Typical one-size-fit-all judgement, bigotry, similar to making a statement like 'All VW cars are polluting'!
> This isn't a UK PhD, at least it's not up to the standard of any rational UK PhD I've ever seen.
How do you judge without reading the thesis?, there is no thesis in the article.
> No one can do a part-time PhD; it's just so much work
You can't generalise, not everyone is the same, some people have the capacity and capability to put all in. There are part-time PhDs and there are many people who completed part-time PhDs whilst working full-time. Oxford University and many others top institutions offer part-time PhDs, it's possible and doable
https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/graduate/courses/part-time-a...
> PhD with basically no research with one publication
Publications usually take a while to get through the review process, many be there are many in the pipeline, how do you know?
> Looking at his thesis and publication he's done none of the above.
There is no thesis in the article!, it's very hard to judge without reading the thesis.
I would guesstimate that 75%+ of the "value" of my PhD came from casually interacting with smart people (classmates, postdocs, profs) working on related topics.
These same people go to conferences, but they are busy there--they have talks to see, posters to visit, and friends/collaborators/funders to catch up with. In contrast, when you're "around", it's possible to muse and mull things over with the grad student waiting for her turn in the darkroom or the postdoc brewing coffee. "Hey, did you see this paper?" or "How do we know that <X>, anyway?"
I'd worry that a part-time student would miss out on a lot of these opportunities; by definition, they're around only part-time and most of that time is "business time."
> This isn't a UK PhD, at least it's not up to the standard of any rational UK PhD I've ever seen.
How do you judge without reading the thesis?, there is no thesis in the article.
> No one can do a part-time PhD; it's just so much work
You can't generalise, not everyone is the same, some people have the capacity and capability to put all in. There are part-time PhDs and there are many people who completed part-time PhDs whilst working full-time. Oxford University and many others top institutions offer part-time PhDs, it's possible and doable https://www.ox.ac.uk/admissions/graduate/courses/part-time-a...
> PhD with basically no research with one publication Publications usually take a while to get through the review process, many be there are many in the pipeline, how do you know?
> Looking at his thesis and publication he's done none of the above.
There is no thesis in the article!, it's very hard to judge without reading the thesis.
> A US PhD is like a UK PhD plus a postdoc No comment, I'm quite sure this debate has taken place in many forums https://www.quora.com/How-do-you-compare-pursuing-a-PhD-in-E...
And of course if you have to attend classes, it will be difficult doing it part-time.
> Being around them will make you much smarter and more capable in ways that are intangible but obvious in retrospect.
As part time you can still meet those smart people at the university or by attending conferences.