Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

im going for a max oversize hi flow now after further thought and recomendations. in fact ive recieved so many recomendations and others thoughts that it just isnt worth talking about it for another 2 weeks. im getting MTQ to get a rb25 max hiflow stage 3 wheel. any experiences with MTQ here in adelaide.?
Didnt I just say i am going to ATS and bill there is hooking me up with a sweet GT30R kit?

Are u sure u know what your talking about :(

Uni are still teching Ada and Sun systems.

Uni for IT is really a waste of time unless you want to work in defense. A 4 or 5 year course garanties everything you learnt in the first year is out of date by the time you have finished. It has applications later on for pure research but not a lot of use in day to day IT

Try getting any sort of decent job without any formal qualifications...it aint happnin. Sure u can score a job doing some sort of "IT" job, but higher paying decent jobs with a window to advancement require the Uni background.

The "out of date" stuff is up to the individual to keep themselves informed about whats new, and coming soon. No job could offer that either...

Try getting any sort of decent job without any formal qualifications...it aint happnin. Sure u can score a job doing some sort of "IT" job, but higher paying decent jobs with a window to advancement require the Uni background.

The "out of date" stuff is up to the individual to keep themselves informed about whats new, and coming soon. No job could offer that either...

That’s why I said

For many people it’s more relevant and offers better employment and remuneration prospects to do the MSCE and CISCO units than a degree in ICT. (IMHO and many others)

Although a Uni degree in IT alone wont get you too far, but add a business management or similar degree and you have opened a whole lot of doors.

Guy,

There are quite a few opportunities for those graduating from Uni as I have been receiving for the last year ~35-40 I.T Graduate 'only' positions per month. Slack off and those jobs are out of reach as they require a credit average or better.

A lot are within the government but a fair share also from private.

Providing one pulls their weight the opportunitys are definitely there.

I think it stands for both tafe and uni..

You can't expect to get far without a piece of paper full stop.

The same goes for you can't expect to get far without experience full stop.

Combine the two with a little luck thrown in, and your bound to go places.

As with everything in life you only get out what you put in. >_<

+ Working within the government (where you need a piece of paper from Uni to get your foot in the door) has very nice perks.

Having a uni degree certainly won't hurt your chances of landing a job, or improving your abilities as an IT professional. I say if you get the chance to take up a CIS/IT degree then go for it. Even so, having said that, some of my colleagues do not have formal IT qualifications and similarly my manager only has an environmental science degree yet he's regarded as one of australia's leading developers in e-health. My predecessor from a long while back at my current position went on to found Internode - and i believe he had just engineering qualifications and was a sys admin for our department.

So i'd say most importantly If you have strong desire to learn and continually keep up to date with industry trends, you can get to where you want to be eventually.

Yes. :) Depends where you want to work. Help desk/sales (with the possibility of being stuck there) and slowly work your way up or make leaps and bounds by entering the workforce via graduate offers.

All the GPA really indicates is motivation.

Its difficult not to get good/reasonable grades at Uni UNLESS your just slack. Allthough it may be a different story within Engineering. I.T it comes down to motivation. :)

I find that when work is too easy I cannot do it. I get bored to easily. At school anyway... You need new shit to keep it challenging and interesting in IT... if you want examples I can give you about 1000000 of them.

With engineering you actually have to try to get good grades. Some of the subjects are pretty easy, eg programming and the computer ones I didn't even study for or go to lectures and got distinctions. Maths, Chemistry and Electronics I studied all damn year and only got credits.

I find that when work is too easy I cannot do it. I get bored to easily. At school anyway... You need new shit to keep it challenging and interesting in IT... if you want examples I can give you about 1000000 of them.

I'm definitely not saying the work is easy I'm saying if you turn up to the lectures/tutes/workshops and do the home work and assignments required its almost impossible not to get a good grade.

Slack off and not turn up to lectures/tutes/workshops and try to get by doing just the assignments etc and most of the topics are difficult resulting in poor grades. ;)

Allthough providing you don't have issues getting your head around programming you don't really need to go to lectures etc. I've got distinctions by only doing assignments and an exams in the programming topics. :(

I didnt pass my SACE well, im too slack to go to tafe although im doing it this year and im lacking the motivation of the challenge. what do you suggest without giving me a lecture? Is SAIBT a way to go to further my studies, I'm lining up an online MCSE course I thought that woudl be a good idea?\

Yes i do work as an IT administrator only because of my abilities. not qualifications but i want the big money so i want to seek further study once more. i think im ready for it lol.

Edited by Pauly33GTS-t

Just giving the gamers a heads up.

Reloaded II - Combined Event

27/01/2007

1:00PM - 8:00AM

Where: Valhalla

St Clairs Recreation Centre, Woodville, South Australia

Capacity: 500

Entry Cost:

? $20 per person

? Group discount - 5 tickets for $80

Tickets will be available from December 1

Comp Details can be found @ Reloaded

Just thought id show off by saying im posting this while im using a Ubuntu live cd...

This looks better to me than upgrading to Vista fer my needs....

*waits tilll dx10 comes then does the inevitable jump fanboi ship

I think im gunna have to dual boot Ubuntu from now on. I need to format my pc now me thinks anyways, so might be the right time...

Ill run Xp for games only, and run everything i need through this GUI. That is untill i need to use something that only needs Xp again dammit...

Do i have to reformat to FAT32 instead of NTFS when i go for this dual boot idea???

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Actually, that's not entirely true. It's also the same motor in the 1st gen Nissan Cube but they're rare as hen's teeth.  
    • Yeah it is always worth testing and balancing actuators out of the box, just set the pressure regulator on a compressor very low (eg 5 psi) and increase it slowly to see when they both move.....unfortunately while you may be able to adjust the length of the actuator rod to minimise any difference, the actual pressure they move from is not adjustable so you need a well matched pair. And yes, the VCAM is probably contributing; the earlier in the rev range they come on boost and the slower the revs build (I think your demo was in 5th), the more you notice it.  Driving at WOT through 1st, 2nd, 3rd etc you will probably never hear it as any shuffling starts and is over super quickly
    • oh they were with that motor, you need to remove the engine to change the spark plugs (don't have to, but it does make it easier)
    • I certainly fall into the annoyed camp, but glad to hear that if it's happening at low boost then I'm not likely going to blow a turbo and end up with metal shards in my oil. Just feels like it prevents me from really driving it without hesitation and "peak" performance. Wonder if it's the VCAM, it did an impressive job of shifting the torque curve and faster spool, but maybe now it's "too fast" and there's too much air for how open the throttle is.  Based on some other threads, will also do some reading on synchronizing the actuators. They are the default actuators that come on the Garrett's and I would think they would be set the same coming from the factory, but if the turbos don't actually work exactly the same way at the same time as previously mentioned, it would be worth making sure the actuators are actuating together properly
    • I went down this rabbit hole before, ended up sourcing a motor from the UK (I'm in Japan) which also didn't function correctly. With the original motor, I disassembled it and reassembled it and it works somewhat, sometimes. What I could deduce from all my screwing around is that there is calibration of the gears on the inside of the motor and two ramps on the main gear which activate switches that operate the motor and move the sunroof either to retract into the roof or tilt. Where I got stuck was that, it seemed in my case that one or both of the switches that are activated by the ramp on the gear did not always activate and thus the motor did not move, causing it to sometimes not retract or tilt (apologies, I've forgotten which way it didn't work.).  Of course this part is discontinued at Nissan now, it's the same part in the S15 but no other models. I also contacted the manufacturer of the component for schematics - forgot the name, they're based in Gifu - but they declined to share the information due to being bound by an NDA, sadly. Looking through my pictures now, it seems I last had a crack at this in 2022. See, I so kindly wrote "open" and "close" next to the switches. If you figure it out, please do tell me. Those little switches, with the red buttons may need to be replaced.
×
×
  • Create New...