lungs, periodontal, callus
Crossing guard, police officer, street, sewer, water line, electrical pole, bridge, garbage man, sidewalks, snow removal trucks, street cleaner people, street cleaning vehicles, water system technicians, pump stations, sewage treatment plants, hydro electric installations, power cables, nuclear energy facility, nuclear energy technician, power technician, fireman, firetruck, highway, tollbooth, ambulance, emergency medical technician, nurses, doctors, hospitals, clinics, hospital and clinic support staff, teachers, schools, public domain ground keepers...
All infrastructure. I do not work in an infrastructure capacity. I wonder if there is a benefit to doing so. Curiously enough, two out of three of my most prolific replying blogmates work in infrastructure. Tell me, is there a benefit?
2 comments:
Dunno. Easy to tell what one does. "I paint the lines on the streets." Pretty clear cut, observable.
Yes, significantly easier than saying: I implement, upgrade and support a large software package for retail companies that use either unix or windows servers and use either oracle or MS SQL databases.
So indeed, a benefit has been found.
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