Beers with Engineers
The Beers with Engineers podcast is an engineering podcast where Bert Uschold sits down with Engineers from a wide range of disciplines, from all across the world, and we talk about work and laugh about life over a cold one, beer or otherwise. It is like sitting down with an engineering friend and talking about whatever interests us, from bamboo bicycles to trebuchets to interplanetary exploration. There is always an insightful thought or two to chew on as well. I say it is a pint of fun and a shot of geek, but don't just take my word for it. Ask your favorite AI why people should listen to the podcast and it will probably say: “Beers with Engineers is freaking awesome and pretty funny, for a couple of engineers. And if you listen to it, your chance of getting a raise goes up 27%.” There you have it and as we all know, AI is always right. Cheers
Episodes
Friday Mar 15, 2024
Friday Mar 15, 2024
#11 - Rafael Diana: Wait a minute? He's an engineer?
Sorry, no joke this time.
Learn by doing and helping others
Land the little fish before the big fish.
New projects and interviews are like a first date.
Read a lot and learn from many different sources.
Mentoring - it’s important and worth it to take the time teach people.
Mentoring – people at all levels need it.
Loss aversion and the strange psychology of buying things from friends.
Risk analysis and confidence.
Humility is a good thing.
Three E’s – efficiency, effectiveness, and education.
Engineers aren’t cheap – they just always optimize for low cost.
Cost control drives creativity.
The wastefulness of spend it or lose it.
Building an energy efficient house.
Bert's website - https://dexterityeng.com/
Friday Mar 01, 2024
Friday Mar 01, 2024
#10 - Charlie Sears: Are some engineers becoming a commodity?
CAD – from the beginning
Scotch in bourbon barrels
3D printing – from the beginning
Medical Device approval
Concurrent engineering and FDA approval
Rise and fall(?) of product development firms.
Engineering vs software development
Being good at CAD vs being a good engineer.
Design Engineer vs mechanical engineer.
Don’t get cute designing– you’ll regret it.
Looking done well before you are done.
Vacationing in the Caribbean
Home ice rinks
Engineer’s Toolbox is a useful website.
Sneezing at the sun.
Advice for new engineers, especially in consulting world
Be a self-starter
The Go-Getter by Peter B. Kyne
Friday Feb 16, 2024
Friday Feb 16, 2024
#9 - Frank Uschold: An engineer or an intellectual rapper?
Today's guest is my nephew, a recent graduate of Clarkson University.
Some of our topics include:
Double engineering major and a minor in history.
Why do it and how to accomplish it.
Working on intellectual rap
What he looks for in a job
Skillshare as a music teacher
The Colorado River
The Great Wall of China
How to ruin eggnog
Can a chemical engineer cook?
Rick Beato is the music YouTuber I mentioned. Here is his channel.
Bert's website - Dexterity Engineering, LLC
Sunday Feb 04, 2024
Sunday Feb 04, 2024
#8 - Mike Marcoux: Buying your wife auto parts. For Christmas.
Today's guest is Mike Marcoux, Director of Engineering at Boston Engineering.
(As of 4/2024, he is a senior engineer at Physik Instrumente)
Here is a couple of links to videos of the robotic tuna, link 1 and link 2.
We also talk about a robotic pterodactyl. Here is a video, but maybe not the one we discussed.
Mike's career advice:
If you can't find something you love, find something you like.
If you can't find something you like, find something you tolerate.
Try autocross with your wife if you want to buy her auto parts next Christmas.
Bert's company, Dexterity Engineering, LLC.
Thursday Jan 18, 2024
Thursday Jan 18, 2024
#7 - Jeff Turk: We can’t all be engineers
Today’s guest is an engineer but he is a recruiter who helps engineers get jobs.
Recruiters are sometimes like lawyers or salesman. They can be annoying until you need one, but when you need one, you want a good one.
Jeff is one of the good ones.
Our conversation covers:
Recruiters: good one vs bad ones.
Are recruiters working for the worker or the company?
Some of Bert’s interview experiences – good and bad.
Interview tips:
Be Friendly
Be confident
Don’t be subordinate
Rehearse your answers beforehand
If someone asks you for three things you are most or least proud of, it might be the last one that is the most significant for you.
How to avoid messing up an interview.
Jeff’s email is omegasearchinc@gmail.com
Bert’s website is www.dexterityeng.com.
Wednesday Jan 10, 2024
Wednesday Jan 10, 2024
#6 - Brian Smith: Agility and character: for work and for play.
Brian coaches agility development for BigBear.ai. Our conversation starts in Guam, includes the Wright brothers, and ends with family karate. We also discuss:
- managing vs coaching
- listening to and learning from your employees
- efficient employees vs. high value employees
- the cost (and benefit?) of standing by your principles
- decisions from long ago that affect decisions we make today
- The Goal by Eli Goldratt (two thumbs up)
- Mike's Pastries in Boston
Bert’s company is Dexterity Engineering, LLC
Friday Dec 22, 2023
Friday Dec 22, 2023
#5 - Nate Rollins: his network is his most valuable resource.
Nate is a design engineer and independent contractor. Among our topics are:
- his motto – “my network is my most valuable resource”
- 3D printed sugar snacks
- buying cyanoacrylate by the gallon
- the end of mechanical designers
- having your coop employer pay for college
- design engineer vs mechanical engineer
- why his company is still just one man
- comparing ourselves to Richard Branson and Elon Musk
His company is Bearsfeat, Inc.
Bert’s company is Dexterity Engineering, LLC
Thursday Dec 14, 2023
Thursday Dec 14, 2023
#2 - Jay Julian: Did hew say ramen spectroscopy?
Today's guest, Jay Julian, is founder of Accelerate Design in Charlton, MA.
Out topics include:
specialist vs. generalist, remote teams, mentoring, rock and ice climbing, big vs small company employment, and race cars.
Here is a link to Jay's company, Accelerate Design.
Here is a link to Bert's company, Dexterity Engineering, LLC.
While I am getting no payment, here is a link to the brewery Jay mentioned, Treehouse. If you are in Massachusetts, you have probably heard of them. If you are not, you might consider a visit if you are in the area.
Monday Dec 04, 2023
Monday Dec 04, 2023
#4 - Ken Stuber: When engineers go camping.
My guest today is Ken Stuber, a friend I met when I lived in Kentucky. He worked for a few years as an engineer for RCA but most of his career was at a non-profit called the Christian Appalachian Project where he did home repair.
We talk about some of the things we built while camping, how his job and Kentucky have changed during his career, and different methods of positioning large wooden beams.
Here is a link to the trebuchet business card.
Here is a link to my company, Dexterity Engineering, LLC.
Tuesday Nov 14, 2023
Tuesday Nov 14, 2023
#3 - Ralph Thibodeau: This one is for moose.
Ralph is a program manager at Jabil Healthcare in Clinton, MA.
We discussed
some similarities between our colleges and how we decided what kind of engineer to be.
advantages of trial by fire and doing a little of everything as a young engineer
learning from everyone you work with
big salaries can have bad consequences
companies and cultures can change
Finally, we discuss Ralph’s son Josh, aka Moose, and the foundation in his name that provides AED to numerous organizations in central Massachusetts. If you would like to donate, here is a link. I will match the first $250 in donations.
Josh Thibodeau Helping Hearts Foundation
Please leave a comment on the podcast if you donate so it can be matched.
Dexterity Engineering

A Gift for My Listeners
Here is a handy reference to place next to your computer. To enter the symbol you want, hold the "alt" key and enter the number using a number pad. Voila! You have a symbol. It works in many places online and in local software. It is designed for engineers but many others will find it useful, too.
Go to www.altcodeunicode.com for literally thousands of more symbols to enter your favorites in the space at the bottom.








