Reactor safety systems testing and instrumentation controls maintenance in a nuclear power plant.what do you do?
what do you do, too?
Reactor safety systems testing and instrumentation controls maintenance in a nuclear power plant.what do you do?
what do you do, too?
Reactor safety systems testing and instrumentation controls maintenance in a nuclear power plant.
I knew I was ballin' for my salary in Florida. The equivalent salary of $107k in Orlando for Manhattan would be a little over $240k.
My cousin is a Finance Director making $190k in Orlando, which is equivalent to $422k for Manhattan, $322k for Brooklyn.
New York is too damn expensive.
Those cost of living calculators are kind of bullshit for people with high salaries. They only make sense if you are spending 100% of your money on necessities and not saving anything, because the cost of living multiplier only applies to the money you spend, not on what you save.
The other thing to consider is that the biggest differentiator is usually housing, however if you are paying a mortgage, you are accruing equity. Paying twice as much in Manhattan is not equivalent, because when all is said and done, you will end up with an asset that is worth twice as much.
Haha, no harm man, I like itI just had to mate, cool job, I hope it stays cool.
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You need a private email address to apply to GAF, which is a huge selection bias.
everyone else is fussing over the big ones, I want to poke at yours a bit more.
assuming 9 hours a day 5 days a week that is 40 hours of normal pay and 5 hours of overtime. assume time and a half 47.5 hours a week. or puts your job at merely 7.69 an hour.
I'm not sure where you work but that seems really low as if we do the upper end of what you said 12 hours a day 6 days a week. that is 40 hours of normal pay 32 hours of over time or effectively 88 hours a week or you would be making 4.15 an hour.
thus, I am curious where you live, what you do and what not![]()
$210k, 37, Technical Writing.
$210k, 37, Technical Writing.
I'm senior-level and the lead tech writer on my team. It's really hard work -- you have to be an adept writer, coder, and at my level, a UX and SEO expert. But it's a great gig if you can get it. Engineers have pagers for when things go down and spend hours trying to figure out obscure bugs. I get paid like a senior-level engineer, but have no such pressure. I have a lot to slog through but the closest thing I have to brain-bending debugging is wracking my brain to explain something in English. Oh, and reading hundreds of pages of very dense technical design docs and/or source code. That can be not fun.What? No way. Not for technical writing. Unless you are the only one.
Daniel B·;184373717 said:$2k (0, 45, retired (@37) Software Engineer (DOS (x86, C, C++), Windows 3 through NT/XP (C++, C#, SQL), Web (ISAPI, .Net etc).
Downsized to U.S. in fall of 07 and after U.S.'s financial meltdown, when interest rates plunged from 5% to 1%, bought v. modest fully refurbished home in 08, and supplement $2k interest income, with savings, for lavish $5k / year lifestyle.
How can one live reasonably comfortably on $5k? Well first, have to deduct $1k property tax and $.5k for water / refuse = $3.5k. Comcast Budget Digital Cable (at least get On-Demand and HBO) + Basic Broadband (presently no cap and 1080p streaming) reduces this to $2.6k and with elecricity, down to around $2k. That goes on consumables, with a budget of around $38 / week. Have no car (Arnie would be impressed with my calf muscles, from walking 4.5 miles / week in Shenandoah Valley), no insurance and clothes budget is virtually $0.
I prepare all my meals (never eat out), from scratch, including whole wheat (yeast free) bread (actually quite good, toasted) and margarita pizza (use naan as base). My cooking skills have their limits, so do regularly buy Sharwoods Jalfrezi sauce, when on special for $2 at Kroger (pucker with Stonefire Tandori Naan, on clearance for $1.5, which can freeze). Also occasionally, Bertolli Portobello Mushroom Tomato Sauce (recommend) for $2.15 at Walmart, which I use with browned chicken breast chunks and Uncle Bens rice. For week's worth of semi-healthy snacks, bake batch of cookies (oatmeal craisin or crunchy peanut butter), brownies or banana bread.
At height of my career, I was earning around $75k+ (at today's exchange rate) and I made a killing (3.3 times purchase price!) when I sold my U.K. apartment, which I spent several months completely refurbishing. I don't miss my past life, however, I won't be complaining when interest rates finally edge their way back up.
I'm senior-level and the lead tech writer on my team. It's really hard work -- you have to be an adept writer, coder, and at my level, a UX and SEO expert. But it's a great gig if you can get it. Engineers have pagers for when things go down and spend hours trying to figure out obscure bugs. I get paid like a senior-level engineer, but have no such pressure. I have a lot to slog through but the closest thing I have to brain-bending debugging is wracking my brain to explain something in English. Oh, and reading hundreds of pages of very dense technical design docs and/or source code. That can be not fun.
It's San Francisco, so I'm not as rich as you might think. My GF is an RN who also makes six digits, though, so we are doing alright.
I can admire the non-Consumerism, but "no insurance" seems like a red flag. What happens if your house burns down or you become seriously ill?
I can admire the non-Consumerism, but "no insurance" seems like a red flag. What happens if your house burns down or you become seriously ill?
QA is done through peer review, so yes -- but for other writers' stuff. We have tools for publishing ourselves (on-demand), so we have to design our own publication regime to support releases, etc. I also am working on migrating that system to GitHub so we can open source our documentation w/the community. This is at Google, btw.Do you do QA and publishing as well?
Now can anyone in here calculate the median of all the posts?
It feels like its at like 80k usd
Daniel B·;184427882 said:I did have home insurance, up until 2011, as I managed to fly my "virtually new house" proposition, given that the house was rebuilt from a shell and had brand new wiring, plumbing, roof and interior etc, so I was able to secure a not too exorbitant rate (around $350). Not that long after canceling my insurance (premium had crept up to almost $450), we had the Virginia earthquake, which caused little damage in my area, but my house still shook, and I was going "Oh shit!", thinking about my insurance... I'm not overly worried about fire, given the new wiring and circuit breaker and I don't smoke. When interest rates pick up significantly, I will perhaps have another look.
On health insurance, the plan on the Obamacare marketplace was going to cost almost my entire existing budget ($5k), with a 10% deductible, so that was out of the question.
But, I'm well into the "prevention is better than cure" mantra, so as well as all the power walking I do (for groceries and weekly disc golf), I am eating reasonably healthily too, with little processed junk (no soda at home (just weekly at cinema), commercial snacks etc), and a fair amount of veges: Boston lettuce in my lunch sandwich (also mix in 2 tbsp of organic crushed flax seed into my home made bread), and invariably steamed broccoli (organic, when good quality) for my evening meals.
ive seen a lot more >80's in this thread than <80s
QA is done through peer review, so yes -- but for other writers' stuff. We have tools for publishing ourselves (on-demand), so we have to design our own publication regime to support releases, etc. I also am working on migrating that system to GitHub so we can open source our documentation w/the community. This is at Google, btw.