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On Sun, 29 Jun 2025 19:29:51 GMT, cyclintom <cyclintom@yahoo.com>Retired Drs are under no obligation - even an ethical one - to stay current.
wrote:
On Mon Jun 23 15:27:36 2025 Shadow wrote:On Mon, 23 Jun 2025 16:59:57 GMT, cyclintom <cyclintom@yahoo.com>>
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I am being offered and almost continuous string of jobs with salaries starting near $180,000/year growing to a quarter of a million.
Me too. Hope you didn't pay the US$10.000 they "need" to
examine your (practically empty) curriculum.
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MD's are expected to stay updated their entire lives and be ready to practice at any moment the need arises.
Even less so for EEs. If that were in fact the case, why are you so woefully misinformed regarding even fundamental concepts? (answer: you aren't and never were a bonafide engineer, and never made any effort to familiarize yourself with standard product development practices). When I retire I'll be glad to never have to attend another standards update seminar again.And yet you seem very surprised that an electronics engineer would be the same.
It doesn't? We have several Brazilian immigrants in my company who have no problems conversing in english. I have regular regulatory meetings with our Brazilian sale rep. and the INMETRO reviewer assigned to our company. It's rare that we ever have any translation issues - usually just related to colloquialisms.I often see you use medical terms but not very well, though I usually interpret that as a language problem. Portuguese does not directly cross translate to English.
--Though since most modern medicine comes from the US one would expect you to be familiar with the terminology.I am. I just avoid using it in front of patients. Rule in
medicine is NEVER talk in technical terms to a patient.
[]'s
PS Most modern medicine does NOT come from the US. Both China
and the EU produce more research data. Stuff from the US is usually
biased, and sponsored by Big Pharma.
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