A list of puns related to "Drafter"
Leatherwood. At. 17. No defensive help for Carr. They could have gotten Leatherwood at 30 ffs
Been struggling to find work, since I couldnt land an internship during covid. Was thinking about looking for drafting positions just to add experience. Its between that and continueing full time push out job applications.
Would this be beneficial for me to get a foot in the door? Or should I just hold off for a bit? Its only been a month or so of applying.
Tbh most of my experience is in the form of projects whether personal or school related.
Hey all!
I got up early today and streamed a Theros Quick Draft, and the recording is available on YouTube. At the beginning of the video I talk about the draft signals (commons and uncommons that help you identify the open colours and which colours the other "players" are not taking) and then do a draft and play through the matches.
In this draft we ended up with a sweet black/red aggressive deck with some minor sacrifice synergies.
If you are new to draft or new to Theros draft you might enjoy watching the video.
All the best in your matches!
https://preview.redd.it/6e4e7yk0ikx61.png?width=503&format=png&auto=webp&s=45b3b532fca7717b8fb0e77643946e55c903c401
Hey guys,
It's been nearly 4 months now from the day I started doing mold designs for a very small composites fabricator. They work mostly in aerospace, but also automotive, marine and medical.
I currently make $15/hr working just under full time hours. Most of my work involves surface modeling, which I taught myself and have no certification in. I'm familiar with most of the surfacing functions and some terminology, but I'm not experienced at it by any means. I actually quite enjoy the work and my boss says he's impressed by it. Also I work in middle GA and I'm 21 with about 3 years of SW experience between work, school, and personal projects.
I feel like I might be a bit underpaid, though I do enjoy the work a lot and the company wants to hire me as a full time engineer after I graduate soon. Therefore, it might be worth it to stick it out for a bit longer in hopes of a higher salary.
Is there a very high premium paid to surface modelers? Just curious what kind of pay I should expect given my area and experience.
Hey, I have made a deck drafter similar to hearthstone arena and magic the gathering draft for wargame as I thought it would be a fun new way to play the game. I think it would be cool to run a tournament around decks made from this. Join the discord if you are interested in playing.
Comment here or message me for any bugs.
Link to the site drafter https://wilkob.github.io/Wargame-deck-drafter/
The discord link https://discord.gg/CE2tZ4tsGV
Hello people of Reddit!
I am taking my chances here to hopefully find an employer and a job that could potentially help rescue me from the brink of wallet crisis. Below is a small paragraph regarding my character followed by previous work and freelance experiences:
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I am 26 [M] and is currently unemployed but offering my freelance service to anyone who needs it and has a decent pay. I graduated back in 2017 and became a jack of all trades when it comes to job experiences. I was a former Projects and Planning Coordinator; learned safety supervision and planning. On the afternoon I was an online teacher for ACADSOC, basically clocking in 12 hours a day of work. After a year I pursued my career and applied to a small firm where I designed a factory, university and a residential house (I can send a copy of my portfolio if interested). I resigned last year in May due to anxiety and depression following the pandemic. I was disinterested in everything and coped with unconscious depression during these trying times. Back in November 2020, I applied as a sales representative to bring back what I lost; which was the pursuit of happiness in work. This is because I used to work in 2014-2015 as a sales representative/call center agent in layman's terms whilst in college to buy a laptop and to complete my academic fees; I missed how fun it was and how that it enlightened me on working for a goal. Nevertheless when I resigned due to BPO politics, I continued my freelancing but since my family has no connection with any related fields of my career, I found myself on a predicament. I want to feel happy again, I do not care if the salary won't be astounding, as long as it is fun and makes me jump out of bed to prepare for work.
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Job Experiences:
I went to a technical institute that was a 1.5 years to get a degree in drafting. The program was hand drafting and then using CAD for the latter half. Learned how to work the program and learned sections, laying out drawings, figuring out dimensions, etc. But my experience after actually working a job has not been so pleasant.
I am not an architect or someone in construction. I have no knowledge of how something should be built or necessary pieces of equipment needed to connect piece A to piece B. That being said, I've had two jobs in the field so far and my lack of knowledge for those aspects seem to be a problem. Employers spout off architectural/construction jargon like I am supposed to know what is being said. It always leaves me asking 100 questions where my first employer even said he was getting frustrated with me not knowing how to do something. My boss even said to me the other day. "you know I cant be here everyday to help you, I'm not going to be in the office every day" So what am I supposed to do on those days? I can't waste 8 hours doing something wrong.
If you put everything on paper I can figure it out and translate that to a CAD drawing. But if you ask me to make a section of a house for example, I have a million questions. How thick is this wall, What is it insulated with? How thick is the insulation? what size is are the pieces of wood holding up the floor? The list goes on..
There just seems to be a big learning curve once you're actually in the field and i understand why an employer would be frustrated to a degree. Sometimes i just get anxious to essentially ask the same question over to reassure I'm doing something correct. I don't know I just think working as a drafter is not for me anymore. Not to mention it is extremely boring and mind numbing to look at damn lines all day lol.
Well I just needed to vent and rant here, but am i wrong? I feel like with my degree, yes i can use AutoCAD and have a basic understanding of things, but I don't have, what seems to be necessary, knowledge of architectural construction.
I swear, I've torn up about a 50 mocks while putting them together because it's so hard to find the right combination to put these QBs in.
It's mainly the DeShaun Watson rumors as not knowing where he's going to end up is maddening. Plus, it seems as though Justin Fields is no longer as highly valued as we all initially thought.
This is honestly, the hardest year to do a mock draft if you're an OCD "the fit has to make sense" freak like me.
For example when Ironfist drafts is it the same blue every time or is it royal blue, or navy blue?
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