a film score, I release on a label and do all sorts of projects and voluntary work. I still feel like I haven't made it, I'm not in a comfortable place financially, and I hate it. I'm 27 and haven't got it 'figured out'. I'm trying to find proper work of some kind in something relating to my field, but as a composer, producer orchestrator and mixing engineer, finding a job outside of hunting down freelance work to be paid a fraction of what I invoice...
I envy people who have it figured out.
.
5 years on, how you doing?
@@Bagofnowt In a better place financially, I got out of freelancing, away from jobseekers allowance and earned some freedom to find my own way. I have a partner now who is very supportive, I'm working on becoming a full time musician on my own terms, and we both have a backup plan of moving away and opening up our own business together should our big dreams fail. It's not brilliant but I'm doing a heck of a lot better than I was.
Thanks for checking in :) I hope you are well
@@LavenderAudio gud job
2:37 matt (presumably most brits) is (/are) so polite! saying "evening" and nodding his head at a random stranger!
Ya know, it's kinda sad that simply saying "evening" to a passerby is considered a remarkable example of politeness in today's world.
@@ricardoquerubin3962 yeah... but people don't usually do that right? at least to my knowledge.
@@peachierose3356 Yeah...that's what makes it sad.
It's free to go to university in Scotland so... BOOM!!!
Joe Cooper Only if you're Scottish.
@@mirzaahmed6589 *Only if you're ordinarily resident. You don't need to be born in Scotland, you just need to stay for around 3 years, it has nothing to do with nationality.
i wanted to be an It Technician/Sysadmin. i experienced it and loved it.
5:00 you payed your university costs by building web sites and web games for people. But how do you start? How do you find a company that wants a website / web game that's small enough so it fits in your university schedule, unimportant enough that they are willing to give the project to someone with almost no experience and hopefully is for money?
edit: i do get some offers from startups just by studying for computerscience but most offers are like:
We have this completely unoriginal idea, we need someone to do all the work for free.
We have this project, but we need someone for a half to full time job (so no time).
We have this project, we need someone who already got their masters degree (why that they send it to the students still working on their bachelors, I don't know)
+samramdebest Yep, that was pretty much it. Word of mouth - I made some projects that got a bit of attention, volunteered to make a couple of projects, and worked my way up form there! -- Tom
+Matt and Tom so just luck on your first projects? What quality are we talking about for those first projects. Are they still online?
+samramdebest
"How do you find a company that wants a website / web game that's small enough so it fits in your university schedule, unimportant enough that they are willing to give the project to someone with almost no experience and hopefully is for money?"
You're hunting for a unicorn, my friend! May you find one!
Get involved with some open source projects that interest you. Do some charity work. I designed portions of an alert system the local police department uses to this day. Several hours, not a dime, but it got me recognition. You need to show potential employers solid work that you have done to get ahead. Otherwise you offer nothing more than your fellow CS classmates as someone without a degree.
dowRaist
and how did you get started on that police system? Because I would think the police wouldn't risk their software to have bad security by trusing it to someone without a degree.
You are absolutely right. I did records entry for the same police station later on and the certifications and vetting required to even get close to that data is very stringent. Was not applicable in this situation.
No certification or special data handling rules required; It was to be used as part of their community outreach programs and was hosted on a off-site VPS. Securely hashing phone numbers, emails, and passwords is fairly elementary with PHP. Service was completely opt-in and you can opt-out whenever. Few legal disclaimers "XX Police Department, State of Minnesota, etc not liable" and we're good to go.
I got started by being involved in the Community Emergency Response Team for my local chain of cities. Bunch of volunteers that can act as reserves who know first aid and basic crisis management in the event of an disaster like hurricane Katrina (program started after Katrina leveled New Orleans actually!)
God dammit Matt & Tom I've had all your videos playing in a row and now I have to email a friend of the family to ask for advice on buying phones internationally.
You men and your great hair.
1:40 - I like the all encompassing hand gesture for "Music"
gosh they're actual adults
I find myself watching and nodding. Thanks guys
[Doesn't everyone work with computers to some extent these days?]
8am lectures? My earliest ones are 9, and I don't like them.
8:45 for me (though it rarely occurs), and I mostly skip those...
+Peter Smyth 7:15. Checkmate
+Peter Smyth Yes, 8am and never again. I'm doing either > 9:30 or I'm not doing anything.
+Václav Fejt I'll pray for you.
@@rjfaber1991 7am lectures
Now I don't feel that bad for not having everything figured out
Did that video on university that Tom was talking about ever come out? I can’t find it
Did Tom end up doing the video about differences between UK and US universities? I can find it now
You never made that video about the British education system (as far as I know), which is slightly upsetting. I hope you get it done some day! :)
I just read Cal Newport's book "So good they can't ignore you", which gives career advice. It disapproves of the advice "follow your passion" and instead teaches something along the lines of "keep getting better at doing something, and you'll find people and opportunities turn up and give you chances to use those skills in a way you enjoy". Both of your stories sound like examples of that ethos.
but what does a broadcast engineer actually do?
Broadcast engineering, duh.
micha 030201
so only repairing the antenna?
+samramdebest Every thing but be on camera or microphone. Set up and maintain all the equipment for a broadcast.
+samramdebest He's the guy on the other side of the studio with the headphones on, surrounded by desks of switches, cables, lights and stuff.
Engineers broadcasts.
fiiiiiiine I will go send the damn email
You might be interested in looking up the "Planned Happenstance" theory of career development.
The saying is you miss 100% of the shots you don't make not you regret 100% of the shots you don't make
Found a map that said Sussex on it but WUT WHY IT'S STRAYA
I have to say I'm very impressed by your knowledge of digital security. I recently graduated from my computer science master (no specialization in security), and yet I have the feeling we are on about the same level in this respect even though for you it was/is only a hobby.
I have a question: how old were you guys when you "figured it out." Or even, how old are you guys now? (By "figured it out," I mean knew what you wanted to do and started doing it).
the most annoying thing is telling someone you have no idea what you want to do, and saying you're good at maths and being told "engineering" and nothing else 🙄
Your advice to never turn down an opportunity couldn't be truer. My job/education path has been like this: census enumerator>factory worker>inventory taker>hospital housekeeper>began studying journalism while working>moved to South America to be with wife with cancer (long story) with the help of leftover pel grant funds>journalism internship>launched online games journalism project, which lasted less than a year, but netted me industry contacts>community manager>games marketer>volunteered to a local English theater group>English teacher.
Basically in the end I was saying "yes" to every opportunity that I saw, some were enjoyable, many were not, but the experiences I gained and the people I met along the way have been so valuable. I'd have to say that teaching English to people in South America has been the most enjoyable job I've had yet, and the whole reason I have this position is because I volunteered to help out a local theater group. I was kind of unsure about it at first, but I did not want to turn the opportunity, so I did it, and I met someone who coincidentally was from the same small U.S. town as me, who offered me a teaching position despite me having no formal education as a teacher.
So with that said there are definite potentially life-changing benefits to accepting opportunities, no matter how much you think you might hate them. Naturally there are some opportunities that are rather dubious. I remember one time I stooped down to searching for work over Craigslist and I happened upon a listing where someone was asking for an "erotic model for a graveyard shoot". I think you can safely pass on those ones...
You seem like you have a very interesting life.
I know where Wrexham is because that used to be where Lego UK was based.
I know I'm late watching this and commenting but your thing about not missing a chance/opportunity is something I agree on very much.
I won' t tell the full story here but an opportunity arose which I turned down. Because I turned it down, it was offered to someone else who has now become a very well known RUclips personality and has had a hell of a lot of great experiences because of it.
@@teamgeist3328 You just want to know who I'm talking about.
I mean tom is /kinda/ a journalist-
What happened to the video about unis?
Did he ever do that UCAS video?
I'd like to know as well. I don't think so, tho :/
Thanks - I actually paused and went to bother somebody with an email I was thinking about sending. ;)
"Never turn down a chance" sounds like something I heard David Sedaris say. Someone said to him "Your life is so much interesting than mine," and he said "That's because I say 'yes' to opportunities."
I do work with computers and there's equal measures of people who got there along a direct path and those like me who have meandered our way to where we've got.
Interestingly, I watched this with RUclips's auto comments on and despite the bleep on the audio, the caption system was happy to transcribe the underlying word.
I wish Matt stopped pulling the fingers at us when he lists things.
My family had a phrase ‘just open the box.’ It came about because we would often hesitate to start some project for our home because we weren’t sure how to do it but once we just open the box and got started we figured it out and it came out great so the moral is donut do something because you’re afraid just try.
Donut?
"Didn't find as interesting as a job" As in Computing sorts or Linguistic?
Guys, i love this channel! Its fun ánd real. A rarerity. Thank you!
Don't be afraid of asking someone to do something, because you may get the chance to make Tom Scott go upside-down over Oxfordshire.
You never know!
Hi Tom, in your honest opinion what made you decide that you no longer wanted to become a Journalist? I'm going on to do a degree in Journalism in September and I just wanted to get your proper take on it. Love the videos guys, cheers!
Back-end equpiment :'D
I’ve really been procrastinating doing a lot of things and specifically sending a tweet to that one person so I can get help on Music things and HELL TO IT LETS GO
Noone cares but i sent the thing and it was a great choice yes
So Tom when I fail my exam tomorrow morning can I blame you? Cause I was going to revise but now I have an email to send :p
I literally had a message I was about to send someone, and instead I decided to watch this video. Unfortunately this video had other plans
Is no one going to mention the fact that Chris has been left out of Tom's comment about TechDif at 8:17?!
Wrexham *shakes fist*
(Sorry, Chester boy here...)
At least it wasn't Carlisle...
Story of my life Matt, coming from the current Chief Engineer at URY, and for some reason the Assistant Station Manager as well.
Park Bench has got to be my favorite series you two have done (besides Citation Needed, of course).
1,000 friends and only 1 hater, new record :)
Odd how relevant this is for me XD
I'm choosing my A-Levels in a week :D