I know how tax bracketing works. The 30% I mentioned in the video is the total approximate tax for that pay. How could you even infer that I don’t know how tax bracketing works just by me saying that? 😅 I didn’t even go into the details lol
I was there for two weeks last year at a training session at Google and my car windows were broken twice. Nothing rewards if you have to go to work in California, taxes, homeless, junkies, high rents and overrated house price's...
Unlimited sick time and 21 days PTO is pretty good for US standards btw. Important information left out. Other than that, salary looks a bit low given the company and the experience but the market is kinda down as well
@@Swaxol I'm not saying it's not a lot of money. Nor saying that I wouldn't love that type of salary. But I'm pretty sure there are Meta employees doing the same tasks, with similar experience making 3 and even 4 hundred thousand. In that sense, is kinda low.
@@queenstown9534Really? I think you'd have to consider we don't know exactly when this is from. The stock pay is huge and meta stock used to be worth more
His position won't be eliminated by ai. Just enhanced by it. Once ai can fully program and problem solve it'll be taking more than just programming jobs. Remember programmers are engineers and do a lot more than just program. And also once ai is at that point we as a society will probably restructure how we distribute resources that are overly abundant to people who don't need to work.
I think you are mistaken. on call is not the field of engineering, it's the time your working. you wouldn't just be an "on call engineer" you'd be an "on call *software* engineer" or some other type of engineer. on call just means you are ready if shit hits the fan outside of the 9-5
@@goos42 I am unsure what happened to my reply that I had typed up with links and everything, but I am guessing it got blocked from posting because of the links, but you and your company can be sued for using any word plus engineer for anyone who does not specifically have an engineering degree in that word. It has happened a bunch here because Engineer is a protected title. An example was my friend who had the title of a Security Engineer, and their company got sued and had to switch it. Same story with Software Engineer, since here there is no recognized Software Engineer title/degree. There's Electrical Engineer, Mechanical Engineer etc. There's an entire Engineering body that protects the title
I actually share a lot about how to break into tech industry, so check out my channel for RU-vid shorts and subscribe for future content. I am trying to make as many as I can to be helpful. Also follow me on @nijatchats on Instagram if you'd like
etymology_nerd also has a good short on this. As an American, who does this a lot, I’d suggest when in doubt, focus on the rest of the sentence. The first yeah/no is often just kind of buying time while my brain figures out how to answer. Like today in a work meeting someone gave a long answer and then said “I kind of went on a tangent, but does that answer your question?” And I said, “Yeah, no, I think I kind of led you on a tangent, but the answer makes sense.”
Sir in a new workplace how to identify problem/pain points and take initiative to create massive value for company and earn myself most money and faster career growth in first 1 or 2 years, than normal people in competition ? How to be an exceptional problem solver/ Engineer.. Do any books also provide information regarding this subject..
Don't insult the video game devs man, they work as hard as they can in the miniscule time they're given by the executives If you wanna blame someone then blame the people at the top
I started out in school as a geology based Environmental Scientist. No biology, animal husbandry, agronomy. I've worked as a environmental technician, construction environmental inspector, in the wastewater department, as an engineering technician, and now I'm in animal feeding operations and deal with swine. 🤷♀️