Security and Systems Analyst for the second largest retailer in the U.S. overseeing a building that is 1.5 million square feet big. My position is actually an extension of HQ so i have to be fairly mobile.
+JuggerNaut+ wrote:Security and Systems Analyst for the second largest retailer in the U.S. overseeing a building that is 1.5 million square feet big. My position is actually an extension of HQ so i have to be fairly mobile.
+JuggerNaut+ wrote:Security and Systems Analyst for the second largest retailer in the U.S. overseeing a building that is 1.5 million square feet big. My position is actually an extension of HQ so i have to be fairly mobile.
So that's why you got so mad about security issues when I told you I hadn't updated my work laptop with SP2 (until I told you I didn't use it on the network - just for grades..)
What retailer? Or would you rather keep that to yourself (I understand completely...)
saturn wrote:MD and soon to be resident for anesthesiology in the Rotterdam Academic Hospital
Can you explain all the steps it takes to become a doctor? I don't understand the stuff with the residents and real doctors and stuff.
"Many people think that becoming a doctor is difficult. Others have some sense that becoming a physician takes many years and is expensive. Most people realize that being a physician is difficult yet rewarding. All these people are correct. Becoming a physician is a long, arduous, expensive process that can only be accomplished with great dedication."
That's how it works in the States. I've met a Canadian MD on vacation and she told me that it's slightly different in Canada, but I'm not sure about the details anymore since I was slightly inebriated.
In the Netherlands you'll have to complete 4 years in university and get your doctorate (or MSc Science), then you proceed to clinical practice in numerous teaching hospitals during your 2 year internship. After that you're an MD and will have to get a residency if you want to specialize in something you'll really want. Mostly that's another 6 years. And then I've not counted the 1-2 years you mostly work as non-resident to get more experience.
Maiden wrote:
saturn wrote:MD and soon to be resident for anesthesiology in the Rotterdam Academic Hospital
get those student loans paid off, we'll do business
+JuggerNaut+ wrote:Security and Systems Analyst for the second largest retailer in the U.S. overseeing a building that is 1.5 million square feet big. My position is actually an extension of HQ so i have to be fairly mobile.
So that's why you got so mad about security issues when I told you I hadn't updated my work laptop with SP2 (until I told you I didn't use it on the network - just for grades..)
What retailer? Or would you rather keep that to yourself (I understand completely...)