Hello, I am thinking of going into a career in Bioinformatics or into Forensic Computer work. This is been a bit of a shock as I currently work in a lab (micro) but recently I have had a rotor cuff shoulder injury and I have to potentially rethink my career in science.
I have a 2:1 in Biology (2012) and have undertaken placements in Molecular Biology and Genetics labs and some training in microscopy. I have completed training in immunology (ELISAs and Western Blotts) and furthered my Genetics and Biology training just earlier this year as I wanted to go into Genetics based work and this is my graduate entry job. This injury has really hit me hard and I have completed some bioinformatics work on my 3rd year project using phylogenetic tree software (which I learnt on my own) and have used APEx (during the training this year) and have used NCBI and BLAST but I haven't learnt other software (C++; Python; Java; Perl).
Please don't think I'm been daft or stupid this is potentially a serious injury as I have been off work for the last month and doing physiotherapy and I want to still use my Biology degree because its what I loved and this is potentially what has been given to me and is not what I planned for. Is Bioinformatics likely to be a good career option if I do a good MSc or MRes? I'm trying to rethink my potential career options and I would really appreciate the advice and help and if I do is it likely to be a good career in the future? I am willing to learn all coding and work but need the help. Thank you (sorry for the long post need the help).
What online training could I do as I need to do training and want to work and get experience?
Perhaps some additional options if you want to stay in (biological) science: science journalism, scientific editor at a journal, science communication,...
The good thing about programming is that there are countless online resources. I think you should start getting into one programming language (Python would be a good start) a bit and see if you like it - because if not, you might not want to do bioinformatics. Also some linux/unix skills are usually necessary. So if you want to get into it, I think start with these too topics, linux and python. And after spending some serious time with it I guess you can better judge if this is something for you. Just google, as I said, there are countless tutorials and there is no need at the beginning to include 'bioinformatics' in your search, first you have to learn the basics.
However, as Wouter said, there are A LOT of opportunities with your background that do not involve lab work. So it does not have to be bioinformatics! Keep that in mind and don't get discouraged!