Lol it is so hard dealing with people in tech right who just got into because they can work from home, they're so clueless and could care less about the actual job.
@@stephenknotts6466 Err that's unequivocally false. Being in tech requires a high degree of technical capabilities. If they were clueless they wouldn't have the capacity to be highly critical thinkers that have valued technical skills. Anyone can push buttons or talk to people. Not everyone can be technical.
He’s going to go from $68k to $400k as soon as he finishes residency. EMT and X-ray tech are good careers if you have two incomes. The salaries sound appropriate to me.
Do what you love man, I got into tech because I loved PC's at the age of 13. Also the field is getting really crowded and the pay has dropped way down because people who have no clue or care about the computers or techs they manage, go into only because they are lazy and think it's the easiest way to make money.
@@Sockembopem You moved from accounting after 3 years into development? Where/how did you learn to program? What languages are you using? I know programming pays very well always have , I've just always compartmentalized as separate from tech, because programmers are usually off by themselves from real world support issues.
Had family that originally wanted me to go to med school. I show them the tuition cost and said "unless you guys want to pay half of this. Its not fucking happening". I worked in tech as a designer. Trust me, Anesthesia guy is right.
And handsome and decently buff arms and smart and (will be) wealthy af in a few years. Time to marry him and continue his legacy and have his children 🥰
Let’s weed-out candidates through burn-out instead of merits!!! Yeah we’re Doctors we didn’t suffer sleep deprivation as badly as our peers who dropped out!!
@@hassan7569 lol like I said, pay attention to the movement of society. Also, besides awesome pay, other aspects like fully remote and hours less than 40 a week. FTE doesnt mean working like software engineers at Google at L5, I had a close friend work there. He left Google lol. More ways for success other than only a high salary. If youre working 80 hr weeks….thats two jobs lol. What life do you really have?
@@daaneel yep, depends how you move strategically. Normal averages of tech jobs is higher than any industry. Depends how your job is as well. If youre a contractor, you need to do research on how vendors are proposing their salary charts. Do private or join a big consultant firm that delivers solutions or do your own 1099, build relationships. If we are talking overall life satisfactory, its definitely here.
@@obieeetleb7764 I mean don't you get in debt in medical school, and it's really hard, also hours you work is alot more, in tech you have somewhat of chance at growing your career and maybe working at a faang company or something, you can't really grow on medical, + you can do freelance on the side which can make you alot of money
My parents literally almost kicked me out when I told them I was not going to go into nursing. Now as a new grad I make more than I could ever make as a nurse and I work from home. We have all seen the salaries on this channel. Making 250k-500k is not THAT crazy with about 5 years experience as an "average" person. I slightly disagree with saying the tech space is crowded and so on. All I have to say is there is you don't have to become a software engineer, security engineer or data analyst and so on. You can do much more in niche fields where you are not as disposable.
Making about 50K a year as a licensed X-Ray Tech in "Foggybottom" Washington D.C. is low. If he worked in NYC he would make 100k with the same or even lower cost of living.
I work at Trader Joe’s and make about 25k before taxes in DC. The first one made me sad. They should be getting paid more. 25k is nothing in DC. Im barely scraping by
Anesthesia residents dont work 80 hours a week, unless he’s in his intern year maybe, lol. It’s considered one of the ROAD “lifestyle” specialties in medicine - Radiology, Ophthalmology, Anesthesiology, Dermatology. Those specialties pay very high for minimal work. He’s being dramatic
He’s a resident, they usually have a stipend. My friend is 31 and just finished his residency in anesthesiology. He was making around $80k but he’ll be starting his 1st “real job” as an actual doctor. Salary is $365K. Not bad for a 31 year old
@@vanniee_ it is true. Physicians make up a small part of the medical community. Resp therapist and nurses do, and we work more that what we are paid for sure.
x-ray technician vs x-ray technologist big difference in salary. X-ray technician is limited license and X-ray Technologist is Registered With a R. T. title state and National licenses. a R T. can make over 120k a year
@@josephlabato8446 But you could be good with your hands or take courses at your own pace. Lots of jobs that require hands on work, HVAC, carpentry, plumbing, electrical, landscaping you can start ur own landscaping/ cutting grass business. Can search on RU-vid how to start a business, building credit etc Call center jobs are good too
Hey! just wanted to add a bit of context about the anesthesia resident. Tl:DR (Longer Explanation Below) He makes 68K now cause he’s still in training, post training they can make 250k plus based on years of experience and which state they live in. Longer explanation: Residency training is when you pick a specialty after medical school and train for like 3-5 years. Yes residents make like 50-70k during these years and have a grind of a life. But it’s only during residency. After he finishes his anesthesia residency and becomes an attending he makes an attending physician’s salary, which in his field can be like 250k-400k depending on state, years of experience etc.
@@thebriz1868 this is so true! Apologies for not adding that in. Also possibly more with undergrad loans. It’s a lot of debt but with the correct plan can be paid off reasonably fast. I just wanted to clarify because the 70K thing didn’t paint the whole picture for those who were hearing it for the first time. Like why go to med school to only make 70K if it’s like 7-10 years of schooling
@@robinjacob374 for sure. It’s interesting when you compare it to U.K. new Doctors. For the two years after medical school, when you’re a qualified doctor, you do 2 years of what is called foundation training. Doctors for those 2 years earn the equivalent of $35k. But… you graduate with the equivalent of around $65k in student loans. After those first 2 years you earn around $55k - $60k for the next 3 - 4 years. Then it can reach $100k+ fairly quickly. Doctors after 8 years can reach senior doctor level, which we call Consultants, and earn $110k plus another 50% or so with private work. So you can pay the debt off a lot faster. And the student loan interest rate is only around 3% to 4%
@@thebriz1868 thank you for this breakdown! I’m acc a US pre med and have only known our system. It’s actually amazing to hear how it works in other countries. One thing I do love about the Europe/India/Australian med schools is that you can enter in at 18 as opposed to us you have to do an undergrad. There are ways around it for sure but traditionally you spend 4 years of undergrad so 4 years of debt. Interesting to see how our systems differ!
I'm not sure I'd feel comfortable telling a complete stranger on the street how much I make. But then, I work for the state and anyone who knows where to find it can find every public employee's salary on the internet so...
That’s a bad comparison. Let’s just assume he’s around 30. By then, he would have had 8 years experience in the industry. That is more than enough to command salaries of over 200k. And if he had the drive and work ethic of a doctor, he could easily work at a top tech company as a senior software engineer and make 250k-300k+ with good WLB and benefits.
Lol that’s actually false. I’m an er doctor and they bring the patients to me to save. They follow protocols. I became an EMT after a few months of school before I went to medical school. Took me nearly 10 years to become a doctor and doctors have to make complex medical decisions.. we don’t just follow protocols
Anesthesia is the type of specialty where you can work 40~50 hours and make 400k after residency lol. As a partner you work 60 hours and make 700~1M Plus gas residency is far from being stressful. It's 95% boredom, 5% terror. Most of the time you are just on the phone after intubation
This is why people don't like christians. This is why I would rather say I believe in Christ than say I am a Christian. You don't know my relationship with God,you don't know the anointing of the Holy Spirit that I have and the testimonies I carry with me. You need to repent from judging others least you be judged and Jesus denies you in His last coming.
- finish high school - finish college (with certain courses completed, like bio, chem, orgo, etc.) - take the entrance exam (MCAT) - interview at medical schools - finish medical school - apply to residency (in med school)
If you do Tech come to NOVA, more data centers than you can count. And that one guy is definitely a kitchen worker in the hospital. He’s no x-Ray tech and definitely not making $50k. I promise you that. All you thinking I’m hating say what you want, you’re blind if you don’t see it.