Spyke

Lol nope. A lot of what I do is using computer programs to model soil conditions (dirt) so it's more about understanding what soil is out there and how it acts when we build things on it/with it. The most I use is algebra

5
lemmy.world

How do you feel about climate change and how it affects your job?

4
lemmy.ca

Simultaneously really bummed out about the terrible conditions people have/are going to have to live through and deeply grateful that I get to work on improving those shitty conditions

4
lemmy.ca

How does it make you feel when people in my industry call themselves "software engineers"?

2
lemmy.ca

😂 a little annoyed, tbh. But really only because I think there should be licensing for software engineers too. It's more important than ever to have a duty to protect the public when it comes to tech imo

2

I want to see it, if only to see how many of us fail licensure due to gross incompetence.

4

I'm a geotechnical engineer. A lot of industrial/commercial work, lately more flood protection/coastal

2

Saudia Arabia is planning this Line City

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Line,_Saudi_Arabia

As a civil engineer, i have a few questions for you.

Is this interesting as a project?

What if anything would excite you about it?

What are obvious challenges, and what do you suspect might be much harder than any lay person would think of planning/building this?

1
lemmy.ca

It's someone who designs infrastructure, so roads, buildings, bridges, sewer systems, etc. Basically if you think about anything a construction worker builds, a civil engineer/team of engineers designed it. There are different categories of civil engineers. Structural engineers make sure a building can handle the weight of everything on/in it. Transportation engineers design highways. I'm a geotechnical engineer, so I deal with soils (dirt) and make sure the ground can support whatever is being built.

2
Krestenreply
feddit.dk

I'm soon going to study as a software engineer, but in my country that's also called a "civil engineer", is that true in English, as well?

1

Only for some time. Job boards in their early days were simplistic in their capture of information, you either pasted or attached a cover letter & CV but they would quickly become much more granular in gathering a lot more information about your skills, even if this made the application process a lot longer than before. It had the benefit of your skillset defining your ability rather than the title of your degree obscuring it. Also, OCR & language translation advanced really quickly there after.

2
lemmy.ca

What makes a good and useful CAD drafter? Asking as a cad drafter.

1

Sorry, I'm a geotechnical engineer so I haven't worked with drafters too much. When I have worked with drafters, I really appreciated getting a call if my notes were confusing instead of the drafter making an assumption and getting it wrong

1

Any advice for cities facing the increasing threat of floods? I live on the floodplain in my city, and it has given me a tinge of anxiety whenever it rains rather hard in my neighbourhood.

1

Buy flood insurance and if it gets too expensive, it might make more sense to move. I live in an area where flood insurance just skyrocketed and I think people are still hoping prices will go down somehow but I don't think it'll happen.

If you're handy, maybe look into how to gut a house after a flood. Mold can do a lot of damage.

I don't know if you're in an area where flooding could be a safety issue but always follow local warnings/official's advice. Property can be replaced, people can't.

I think as humans we can engineer our way out of increasingly hostile weather but it takes an investment of time and money and our governments aren't usually great at either.

2

You reached the end

I'm a civil engineer, AMA | Spyke