I'm not interested in platforms or systems that can only be used from company terminals.
Even if you acquire technology that restricts the company's terminal, it will not be accumulated as your own technical ability, and in addition
"boring"
-----
The technologies that are
used, modified, and developed at my own discretion, without being tied to a company or organization
enjoyable with playing freely, ignoring the business model, profitability, and market size,
make me have motivations.
-----
I can't do anything with my company's cloud server because of the company's strict security constraints. So, I purchase a domain name on my own, pay AWS a monthly fee on my own, and study at home on weekends.
Raspberry Pi is purchased on its own, built by itself, and operated at home.
For a control LAN technologies such as EtherCAT, I picked up the device at a junk shop and moved it, wrote the series columns.
The GPS module was also purchased by myself in Akihabara.
My self-sufficient, self-taught, weekend-based study is used in the company's business (R&D).
This is a "public / private confusion"
However, this public / private confusion is a strange one in which intellectual property flows from "me" to "public".
-----
That's why I'm not interested in , "someone gives me a operation of of the best supercomputers in Japan."
Anyway, it will be extinguished within 10 years anyway, and it cannot be used to calculate my column's target.
That's why I'm burning much more with the technology of "making the computing speed and drawing speed of a home PC 100 times faster".