Antarctica Needs a Network Engineer 226
littlekorea writes "It's a little underpaid, but network engineers with a fetish for very cold weather might be interested to know that the Australian Government's Antarctic Division is seeking network engineers to manage its telephony, satellite and radio comms in Antarctica. According to the job FAQ, summer temperatures aren't a lot colder than your average data centre. But winters of -30 degrees celsius (-22 Fahrenheit) might make the morning jog a little challenging."
One plus about the cold: (Score:5, Funny)
Re:One plus about the cold: (Score:4, Informative)
Re:One plus about the cold: (Score:5, Funny)
What else do you need? Clothing? Simply put on what you'll wear. It's not like changing clothes is mandatory, is it?
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1 cubic meter is pretty large, actually. It's 1000L of volume, and should be adequate for all but the largest cases (which will probably bust one of the dimensional limits. Of course, since it's mostly empty space, you could just bring the parts themselves and assemble it over ther
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I have to respond to this.
Did I say "tower" (by itself)? I said "rig". Unless you have direct HDMI or DVI access to your visual cortex, you'll need a monitor. If this is a decent gaming rig, it's not going to be small, even if it's thin (LCD), so that's several cc more.
And your keyboard, mouse, and software CDs? (or did you crack the game, you insidious polar pirate?)
No, it won't be a cubic meter. As long as you use no packing material. I'm sure the cargo ships carrying your less-than-cubic-meter of computi
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Extra job perk (Score:5, Interesting)
The ATMs there don't charge any fees [needcoffee.com]!
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ATMs in the UK don't charge fees (at least, they don't charge people with UK bank accounts) and the climate is much, much better.
Re:Extra job perk (Score:4, Funny)
the climate is much, much better.
That's debatable. I prefer my water in solid form it's less... well, ya know, wet.
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You don't have to shovel rain.
From "The Big Bang Theory" (Score:5, Funny)
"We need to talk to you about something
that happened at the North Pole."
"If this is about the night
the heat went out,
there's nothing to be
embarrassed about."
- "It's not about that."
- "We agreed to never speak of it again."
"So we slept together naked."
"It was only to keep our core body
temperatures from plummeting."
"He's speaking about it."
"For me, it was a bonding moment."
Personal Insulation (Score:4, Funny)
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That explains why they posted the job on /. ;)
Not really as everyone on slashie-dot are basement dwellers which can only survive at the static temperature of their subterranean habitat... Not to mention they would have to ask permission from their mommy and we all know what she would say...
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"Don't forget to put on your mittens"?
Seriously, is there any basement-dweller's mom that wouldn't help her son carry the luggage if he (finally!) decides to move out of there?
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You'll shoot your eye out?
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Actually from my extensive winter hiking experience staying warm when you are moving is easy, in fact not getting too hot is the problem. The problem with getting cold is only when you stop to camp. Breakfast time is the worst. You have to get out of that nice comfy sleeping bag at the coldest part of the day, put on your frozen outer clothes and fiddle with an ice cold stove with half frozen fingers or gloves on. Just keep moving and you'd be fine. :)
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The cold and wind in places like Antarctica are not quite the same as the cold and wind in any place you have been winter camping. I work at the northern equivalent, and it would take one hell of a sleeping bag to keep you warm out in the open over night. There is no good protection when the wind chill makes it -70+F out there (which is what it was here just last week).
It's also a really, really bad idea to go out anywhere by yourself, especially on foot. When the wind picks up and you get white-out cond
Don't need to move to be cold (Score:2)
I live in the middle of Europe and we had -30 C (-22 F) last night. Thank you, I'll pass. (Also, I'm not a network engineer.)
Re:Don't need to move to be cold (Score:4, Informative)
So, just to put it in perspective, the average winter is between -112 to -130 F. The coldest naturally occurring temperature on the face of the earth was recorded there, which was actually colder than dry ice.
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Did you really have to post that link so close to lunchtime, Shakrai? Now I'll never be able to get back to work.
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That is kind of freaky.
So what happens at that temperature? CO2 starts pooling as a liquid on the ground?
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There is not enough atomospheric pressure for it to turn into a liquid. It would go straight into a solid if it were cold enough. It would probably look like regular snow, which would make it a bit difficult to spot.
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There is not enough atomospheric pressure for it to turn into a liquid. It would go straight into a solid if it were cold enough. It would probably look like regular snow, which would make it a bit difficult to spot.
It worked! Now.. if we can only keep it from exploding!
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Tom...
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So what happens at that temperature? CO2 starts pooling as a liquid on the ground?
At atmospheric pressure, the transition from solid to gas, and vice versa, does not go via liquid. Have a look at the phase diagram [fsnet.co.uk] of carbon dioxide. So, no pools on the ground.
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Sources on google. /C
This is /. you need to site sources using Wikipedia and only Wikipedia...
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[citation needed]
Obligatory (Score:3, Funny)
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Where's my red stapler?
I assume you would have some difficulty burning this building down.
Balmy (Score:2)
Raytheon (Score:5, Interesting)
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Raytheon Polar Services is almost always hiring for positions at the US South Pole research facilities.
Yeah. Lots of testers for their pain boxes, wasn't it? :)
Re:Raytheon (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Raytheon (Score:4, Interesting)
Funny but true. My father was "tech support" for the Airforce in the 70s and 80s at Malmstrom AFB in Montana. He serviced remote nuclear silo's and early warning radar. It was cold enough that there was a chance you would die on the drive out if you had to service some of the equipment at night, and thats if you didn't get stuck in a 30ft snow drift. And yes, he did step in front of the radar to warm himself up.
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Did he say what it felt like?
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I hope he had gotten finished with the process of bringing you into the world before he irradiated himself :P
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no.
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I think it'd be pretty cool to be able to walk around the polar base doing work outside, in t-shirt and jeans while being warmed from a microwave device. That's called progress =)
If it's cool that just means you aren't doing it right. =]
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Something similar. Best place to find a US Army Scout in the winter is standing behind an Abrams tank. The Abrams has a turbine engine with a hot jet type blast of exhaust coming out the back of the tank. I've done it a few times but always wondered how dangerous the air really was.
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I applied to them for a 1 year posting at McMurdo once. I didn't have the electronics skills though. You have to be a bit of a jack-of-all-trades to work down there due to the lack of outside support, especially in the winter.
Seen the movie? (Score:2)
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She hates the idea.
Just thought you should know.
Re:Seen the movie? (Score:4, Interesting)
The idea of being trapped with Kate Beckinsale, for any length of time, while highly appealing, is immediately dashed when one realizes she smokes.
Yeah, yeah, blah, blah, smokers. Sorry, if I'm going to have any sense of enjoyment being in close proximity to someone like Kate, I don't want them or me to be horfing up a lung or smelling like shit all the time.
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Well she can't smoke if her mouth's full, can she? Eh? Eh? Geddit?
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While I like the idea of Kate Beckinsale being trapped there with me You say that now. Wait until Kurt Russell, Keith David and T.K. Carter burst into your room and, at gunpoint, orders you and Kate tied to chairs while they draw blood for a test...
I don't know what you're talking about. I'm liking it even more now.
thats one (Score:5, Funny)
cool job
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-30C? That's hot! (Score:5, Interesting)
/me looks at the thermometer outside my window. It shows -49C (I'm in Yakutsk).
Hm. I think, it might be a good idea to move somewhere where it's a bit warmer.
PS: and no, it's not a good idea to put a computer outside at this weather. HDDs freeze to death quickly.
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SSD ftw?
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SSD ftw?
For the Winter?
Re:-30C? That's hot! (Score:4, Funny)
SSD ftw?
For the Winter?
I just finished winterizing my SSD and let me tell you, it's surprisingly difficult to wrap chains around a hard drive and still have it fit in your case.
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What are you doing in Yakutsk? Live there? Work crew?
Got any pics of the area?
Re:-30C? That's hot! (Score:5, Funny)
What are you doing in Yakutsk?
Getting ready to attack Kamchatka... [rolls dice]
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I'm doing a short (I hope) IT consulting job :)
I have some pictures, but they are nothing unusual - just a northern city, I haven't yet have time to go outside skiing.
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Switch to SSDs.
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Switch to SSDs.
Good luck with that. Scientific data sets tend to be quite large...
Re:-30C? That's hot! (Score:4, Funny)
It was cold a few years ago when it was -45C but all that happened was they closed the elementary schools.
We had a similar situation in the UK recently. We had 5cm of snow and the whole country shut down for two days.
Re:-30C? That's hot! (Score:4, Funny)
To be fair, it was more like 10 cm, in some places...
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I'm on a corporate net now, speed is decent (about 1Mbit). Yakutsk has a fiber connection to a trans-Siberian backbone network, so quality is pretty good.
Though Internet is certainly not cheap here.
Demand for the position is high (Score:2)
Even if we weren't all in a recession right now, demand for positions in Antarctica is always surprisingly high.
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HR is pissed now (Score:5, Funny)
I was going to scold Slashdot for posting a job ad on the front page. Imagine all the crap resumes that'll wind up in the HR inbox now.
Then I realized I despise HR, especially those in the hiring/recruiting section.
I'm imagining some choice resume snippets from this crowd -
- I live in my moms basement and never leave, so I won't go stir crazy
- I've seen that John Carpenter movie about monsters in Antarctica like 9 times
- I could totally do a rad experiment where I overclock an old PDP-11 processor to 9ghz since its so cold
- UHF? VHF? Fah! I can replace that with a hacked WRT router running linux for like $5
- Penguin/Linux jokes galore
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Well thanks for precluding all possible conversations on the topic, Mr. Killjoy.
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Can we vote him off slashdot?
Cooling is actually problematic there. (Score:5, Informative)
They need extra large fans to cool their servers. The Amundsen-Scott station is alomst 3000m above sea level,
which means rather thin air - so they need a higher throughput to achieve the same cooling capacity than a
data center at more usal elevations.
The cold outside temperature means no real need for AC, but doesn't help too much in terms of cooling power:
The difference between 295K and 250K isn't that big and outweighed by the lower air density.
Am I crazy or... (Score:2)
Am I crazy or does that sound like the job of a lifetime?
Makes me wish I were an Aussie.
Given the exchange rate I'm thinking it would be a slight pay-cut, but I'd go in a heartbeat for the chance to do something ((presonally)) meaningful.
One question? Is there a really good supply of STRONG coffee and/or coca-cola available?
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One question? Is there a really good supply of STRONG coffee and/or coca-cola available?
You need something to deprive your body from water and sleep? How long do you plan to live anyway?
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According to my doc, my body already passed both, its warranty period and the MTBF by decades...
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The former, my friend, the former.
Penguins (Score:2)
brings a whole new meaning.... (Score:5, Funny)
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Alternatively... (Score:2)
Read "Big Dead Place" before going (Score:5, Informative)
It's not just that being on the ice leads to crazy behavior, it's that the management is back in the US and they treat the workers like dirt. While they have picnics back in Kansas City. The NSF, which pays for it all, is equally brain dead. Here are some some "uncomfortable questions" from the blog.
Having pointed this all out, it also sounds like fun in a weird way, if you enjoy hanging with funny disfunctional drunks in a potentially lethal environment.
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Why is the management of the Australian Government's Antarctic Division in the US?
The Big Dead Place (Score:2)
Have a look at http://www.bigdeadplace.com/ [bigdeadplace.com] for an afternoon's worth of good reading.
finally your chance to join the 300 club (Score:3, Interesting)
This is your chance to join the 300 club [theglobalguy.com]!
-l
/act now!
What if this was Mars? (Score:4, Insightful)
Does anyone really want to go to Antarctica? It is a cold, harsh environment that will isolate you from your family, friends, and civilized comforts. It had its novelty factor back in the day, just like Mars does now.
How is Mars / The moon more exciting/pleasant than Antarctica? Can we really expect people to want to populate the Moon or Mars without a large financial/spiritual/political motivation? Sure, there is the novelty factor of "OMG I'm on the moon!!!" but that can only last for a few years.
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Does anyone really want to go to Antarctica? It is a cold, harsh environment that will isolate you from your family, friends, and civilized comforts.
You're asking the wrong crowd. A number of slashdotters would be quite happy in isolation from family, friends, bars, pubs, or any social interaction.
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I think they mean the problem of getting from your bed to your computer when you forgot to close the window the night before (as I happened to do today). It costs QUITE a bit of effort to leave the cozy-toasty bed to drag your corpse to that chair, I tell you!
One Big Catch (Score:3, Informative)
Before anyone from the US gets too excited about going out on an exotic job:
Only Australian citizens, Australian residents with proof of eligibilty to work in Australia and New Zealand residents are eligble to apply.
Why you want this job (Score:2)
Did They Mention? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Did They Mention? (Score:4, Informative)
125 people, that's 62.5 couples. With 16,500 condoms, that's 264 condoms per couple per year. 264/365*7~= 3x per week. That's about right, maybe a little on the low side. Certainly not indicative of any captivity induced orgies.
My father has held this position. (Score:4, Interesting)
It's very hard to qualify for. My father served two winter tours for the Antarctic Division in exactly this role. He loved it to bits -- he's a bit of a hermit, so only having to deal with the same dozen people for months at a time was his idea of heaven.
However, a lot of people apply. A lot of them are very smart and qualified. My father has decades of experience radio, satellite, microwave, land line and LAN communications. You may need the same.
Next you need to pass the rigorous screening process. You need to be in good physical condition. Dad spent months sweating away in a gym to meet the weight, blood pressure and cardio requirements. You will be checked for a large number of medical conditions, and if any of them turn up, you will not be accepted.
Finally, there's the psych review. If you're going to be a winterer, you'll be living in isolated darkness for months with a small group of people with a pitiful satellite uplink to the internet (no youtube or games for you). Not everyone is suited to that.
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You shoot the helicopter ?
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And come home with the Thing? No thank you...
You wouldn't come home with it. It'd come home looking and acting just like you.
.
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Prolly means the jog dial on some devices and how it might not work in a frozen environment. Personally I could see this as a problem, I sure got used to the scroll wheel on my mouse.
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Kept up with that tthread when it was posted. Great reading.
You need to be an AU or NZ citizen (Score:3, Informative)
Aussies and Kiwis only :-\