• @[email protected]
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    254 months ago

    Honestly, nobody should call themselves an engineer unless they literally drive trains for a living.

    • @Kissaki
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      234 months ago

      Driving a train is engineering?

        • @Kissaki
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          244 months ago

          I see, TIL. That’s different from Germany, where Ingenieur is a protected term.

          • @[email protected]
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            134 months ago

            In the railway context an engineer was the person who worked the engine.

            In German the word comes from Latin roughly meaning inventor. Presumably the general usage of the word engineer in English has the same etymology.

          • @[email protected]
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            154 months ago

            In the US, a conductor is the one who checks tickets, makes announcements, and delegates tasks to the crew to help ensure things keep moving on time.

            The locomotive engineer is the one who is “driving” the train. They run the engine and communicate with dispatch and traffic control to keep them informed where this particular train is fitting into the overall juggling act,. They also make every effort to keep things safe (watching for signals, obstructions, etc.).

            I’m not 100% sure if the terminology is different outside of the Us.

            (Source: My father is a 3rd generation locomotive engineer.)

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      Infrastructure erasure in the states is so bad that people who build it for a living aren’t even considered anymore.

      • @[email protected]
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        14 months ago

        Yes, driving trains is becoming more and more important as we find out how terrible cars are for the environment. We should protect the profession fiercely!