Fresh physics graduate from top 10 uni

>fresh physics graduate from top 10 uni
>know how to code a bit in python
>ideal optimal working hours 18:00 - 02:00 (night time)

what kind of jobs are best suited for me? i'm not morning person at all so ideally i'm looking for a night job that utilizes my physics and coding skills
salary is secondary to me. so all i want is a job which is offers max comfiness and low stress

>inb4 kneepads
wtf thats high stress desu

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Literally no marketable skills.

>le i know python
you and everyone else faggot

congrats your McSkill

haha nice useless degree you got there buddy

>I wanna be a programmer XD

you and literally every other fucking person today. you're better off trying to get some normie healthcare cert or studying to be a CPA. programming is super fucking saturated.

if your job can be done with a computer, it can be done from India for 10% of the cost

>Literally no marketable skills.
>haha nice useless degree you got there buddy
>you and everyone else faggot

what do you mean? i'm not looking for a high paying wagecuck job with prestige. all i want is a job which is 10/10 in comfiness.

300k starting make money from fuck prostitute

i never said i want a programmer job. ofcourse i know programming is saturated with pajeets. but i know how to code scripts on the fly and solve physics problems, that no pajeet can do.

"A bit" of python yields not much of a perspective, mixed with physics your are only a bit better off than the average graduate of your field.

Also "low stress" jobs with "max comfiness" are rare to find, even if you are satisfied with low wage - it is not very likely for you to get them, considering you are a fresh graduate.

One option would be to improve your python, go on working a couple of years normally and then go freelancing, with which you can alternate in between beeing a neet living off what you make during months of working. However, this is quite hard and only possible, if you are actually good at this and at least a bit social.

Also forget it to only work during the night or alone - even as a freelancer, you need to meet with customers while you are on a project.

>that no pajeet can do.
But almost every average math/physics graduate.

Hell, even I am able to use a bit of several laguages & utilize VBA/TSQL/Python every now and then while working in finance.

You need to look out to get additional education to actually utilize coding to the maximum extend.

ok i guess max comfiness is out of the question

what are some jobs that are at least 50% comfy?

>You need to look out to get additional education to actually utilize coding to the maximum extend.

What kind of education? masters or boot camp? its now January so I've missed out on a lot of masters programmes

>what are some jobs that are at least 50% comfy?

Depends on what you want, no one can answer that.
Working only 30h per week would be very comfy for me, for most on /biz working for 20h seems to be a nightmare. If it is not the amount of time but the actual hour, then look for a job that matches your biorythm more.

>What kind of education?
Stuff where you can combine both your coding skills and knowledge about math or physics. Maybe go into databases and specialize in data mining?

You however need to improve your pyhton considerably, because especially in your field, being able to code is more often found than e.g. among business graduates.

>Maybe go into databases and specialize in data mining?

interesting
i know a bit of SQL desu
what kind of job titles should I be looking for in this area?

>You however need to improve your pyhton considerably, because especially in your field, being able to code is more often found than e.g. among business graduates.

yeah my python is good in the sense I just have mastered the basics. I don't even do web dev or crypto stuff

Gas station employee

sir, as you can see we can do it better and cheaper than you, sir.
>what are some jobs that are at least 50% comfy?
stick to the kneepads,sir

bump

Try night trading Japanese futures for a prop trading firm. But you will probably get shitty pay for the first few months of training.

>what kind of job titles should I be looking for in this area?
More technical jobs in Business intelligence would be an option.

These jobs however do need quite a bit of teamwork, so forget working alone or during the night.

Should have took Math.

>More technical jobs in Business intelligence would be an option.

Thanks but would you be able to be a bit more specific? Business Intelligence gets memed as data science these days and entry requirements are doing coding AND statistics tests.

Programming jobs are still the only jobs with a 1:1 graduate to job ratio left. Everything else is heavily skewed towards employers.

Nah, math is still cucked if you're aren't in the top percentile. Besides quants or actuaries there are no good jobs for math. Compsci / Software engineering. And then Statistics as an add on is great.

If you want a job job now, you should go to job fairs and ask around, before my physics PhD I got a job offer at some comfy laser company that I didn't take because I wanted to go to grad school. If you want to up your future pay/employability should should apply for one of these data science incubators. You'll probably be accepted with a physics degree from a top school. From there the sky's the limit: Google, Facebook, IBM etc.

You have a good set of tools to get a job now, and a great foundation for the really good jobs.

I cannot get any more specific, simply because it is a enormous area of possible jobs. While one BI-specialist could work on implementing SAP in companies and crunches on inconsistent master data in Excel for months while sitting in meeting rooms half the time, another one with the same job title could very well do regression analyses with R for years in a small room with no contact to other people at all.
Others might be more in the business analytics area, not dealing with any technical tasks at all - while still being called BI-specialists.

Also, it depends on the company and industry you actually work in. In a smaller company (1k+ employees), you would need to do many tasks yourself, as there are usually not many BI-specialists. In a big company, you are more likely to specialize in one field.