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?

  • sbv@sh.itjust.works
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    17 hours ago

    Twenty years ago, I briefly worked for a research group doing genomics stuff. The researchers couldn’t code worth shit, so they had a hard time analyzing results in a reasonable amount of time. It was easy to be a hero.

    I suspect new researchers would be way better coders (I assume AI may help too).

    The pay was shit.

    • phdepressed@sh.itjust.works
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      11 hours ago

      Nope, most researchers are still poor coders. Coding is a skill that takes time to learn if you even have someone who can check your shit (very rare). “Vibe coding”/using AI for research analytics is probably done and it is also probably shit.

      Pay is still shit.