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Spikes32 posted:Cost of living, lovely lovely lovely infrastructure (including freeways), not as nice of weather compared to southern california (might be specific to me), tech Bros everywhere, a lack of forward planning by the state/city resulting in a huge class divide (see infrastructure) and general snobbery by everyone there for different reasons. if it makes u feel better, I live in SJ nearby the proposed new googleplex site and my rent went down $400/mo (my rent is still hella $). you're right in that public transit blows and you need a car to go everywhere. the best restaurants are in random rear end strip malls (even michelin starred ones). the tech bros can be annoying but nobody is going out of their way to being obnoxious anymore than in other cities.
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# ? Mar 26, 2021 15:03 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 19:37 |
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Spikes32 posted:... glp experience ... I'm assuming a PhD counts as negative experience?
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# ? Mar 26, 2021 15:57 |
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Spikes32 posted:Cost of living, lovely lovely lovely infrastructure (including freeways), not as nice of weather compared to southern california (might be specific to me), tech Bros everywhere, a lack of forward planning by the state/city resulting in a huge class divide (see infrastructure) and general snobbery by everyone there for different reasons.
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# ? Mar 26, 2021 16:16 |
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Greatest Living Man posted:I'm assuming a PhD counts as negative experience? Depends on what part of pharma you're getting into. Pure R&D it's a net positive. If you've got any kind of regulated lab experience spin that as much as you can. My experience is all on the production /regulated side of things though so I have less insight into the research side of things where things are fast and loose.
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# ? Mar 26, 2021 16:24 |
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Dik Hz posted:I 100% agree with this sentiment. You couldn't pay me enough to live there. This and the burritos have rice in them, what the gently caress
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# ? Mar 26, 2021 17:22 |
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Spikes32 posted:Cost of living, lovely lovely lovely infrastructure (including freeways), not as nice of weather compared to southern california (might be specific to me), tech Bros everywhere, a lack of forward planning by the state/city resulting in a huge class divide (see infrastructure) and general snobbery by everyone there for different reasons. Sounds like Boston with better weather and higher rent.
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 04:08 |
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Yeah that’s why I turned down Gingko
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 05:31 |
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street doc posted:Sounds like Boston with better weather and higher rent. Idk so far Boston’s public transportation seems pretty awesome
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 15:03 |
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Shrieking Muppet posted:Idk so far Boston’s public transportation seems pretty awesome Lol oh my sweet summer child
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 15:15 |
Shrieking Muppet posted:Idk so far Boston’s public transportation seems pretty awesome please dont troll
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 16:21 |
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Shrieking Muppet posted:Idk so far Boston’s public transportation seems pretty awesome I’m sharing this one with the Boston thread.
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# ? Mar 29, 2021 22:19 |
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Shrieking Muppet posted:Idk so far Boston’s public transportation seems pretty awesome Lots of articles, every year since 2014 posted:Runners Narrowly Win Race Against Boston Trolley Yeah, I know it's not quite a fair comparison, but it's a fun story.
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# ? Mar 30, 2021 00:52 |
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street doc fucked around with this message at 14:25 on May 18, 2021 |
# ? Mar 30, 2021 04:36 |
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Johnny Truant posted:Lol oh my sweet summer child Am I in for a treat when life returns to normal? Edit: Also better or worse than NYC?
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# ? Mar 30, 2021 20:28 |
Shrieking Muppet posted:Am I in for a treat when life returns to normal? vastly worse
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# ? Mar 30, 2021 20:35 |
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Come post with us in the Boston thread. I moved away like 5 years ago but I'm actually still posting from the T, waiting to leave.
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# ? Mar 30, 2021 20:39 |
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RadioPassive posted:Come post with us in the Boston thread. I moved away like 5 years ago but I'm actually still posting from the T, waiting to leave. Charlie??
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# ? Mar 30, 2021 20:42 |
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mllaneza posted:If you end up landing in the Bay Area, look into Genentech, we could use more goons. And working here does not suck. We've got something like 800 PathLIMS users, and anyone who wants to write their own ticket for lab automation should be looking in our direction. The new head of research and early development is big on computational biology, so R and Python are both in demand. I always heard weird things about how Genentech was structured compared to other companies (generally not in a positive light). Then again I have never worked there and I only hear stuff from people that left which might introduce some bias. I recall when my smallish company shut down in 2007 they brought in the entire company for a mass interview. Small startups have been entertaining for the last while as long as you land a good one, just do whatever you want to do. Very hit or miss though, it will either be great or terrible with nothing inbetween Edit: Just saw the post was from almost a month ago, guess I have not looked at BFC for a while. Pain of Mind fucked around with this message at 05:35 on Apr 23, 2021 |
# ? Apr 23, 2021 03:41 |
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Pain of Mind posted:I always heard weird things about how Genentech was structured compared to other companies (generally not in a positive light). Then again I have never worked there and I only hear stuff from people that left which might introduce some bias. I recall when I my smallish company shut down in 2007 they brought in the entire company for a mass interview. It probably depends heavily on your department and whether Roche has oversight of you or not, but I can definitely say that Genentech is the best place I've ever worked. Every job sucks compared to whatever else we'd enjoy doing with our time otherwise of course, but I would legit call this a good job.
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# ? Apr 23, 2021 04:50 |
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Sundae posted:It probably depends heavily on your department and whether Roche has oversight of you or not, but I can definitely say that Genentech is the best place I've ever worked. Every job sucks compared to whatever else we'd enjoy doing with our time otherwise of course, but I would legit call this a good job. A lot of places will have managers ask you where you want to be in five years. Genentech is a unicorn in that they follow that up with helping you develop a plan to get there within the larger organization, develop the skills you want to learn, and position yourself as someone a manager from another division might come and poach to their team. We have HR systems built to facilitate this. If I remember correctly, yesterday's all-hands department meeting had 2 15 year, and a 20 year anniversary announced. I've seen 2 or 3 30s in the last 18 months. When I first started it was kind of creepy. Everyone was super nice., like "is this a cult ?" nice. After about 6 months I realized that Recruiting was aggressively screening toxic people out at the interview stage. It's working, corporate culture is, by and large, the healthiest I've ever even heard of. We also spend money on basic science. people work on new techniques. People work on old diseases. We've done studies recently on such old favorites as cholera. Imagine ending cholera's reign as a top killer. We do.
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# ? Apr 23, 2021 05:53 |
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mllaneza posted:If I remember correctly, yesterday's all-hands department meeting had 2 15 year, and a 20 year anniversary announced. I've seen 2 or 3 30s in the last 18 months. This part isn't something my group has (I mean, apart from the fact that we're a brand-new group and all new hires in the last 6 years). About 70% of my group is made of contractors on 3-yr terms that I'm not usually allowed to renew. (HR says "you can renew critical contractors for one term" but then when you try, they say "if they were critical, they wouldn't be a contractor.) It's a constant source of conflict between me and my upper management, because I can't run an efficient manufacturing operation when I have to replace the operators every time they finally reach full proficiency in the operations.
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# ? Apr 23, 2021 07:09 |
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Sundae posted:This part isn't something my group has (I mean, apart from the fact that we're a brand-new group and all new hires in the last 6 years). About 70% of my group is made of contractors on 3-yr terms that I'm not usually allowed to renew. (HR says "you can renew critical contractors for one term" but then when you try, they say "if they were critical, they wouldn't be a contractor.) It's a constant source of conflict between me and my upper management, because I can't run an efficient manufacturing operation when I have to replace the operators every time they finally reach full proficiency in the operations. Good point. Contractors are very much second-class citizens in many ways. The shipping & receiving folks for example are on an 18-month turnover contract. Which should explain a lot. The state labor board just wants someone who looks, acts, and quacks like an employee to have someone paying payroll tax for them. In IT we have an MSP under contract for all of hardware lifecycle for desktops and laptops: initial deployment, repair, and retirement. They've got a lot of people with years of experience because the individuals in that org are FTEs of the MSP, so term limits do not apply. There's an opportunity here to organize a worker's coop that will employ the manufacturing contractors and deal with GNE collectively to get around your issues with HR. You'd get to keep your experienced people. The contractors would become FTEs of their org. Gnenetech might even save money over 1099 rates or whatever the umbrella contracting agency charges.
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# ? Apr 23, 2021 07:51 |
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Thanks for all the great replies to me about method development earlier. As you can guess I’m considering my next move and I am far from having it all figured out. My dream job would be having a lot of autonomy and ownership of work I can be proud of. My work history is: 8 years analytical chemistry (QC actually), then 0.5 new product development, now 2 in process development. Considering these roles, I think only the product development was really conducive to both autonomy and ownership. When you think of those 2 things, do any other chemistry roles come to mind? A dream job for me might be in reach with my current experience, or it may require more years somewhere as a stepping stone. Ideally a stepping stone that partly fulfills my goal anyway! Either way, I would love advice to help focus my search. teardrop fucked around with this message at 04:09 on May 8, 2021 |
# ? May 8, 2021 03:49 |
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Highschool teaching lab, so it might not qualify for the thread, but amusing story: My lab doesn't have a disposal policy. And every attempt I make to draw one up gets rejected. It's in a country that doesn't really care about this sort of thing, despite laws being on the books. At first I kept lab waste in a set of appropriately divided/categorised containers, and I was worrying about when said containers would become more of a risk than inappropriate disposal... ...until I came back after a long weekend to find the containers emptied, (apparently) cleaned and stacked. Supposedly the cleaning staff had just dumped the contents down the sink, no word on what safety gear they had but it couldn't have been much. And sure, it's only highschool teaching, but there's plenty of deeply questionable waste being produced regardless. Anyway, I am now in situation where carefully dumping waste down the sink with consideration of timing and combinations is literally my least-unsafe disposal option. I never imagined this would be possible. Delightful.
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# ? May 14, 2021 09:39 |
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Atopian posted:It's in a country that doesn't really care about this sort of thing, despite laws being on the books. Sounds like my country, the United States When I first delivered waste to the hazardous waste facility here, I was prepped to be good. MSDSs, labeled containers. They had me fill out paperwork, ok great. I wrote chemical names. He said oh you're not supposed to write there. He crossed them out and put "lab chemicals." On another trip they labeled them "flammable solvents" which was half the cost per pound of "lab chemicals" I've watched them decant jugs into drums with nothing but a smock and goggles, and they've asked us to change our waste stream for smell purposes. This lead me down a "should we collect in drums ourselves?" path, and lamenting their ultimate fate https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2016/11/the-toxic-waste-drum-is-everywhere/508418/
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# ? May 14, 2021 19:36 |
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I was trying to figure out methods for an experiment and did a literature dive. Turns out a couple months ago a lab in Canada was doing something similar, and their methods section includes full 3d printer diagrams for their machine AND all the code they used in to control it with an arduino, so I should be able to basically just download their entire experimental apparatus and use it for our experiment. Thanks, Canadians. You just saved me a ton of work.
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# ? May 21, 2021 21:17 |
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I keep getting these scam mails. I am assuming I am not the only one getting these. Anyone knows what the setup is? Example below: Hello, I came across one of your published papers. My company is looking to buy a used Waters Triple Quadrupole Mass Spectrometer and I noticed that you were referring to a similar model in your research, so I thought maybe you would consider selling your old instrument. In particular, we are looking to buy a Waters Xevo TQ-S or TQ-D models. Please let me know if your lab is planning to retire anything. We will be happy to make an offer. Thanks!
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# ? May 22, 2021 20:03 |
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Never gotten one of those before, do you get tons of them for different equipmwnt?
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# ? May 22, 2021 20:23 |
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Could just be desperate people trying to get equipment. Supply chain issues may mean the manufacturer isn't able to produce them at the moment? Probably just a scam but if you actually worked with that instrument and have published on it maybe it's legit?
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# ? May 22, 2021 20:29 |
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Mr Newsman posted:Could just be desperate people trying to get equipment. Supply chain issues may mean the manufacturer isn't able to produce them at the moment? I have gotten the same literal email only differing in the equipment wanted. It have so far only been one case of me actually having worked with that specific equipment. Which was an äkta Fplc and which I know you can get on EBay and which is common on surplus markets. It is also discontinued since like 5 years.
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# ? May 22, 2021 20:52 |
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My guess is spear phishing for IP.
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# ? May 22, 2021 21:39 |
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Maybe they want to sell them on eBay and are hoping to find people who will let them go cheap?
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# ? May 23, 2021 06:16 |
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Obvious answer: Opening a lab to make spice for the street market and need some QC equipment
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# ? May 23, 2021 12:29 |
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What I find weird is that all of the equipment are regularly available on auctions, especially in the US. Mustached Demon posted:My guess is spear phishing for IP. As in email? Good luck with that since we run google suites.
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# ? May 23, 2021 13:56 |
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Cardiac posted:What I find weird is that all of the equipment are regularly available on auctions, especially in the US. I was thinking less for access and more about what you use the instruments for. Any little bit of information they can snag off to build a better picture. To be fair, my works hyper-paranoid and encourages us to view everything external under that lense if we're not in a role that works with external groups.
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# ? May 24, 2021 00:07 |
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Our manufacturing team.... Had a media fill last week which involves finishing the vials with clean and compressed air instead of nitrogen. But forgot to switch back to nitrogen after it was done. And filled product for two days before realizing on the 3rd day they were pumping air into the vials when it should have been sterile, anaerobic nitrogen. What. How. Yes the batch record didn't include instructions for them to switch back at the end of the media fill and yes it will soon.
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# ? May 24, 2021 15:20 |
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Probably already known to those for whom it's directly relevant, but FDA has released new clinical trial covariance guidance.
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# ? May 24, 2021 17:31 |
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Mustached Demon posted:I was thinking less for access and more about what you use the instruments for. Any little bit of information they can snag off to build a better picture. Since I work at a cro, they would/should get a better picture from our website. I am just waiting for them to ask for one of our sorvall ultracentrifuges. Currently we are up to 5 of them in different conditions spanning a time period of 30 years. Don’t ask about ss-34 rotors.
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# ? May 24, 2021 17:41 |
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Speaking of FDA, I’m new at a pharma company, and asked our analytical lab for an ICP-MS method for our process. They come back with results and it just says <LOQ for all 50 elements... because they’ve set LOQ at 50% of the upper specification limit, or about 1000x higher than the capability of the instrument. Even better, someone gave them old specs that were too high so it missed our entire range. I ask how they monitor trends with methods that only report “<LOQ” and they say that’s just how pharma does it, check USP 233. Sure enough, that seems to say ICP-MS methods should only be validated from 50-150% of the upper spec limit. Best case scenario missing fully half of the range that’s in spec. Is this for real? How is there any process control like that, it basically turns a high sensitivity analytical method into a pass/fail stamp
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# ? May 28, 2021 04:09 |
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# ? May 26, 2024 19:37 |
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Usp is your guidepost/ minimum. Companies are free to validate beyond that. I'll let you guess how many do. In a well run/funded/staffed company the analytical dept would have recognized that there was oodles of data below that initial loq and done the extra work for trending purposes. If your product though is very well known or simple to make, gathering that data might not have been a priority.
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# ? May 28, 2021 04:22 |