Or is it just a term made up to find an easier reason to reject job applicants?


So it looks like the consensus is “overqualified” is a euphemism for

  • “I’m afraid you’ll leave this job because I’m assuming you’ll have better chances elsewhere” aka “you won’t accept being my slave forever due to lack of opportunities”
  • “I’m afraid you might actually understand how shitty it is here and want to improve things. can’t have that”
  • “I don’t want to figure out how much to pay you when you know your worth”
  • “You cost too much”
  • “I have other reasons, but won’t say them”
      • bizarroland@fedia.io
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        4 months ago

        Technically , a server isn’t a PC.

        PC means “Personal Computer” and servers are not personal computers they are group computers.

            • neidu2@feddit.nl
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              4 months ago

              Handling geophysical data. Very demanding in terms of processing, network and storage, so they’re built accordingly.

                • neidu2@feddit.nl
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                  4 months ago

                  I only remember the rough outline:
                  Dual Xeon gold of some sort. The CPUs were upgraded in 2021, so whatever was reasonably top shelf around that time would be a good bet.
                  256GB RAM
                  Intel X710 Dual SFP+ 10gig net
                  Mellanox ConnectX (5, I think, not sure) 100gig net
                  Some high end NVIDIA card. I don’t remember which, but it replaced a Quadro P5000.
                  Broadcom 3108 with cache battery
                  36x Exos 10TB 3.5" SAS drives
                  2x SSD of some type I do not remember
                  2x NVMe, don’t remember those either.
                  Supermicro X11 mainboard.
                  Supermicro 5U chassis with drive bays in both back and front

                  Some bits were upgraded, such as network, cpu, ram, and GPU. It’d be substantially less today, but the original setup is from 2017, and I remember seeing an invoice of ~180.000 USD equivalent each. My house is 150.000 USD equivalent.

                  Each cluster involves four or six of these machines in a modified shipping container along with some other hardware, working as a mobile data cruncher.