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Life After DoC Nick Dingle 15 November 2013

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My timeline • 1996-99: BA in War Studies • 2000-04: MSc and PhD at DoC • 2004-07: Analyst at Dstl • 2007-10: Post-doc at DoC • 2010-13: Post-doc at School of Maths, University of Manchester • Currently: HPC Software Developer at NAG

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Am I the only one? (Royal Society, The Scientific Century: Securing Our Future Prosperity, p. 14)

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Dstl: Working outside academia • Dstl provides “sensitive and specialist science and technology services for the Ministry of Defence (MOD) and wider government” • Sites across the UK; I worked in Portsmouth • Unique work environment

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Acronyms (http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/2005-08-22/)

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Dstl: Working outside academia • Skills I brought with me from DoC: – Communicating ideas (written and verbal) – Time management – Problem-solving • Skills I developed at Dstl: – Project management – People management – Working with a mix of technical and non-technical team members

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(http://itrappedinwords.wordpress.com/2013/02/08/peter-pans-famous-quotes-5/)

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DoC again: Returning to academia • Worked as a post-doc with my PhD supervisor (Will Knottenbelt) in the AESOP group • Definite benefits to working in an environment where you’re already “known”

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Manchester: A second post-doc • Change of department (to Maths) as well as university – broadening my horizons • Work was directly related to what I did in my PhD (asynchronous solution of large sparse systems of equations) • But did it mean starting from scratch again?

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Numerical Algorithms Group (NAG) • Provides high quality numerical computing software (e.g. the NAG Library) and high performance computing (HPC) services • Sells software and services but is a not-for- profit organisation with close ties to academia

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Numerical Algorithms Group (NAG) • I am an HPC Software Developer • Support users of HECToR (UK national supercomputer) in porting, debugging and tuning their code • Opportunity to put in to practice the range of technical and non-technical skills I’ve developed in my career so far

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"Life is What Happens To You While You’re Busy Making Other Plans"

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The two-body problem (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Two-body_problem)

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The two-body problem (http://www.divched.org/blogentry/navigating-two-body-problem)

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Conclusions • PhD gives you extremely valuable skills beyond just the technical ones • Know what's important to you. Switch jobs if you aren't doing what you want to do • How does one decide what to do next?