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by petercooper
4864 days ago
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It's not the only way but a PhD will certainly open a lot more doors at the "high end" research end of things. That said, even Microsoft Research will hire "Research Software Development Engineers" who work with researchers to implement cutting edge stuff as well as migrate it into regular Microsoft products, and only a bachelor's is required: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/jobs/fulltime/technical.... .. these sort of roles can blossom into more challenging and more research oriented work over long periods of time. This is a rather crude generalization, but PhDs are often demanded at high end research positions not to prove you know your stuff, but to guarantee you have the mettle to do research and bounce back from failure after failure.. a must if you're working on someone else's dime. Of course, if you can find another way to support yourself, you can do (almost) any research you like in your own time without strings attached ;-) |
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