
No One Else Like You

No One Else Like You
Ink – Written by Hand (#INKdoc)

My ATH-M50 #athm50 #m50 #ath #mod #headphones #bokeh
After listening to the latest episode on This American Life, I cant stop hearing this music.
1) A gentleman never tells about conquests, private matters, or dealings. His business is nobody else’s.
2) A gentleman doesn’t clash in public with enemies or exes, or worse, with out-of-fashion contrasts, colors or styles.
3) A gentleman is always happy to serve, whether it’s opening the door, picking up the bill, or merely calling a cab the next morning. Ask him for help and he cannot refuse.
4) A gentleman never reacts to rudeness. He pretends he doesn’t recognize it and moves on like it never happened, because it never should have.
5) A gentleman is always on target with witty remarks, interesting facts, and conversation starters that bring the best out of everyone.
6) A gentleman asks non-invasive questions to keep a conversation going and attention focused on others. He makes them feel like the most interesting person he’s ever met, whether that’s true or not.
When is One Ready to Settle Down?

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Making industry connections on LinkedIn helped Vignesh Viswanath impress the bosses of motorsport engineering firm KW Special Projects.

Vinny spent six months looking for a job before he joined KWSP.
A much talked-about shortage of engineers doesn’t guarantee you’ll walk straight out of university into a graduate job. And if you’re trying to break into a competitive industry like motorsport, finding a suitable role can be a particular struggle.
Six months after he’d finished his master’s in motorsport engineering at Oxford Brookes University, Vignesh Viswanath was considering going back to India. Even with work experience placements at an automotive manufacturer and a research institution on his CV, he was battling just to get a job interview.
‘I was doing retail jobs just to pay the bills,’ he says. ‘It’s very demotivating and a grind. Every day you apply for jobs and most of the time you don’t even hear back.’
Vinny knew he couldn’t just focus on the big F1 teams so he began writing to as many firms in the industry supply chain as he could, looking at companies supporting the other ranks of motorsport. His breakthrough came while using LinkedIn to look for potential employers when he came across co-founder of KW Motorsport, Kieron Salter.
Vinny began applying to firms that worked outside of F1 – such as KW Motorsport which has over a decade’s experience of Le Mans endurance racing.
The veteran engineer accepted an invitation to connect on the social network and Vinny wrote a letter offering his skills. Shortly after, sister company KW Special Projects advertised a graduate role and Vinny wrote again, this time being rewarded with a job offer.
Today, he is an automation and controls engineer for the company, which specialises in adapting motorsport innovations for other industries, from aerospace to pharmaceuticals.
As a small company, KWSP has given Vinny the chance to play an important role in a variety of projects. His first tasks were designing the casing and developing software for a medical printer. Three years later his current position is as project engineer for a wind tunnel technology targeted at the professional sports industry.
‘Doing different projects in different fields means we have to take on other things and adapt,’ he says. ‘That’s part of why I like working here. It’s very varied and not everyday is the same. You don’t just finish a project and go back and do the same thing again. The whole thing is different.
Vinny’s first role with KWSP was in CAD. Today he’s a project engineer.

‘If I’m on a project I’ll be creating specifications, talking to our design engineers, writing documentation or doing research into how to solve the problem in a more efficient way. If it’s not so busy I can be training, learning new skills depending on what projects we have in the pipeline.’
His experience of job hunting means Vinny has a clear message for engineering students. ‘You need to be persistent and not give up. Starting your job search early while you’re in uni helps quite a lot – it doesn’t matter if you don’t have your final grade.
‘Getting real work and hands-on experience is very helpful. A placement year gives you a good feel of what the day-to-day job is like not just the glamour of the industry. In motorsport it’s great to be working with the race team and travelling to all sorts of places but the other side of it is coping with jet lag and coming to work the next day.’

Great quote #Kingsman #hemingway

Nets-ready #cricket #season #backtoform