Yeah, those of my two brothers who were artillerymen are now a developer co-owner of a company that creates software solutions for some major Danish clients, and the other recently started teaching "Supply Chain Management" at a business school after several years in the private sector working logistics management. Another brother who avoided conscription due to a lucky draw (literally), is a mechanical engineer at Siemens. There's also a former bricklayer brother (had to retire due to a nasty fall that damaged his knee) now lighting technician for TV and movie productions. And I recall a niece of mine is a lab tech at Novo Nordisk (major pharma company).Hastur wrote:I sense mathematical skills in your family. Same with mine. Oldest brother went to coastal artillery, middle brother forward observer for army art and I was picked for the signal core after acing the morse test.BjornP wrote:Well, I sort of did, sort of didn't choose it, remember? You have no choice when it comes to serving, but you are allowed a choice when it comes to picking which branch of the military you want to go to. Two of my brothers had been artilleryman before that, so that factored into the equation, too. One made a career of it, but moved over to the telegraph troops. The year I was a conscript at the then "King's Artillery Regiment", it had the lowest number of volunteers in several years, there weren't many who were really enthustiatic about being artilleryman.
But still, alot could get pretty enthusiastic about things that made loud boom noises.. As we say here, simple minds, simple pleasures.
And then there's me...who's not particularly mathematically gifted, but I worked in historical archives finding out things for amateur historians, genealogists, journalists and occasional surly public servants who can't look up property histories for themselves. Knowing how to find something by finding out another and knowing where to look to for that one piece of data that lets you find out another piece of data, which lets you finally answer the question the citizen wants answered about the past... that may not be mathematical, but there's a rational method behind the searching for answers.
..or a certain someone carried out that test back in olden times?ssu wrote:Morse test to pick troops to the signal core? Must have been an old test still carried on.
Though I guess, given Smitty's response to what I was taught back in '02, it could be that some militaries are just a tiny bit outdated.