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IBEW?That’s an easy one. Dad was a union construction electrician ………..then so was I.
IBEW?That’s an easy one. Dad was a union construction electrician ………..then so was I.
Hey @Richard Davis, you happen to get the chance to meet Ron?From watching all the sci-fi type shows from the 60's and the Apollo space program, I was always curious about computers. My parents didn't have the money to send me to college and there were no grants or scholarships available. My first thought was to join the military but after many of my friends, one year ahead of me, convinced me not to, my options were limited. I ended up going to one of those private technical schools that advertise on Saturday afternoon TV. It was a self paced electronics/computer certificate program that normally takes 2 years. I got my Certificate in 9 months.
After graduation I got word that a Silicon Valley company was interviewing. I went to the interview and the company offered me, my roommate and one of my teachers a job. We all accepted. Companies needed people quick and were willing to train people with any degree of computer training. Once I got my foot in the door I worked my up to Engineer over the years. After 40 or so years, the industry has changed drastically. I was forced into retirement during COVID.
During my career I travelled to several continents and been involved with a wide range of computer related sites. Early on I designed one of the first digital image systems for Hanna-Barbera Cartoons. Toward the end of my career I worked on large systems for NASCAR Media Group, CDC, and NOAA.
I was working behind the scenes in the factory. They gave me the specs they wanted and I put the design together. Our Field Service team did the install. I remained friends with our main installer over the decades but unfortunately, he passed away a few years back. He said they were a tight group so I would expect that my friend met Ron.Hey @Richard Davis, you happen to get the chance to meet Ron?
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He was a very talented man. I met him at a art gallery here in town about 4 years ago.I was working behind the scenes in the factory. They gave me the specs they wanted and I put the design together. Our Field Service team did the install. I remained friends with our main installer over the decades but unfortunately, he passed away a few years back. He said they were a tight group so I would expect that my friend met Ron.
My mother was a terrible example of this attitude. Ironic, considering that her own father, a carpenter, built an extremely successful construction company in New York City, and had no higher education. She and my father both attended college for free at City College in New York, then fled to Penn State after they got married. Both quickly assimilated into the academic culture, and used the staff discount to earn masters degrees. Dad learned carpentry from his father in law, and worked with him to build the home where I grew up. He retained his practical skills, and respect for them in others, even as he moved up the academic ladder.Some people look down their noses at a construction worker or should I say, any guy with busted knuckles and a few scars. Work is what you make of it or push yourself to achieve. I'm 68 and I've been retired for 16 years, yes, a few scars and a jacked up finger, that still hates the cold, but Theresa was worth it................ All good stories are about a woman............
I'm proud of you, like me, we never got anything for free and you failed no one. It's a path and we followed it!!! See, a great story is always about a woman.My mother was a terrible example of this attitude. Ironic, considering that her own father, a carpenter, built an extremely successful construction company in New York City, and had no higher education. She and my father both attended college for free at City College in New York, then fled to Penn State after they got married. Both quickly assimilated into the academic culture, and used the staff discount to earn masters degrees. Dad learned carpentry from his father in law, and worked with him to build the home where I grew up. He retained his practical skills, and respect for them in others, even as he moved up the academic ladder.
On the other hand, my mother judged success purely in terms of academic achievement. I failed her miserably in that department, and she never forgave me for it. I would have preferred to have her support my choices, but proving her wrong became a major motivator for me. I was fortunate my wife found it amusing when my truck driving earnings eclipsed those of her academic colleagues.
Great story and glad you were happy doing what you did. It’s odd for me as I never had any intentions to start a biz; but that’s what I did at 45-years-old, despite hating corporate the politics. Longer story, but I got a nice severance package to exit my last employer. I was making nice money and had built a house two-years earlier. Kids in HS, wife had a job she liked being there over 10-years. To find a comparable job required moving and that was sure a hard do all considering at the time.Stayed there for 50 more years taking over the joint and running it by myself in 1992.
You got it!IBEW?
Yes insurance is a big scam, but you have to have it or else. We had two claims in all those years and neither were our fault but we did it to save the bad mouthing to come. Like you we never advertised other than a line in yellow pages (how old is that?) just word of mouth, never standing still, always booked. NOW you have an understanding of being on the owner side with expenses. Glad you made itGreat story and glad you were happy doing what you did. It’s odd for me as I never had any intentions to start a biz; but that’s what I did at 45-years-old, despite hating corporate the politics. Longer story, but I got a nice severance package to exit my last employer. I was making nice money and had built a house two-years earlier. Kids in HS, wife had a job she liked being there over 10-years. To find a comparable job required moving and that was sure a hard do all considering at the time.
Discussing a biz startup with two friends, one already establishing his biz, they said if I do, they’d be able to give me some contract work. That was that. The old saying worked for me – not what you know, it is who you know. Later referrals gave me more work and did all right for the next 21-years; the covid prompted me to retire a bit sooner than I planned. Zoom meetings weren’t my thing. When I closed up my shop, referred my biz to the guy who helped me get my start as some payback. And good thing I was able to get on my wife’s HC insurance, as this looked like it could have been a deal breaker. All the required insurance I had to have was costly enough and NOT one claim in 21-years of paying thousands each year...figured it amounted to some 150-grand in premiums..
Thought so. I was in the Sprinkler Fitters Local 669 as a young fella (required where I was in DC/Balmer area).You got it!
My wife is a programmer, has worked mostly from home the last 10-years, about full retired now, but she keeps getting called back to pop in on one project here and there. The timing for me with the advent of computers seemed pretty fast. In tech school the calculus course had just switched from learning slide rules to doing it on a calculator, expensive purchase back then with all the functions I had to have, like a 100-bucks – then. And the drafting courses I took were dinosaur as the tech exploded there. Before going on to tech school, worked at a machine shop making parts for micro-film machines, slide rods, lens housings, and those went bye-bye.was 6 when I saw my first computer,