Sorry if this isn’t the right place for this question but I couldn’t think of anywhere better to put it.

So I finished my degree in computer science a couple years ago right when the tech crash just started hitting, and the job market has been an enormous clusterfuck. Instead of trying to get a job where everyone seems to be going all-in on LLMs, machine learning, and crypto bullshit, I’d really like to be able to put my programming skills to good use helping out scientific research in some way, but I have no clue where to start. While in college I did help out my university’s biology research department by writing small programs here and there to help undergrad/grad students who weren’t very knowledgeable about technical solutions, but because of the recent funding cuts to scientific research and education, everyone there is struggling harder than I am.

Ideally I’d love to help contribute to causes that help improve people’s lives (or astronomy just because space is cool). Does anyone know of resources I could look into to start down this path?

  • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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    8 days ago

    if you want a guaranteed job, where you want… learn how to program the medical charting apps.

    EPIC is a major player and as someone who spent over 20 years in medicine IT, let me tell you a good EPIC programmer/developer is worth their weight in gold. They get a cushy roll and they all seem to have a good time. Bonus is they can’t afford to lose you once you have a grasp of their systems.

    • skvlp@feddit.nl
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      8 days ago

      Medical charting apps is a very good suggestion. EPIC is not a good suggestion - they’re not a good choice for their customers. Contribute to alternatives to EPIC instead.

    • PodPerson@lemmy.zip
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      7 days ago

      I work in IT in healthcare at an epic shop, and everyone I’ve ever talked to that has either worked at or knows someone who works at epic says it’s a meat grinder. They seem to like young staff that they can work long hours for several years, so may want to ask around to see if their work culture is for you.

      Also, if I was looking for rewarding programming work, an EMR would not be where I’d look for many reasons.