More Fun at Work
First Published February 2006
ILLUSTRATION: DAVID GOLDIN (AFTER RUBE GOLDBERG)
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Rube Goldberg would have loved National Engineers
Week (19 to 25 February). The late Pulitzer PrizeĀ
winning cartoonist had an engineering degree from the
University of California, Berkeley, and in his cartoons
he managed to combine engineering smarts with artistic
inspiration. The most famous of his technology-taunting
cartoons are the ones featuring the "inventions" of his
character Professor Lucifer Gorgonzola Butts—hideously
complicated devices that do simple tasks in ridiculous
ways [see illustration, right].
Rube sure had some fun. And so do lots of other
engineers. Lots of chip designers, optical-switch
mavens, nanotech specialists, technology teachers, and
power-grid bigwigs all love what they do for a living.
But in choosing 10 technologists for our annual special
report, "Dream Jobs 2006," we looked for people who've
found unusual, off-the-beaten-path fun in the careers
they've created for themselves.
Take Jos Cocquyt, who builds and tests small spy
planes for a living. Or Manni Wong, who designs
electronic systems for Disney rides. Grant Imahara is
one of the stars of the Discovery Channel's
"Mythbusters" television program. And Martin Cooper
works with lasers and three-dimensional scanners to
restore priceless works of art.
In compiling this annual list of dream jobs we hope
to remind our readers and ourselves—and tell
up-and-coming generations—why people go into technology
in the first place. It's exciting. It's fun. And we also
want them to know that in technology it is still
possible to build a career to their own specs, not
someone else's.
Got a dream job or know someone who does? Write to us
at eedreamjobs@ieee.org.