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Former Dot-Com Workers Crowd Homeless Shelters

An anonymous submitter sent in this AP article - Former Dot-Com Workers Crowd Homeless Shelters. This article has inspired huge threads on two mailing lists I subscribe to, people coming out of the woodwork saying that they too were laid off/fired/quit many months ago and haven't been able to find jobs. Is the job market really that bad?

499 comments

  1. all by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    all your stuff are belong to the repo men

  2. Re:irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Geez, just look at yourself. You don't know anything about these people yet here you are psychoanalyzing them and calling them names. How would you know what they're going through? Or was this post just an excuse to brag about your tall dollars? I for one am truly impressed.

  3. Re:From what I've seen ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You have just described 9/10 of the people I work with

  4. Re:irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    Anyone who complains there are no jobs isn't either looking, not looking hard enough or being too picky about things. I feel no pity for them sorry.


    First of all, fuck you. No one asked for your pity. Second, nobody wants to be in a shelter except as an alternative to living in a cardboard box, you asshole.

    I've been looking for an IT support job in New York for five months, and I've had all of three interviews. I've even applied at Kinko's but was told I was overqualified -- not that I was asking for too much money, just that they figured I would bolt as soon as something better came along. (Like that isn't the case with everyone at Kinko's...) I wasn't eligible for unemployment since I had officially been an independent contractor before being let go. I've been doing whatever odd jobs I can get -- drywall, painting, stuffing envelopes, whatever, but it's not nearly enough to live on. So cram your double-family income up your fucking ass. And go finish school, because you sure can't write worth a damn.

  5. Re:always have a backup. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    I once told a former boss, "I"m here for the money, nothing more"

    And remember:

    "Job satisfaction is the same as stealing from the company."

    From a Dilbert cartoon, and too often believed by Mgmt. (i.e., they consider "fun" jobs to be worthy of less pay because "how dare an employee be happy?")

  6. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    I find it hard to believe someone that used to earn around 100k is now homeless.

    Don't you have any savings?

    Of course there are savings. Some. But - myself as an example at "just" $80K -the costs of living in the Silicon Valley area ate most of it. My own savings are disappearing rapidly into my landlord's continued demand for $1500/mo rent, my (used) car payment, phone, immense energy bills, and little things like trying to buy for one person at supermarkets where the "specials" nowdays are "Buy over 20 pounds of chicken or three dozen eggs and get 20 pounds/another 3 dozen free!" while the regular prices are upped a third to compensate.

    It doesn't matter how frugal you are if you don't have a job. If your outgo exceeds your income your upkeep will be your downfall, eventually.

    And what makes you think the economy is better elsewhere? That "4.2% unemployment rate" is a fiction resulting from ignoring many who don't have jobs (as in, if you are unemployed for too long it is assumed you aren't looking anymore, so you aren't counted).

    Sadly (for me), it seems even the fast food places I''ve attempted - yes - would rather hire someone just at the point of being able to do the job, than someone with more experience at anything at all. Not that one would be able to live on it without resulting to homeless shelters.

    And let's face it - once you've done that, you're going to be royally screwed getting another better paying job. No one is going to hire you if don't have a decent place to live on your resume, or "normal" phone and address. "Please tack your offer letter to the third cardboard box from the west end of the vacant lot at such-and-such an address" isn't going to cut it.

  7. Re:It is really that bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Screw you.... I was layed off and you know what I did THE NEXT DAY!!!?! I got a quick job at the Fred Meyer to make ends meet until I could get something more permanent in my field. I have no pitty and don't feel sorry for you. I was bummed but it didn't ruin my life. To many of these freaks probably lived beyond their means. Using their high salaries to get loans for cars and shit they don't need. While blowing their salaries on payments and DVD's. Quit sniveling and do something about it....

  8. Get your communication skills together! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I quit from my position as a UNIX Systems Admin (mostly GNU/Linux with Apache, and Solaris 7 running Oracle 8) back in December before the first round of layoffs happend at my .com (so I didn't get severance, doh!). I had previously had some HP-UX and DEC mainframe experience, but mostly the technologies I had recent and deep experience with were Macs and NT 3.51/4.0. I got a good job as a Systems Engineer back in March, and I'm learning alot, not bored, and making decent cash.

    Boy, am I glad I made the transition to pure *NIX! My best friend is an NT Admin attempting to make the transition to Linux Admin now, and he is having a terrible time both making the transition and getting a new job. He's sent out 50 resumes to companies and had very little feedback. Why? Yes, he's having to learn new tech and is encountering the low end of the learning curve, but the real reason he's having problems?

    1. Poor resume writing skills.
    2. He's being a "Job Beggar" (see What Color Is My Parachute? , an excellent book on finding a job and defining your carrer). Employers smell fear.
    His approach to job interviews is to let the employer to ask all of the questions, and not really show much interest in what the company is actually doing. When asked, "Do you know ?", he answers only, "Yes," with no followup of how he used it or what problem he solved with it. It's also that he just "mass-mails" his info, not tailoring it to the job he's applying for.

    He is a quick learner, but, stereotypes aside, communication skills are very important, and if you don't have very much of them, you need to lean on your friends that do, and do some practice interviews, do some research on companies, figure out what you want to do (not just that you need cash NOW). With research, your questions will show the company that you actually cared enough to take the time and effort to figure them out, and they'll appreciate that, unless they are totally brain-dead. With good language skills and a good brain that can absorb new tech skills like a sponge, you can overcome any current lack of skills in areas required, because employers are investing on you for not only what you can do for them now, but what you can do for them later, as well.

    P.S. I'm in the Bay Area.

  9. Re:It is really that bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    > I just wish they would get rid of some of the real middle-managers. They
    > will probably use the chance to get rid of effective managers who
    > give realistic dates and refuse to kiss ass.

    Heh, that's what happened at Telstra (Australia's Government telco. A monopoly, but a good one. Alas, now stolen from the people to prop up a couple of budgets.) about ten years ago. A Canadian dick-head (COUGH)Ziggy!!!(COUGH) came in and said "Hmmmm, this organization has too many chiefs" and promptly gave the job of thinning the ranks, you guessed it, to the chiefs. Every tech who wanted it was then given a redundancy(including, not exactly Golden, rather Brassy, Handshake). Several months later, they found the only techs they had left were the incompentents and the young ones who could not take the deal for financial reasons(Family to support, home loans, etc). Well, the old techs were hired back - as contractors, and at contractor rates.

    As it was put so eloquently in Bored of the Rings - KaChing!!!

    Our family's next-door-neighbour, who took the deal, now has a pool and an extra story on his house.....

  10. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    As the other guy said, the published unemployment figures in the US pretty much only count the people that are on unemployment insurance. This is a distorted number because it includes various tradespeople that get laid off seasonally, as well as people that say they are looking for a job but aren't really. It doesn't include the homeless, people on disability, people on welfare, people living off savings for a short time between jobs, people on early retirement, people working part-time that want a full time job, other forms of underemployment, etc etc.

    The actual unemployment rate in the US is probably well over 10% - far higher than your "ideal", and this is somewhat obvious if you ever visited a bad neighborhood, even during the boomtimes of 99-00

  11. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Saint John nice?! I think you have to travel around a bit more. It's a frigging dump with the papermill that stinks and the refinery that polutes all in the middle of this minute (70,000 population) city. Unemployment is rampant, the roads are so bad I nearly lost my exhaust pipe a few months back and iMagicTV is going down the tubes. So is NBTel in fact. Even though I'm employed right now I hate this place so much I'll begone the minute someone elswhere offers me a job. Even Fredericton would be an improvement...

  12. They bought $40K SUVs and $500K homes. Dumb. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    I find it hard to believe someone that used to earn around 100k is now homeless.

    They were complete frauds. They weren't really worth $100K. But the dotcom market was expanding so fast, that anyone who read "Java for Dummies" was hired with a huge salary to make lots of meaningless, slick powerpoint presentations.

    Now the shakeout is on. Those with real skills (strong C/C++ skills, network admining) will survive. The overpaid will experience severe withdrawal. Those who saved will settle and survive at a lower (more realistic) pay level for their skills. The ones who bought the $40K Ford Excursions and owing $3200/month for their half a million dollar home, and were so 31337 that they 0wn3d your asses, will be slammed hard into the ground of reality. For these idiots, I will not feel sorry.

    c'mmon, 4.2% unemployment is not that bad. In my country, unemployment is around 10%.

    "Employment figures" like this are meaningless unless "average pay" is stated right along side it. e.g., 10,000 cut defense industry jobs with high pay in the 80s are not "made up for" in the 90s by creating 100,000 jobs in the service industries. Percentage of people employed is only half of what matters.

  13. Re:Intern Market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    Also, I had three internship offers this year, so I don't see where all this "crappy job market" stuff is coming from.

    Congratulations, you're obviously in good shape. You're attending CMU, one of the best computer science schools in the country. You've interned for some of the most famous software companies in the world. You're obviously one of the brightest students out there, and your future is just as bright as you are.

    But one thing I don't understand about bright people: they never seem to realize how bright they are and the perks that come with their intelligence. You'd think that, being bright, they would be able to figure this out. Maybe you haven't taken stats 101 at university yet?

    Your personal experience in job market is just a piece of anecdotal evidence. It means nothing to the rest of the world. Not everyone has a CMU education, not everyone gets a job at Microsoft (only about 2% of people who apply to Microsoft actually get hired), and there are a lot of people out there who simply aren't as eligible as you are and aren't having the same success in the job market. That doesn't mean they don't exist, or that unemployment isn't a problem.

    Again, I congratulate you on the success you have achieved already. You no doubt have a highly productive career developing software ahead of you. But you aren't being productive when you argue ridiculous propositions like "I have a job, therefore the job market isn't a problem".

  14. Soft Skills no longer needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    Here in Seattle, my view on the situation is that if you have hard skills - solid C++ and/or Java programming skills or even good network admin skills with experience - then you can get a decent job. Unfortunately, for all those who were working at dot-coms doing customer service, order fullfillment, copyediting, etc. you are out of luck and have to look at customer service jobs at old industry firms - which come with low salaries and no-fun workplaces.

    I think people assume that dot-commers were techies - most weren't. I think a lot don't have well-defined skills and are generalists - which is hard to sell to employers these days.

    1. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2

      You mean someone whose biggest claim to fame is plagarism?

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    2. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by asheris · · Score: 1
      In the Minneapolis/St. Paul area, it IS pretty bad. Doesn't matter if you have "hard" or "soft" skills.

      I got laid off three months ago from a non-dotcom. I've been diligent about sending out the resumes, going to job fairs, making calls, checking the job boards every single day, working with about a dozen headhunters/consulting firms- and so far I've had one 2-week contract and a few interviews.

      Due to the way my former employer worked it, I'm not eligible for unemployment, and my savings are nearly shot. Had I known I'd still be looking three months later, I'd have gone for that part-time job at the coffee shop down the road just to slow the financial slide!

      (They were a good place to work, not a high-paying job; most of the people in the tech departments there were getting paid 30-80% below the local average for those positions. People worked there for the low wages because it was a big-name ad agency, and you got to work on amazing projects you couldn't find anywhere else.)

      The week before I "left" my old job, I was still getting 1-2 calls from headhunters each week, without my resume even being out. About the time I "left", those headhunters stopped getting positions to fill as the market started to take a nosedive.

      I'm damn good at what I do. There just aren't many openings here right now, and far too many people to fill each one. The place I used to work just laid off a dozen more people from my old department- so now I'm competing against even more people for the same few jobs.

      If you look at many of the job postings out there, you'll find many want the 5-in-one kind of person- someone who can set up their servers, do graphic design work and build the site, as well as handling the databases and the C++ programming and doing end-user support. I don't think there are many people like that out there; at least not if you want high-class work at _every_ step of the way.

      The other biggie right now is the "we're not hiring at the moment, just collecting resumes" in small print at the bottom of the ad.

      Yes, the market is bad. Even with almost 6 years of experience and solid skills (ie, not one of those "I've seen the catchphrase so I'm an expert" types) I'm having a hard time finding a new job.

      It's not just me, either. people I know who are top-notch dbas, those who can program in just about any language under the sun, some excellent QA people- they're all out here looking, too. With little or no luck.


      It IS bad out there.

    3. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by IronChef · · Score: 2

      I think a lot don't have well-defined skills and are generalists - which is hard to sell to employers these days.

      Man, you nailed it. That's it exactly. It doesn't pay to be a generalist. Not that I didn't accomplish things on the job. My resume isn't totally devoid of good things. But it all doesn't add up to 2 magic words like "JavaScript proficient."

      I should have been a programmer, what the hell was I thinking?

      I wish I had a time machine, I'd go back and tell my young self to be a coder, or get an MBA, or go into sales. Sales sucks but at least there are always jobs out there.

      My last job was actually in "sales engineering," which means I was the propellorhead who accompanied the tech-clueless sales guys on calls. "Yes Mr. Prospective Client, we can do that for $X,000, and here's my SE to tell you the details of how."

      You kind of have to sell your sould to be an SE -- I was helping to sell people on VIGNETTE, for god's sake -- but it paid well and it wasn't unpleasant work. Besides the whole sliminess thing. :)

    4. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by GuanoBoy · · Score: 1
      I think the specialists have a harder time finding work.

      I'm primarily an Oracle DBA, but I have enough skills in other areas (sysadmin, network admin) that I'm seeing a whole lot more opportunities than I would if I specialized in one thing.

      The biggest obstacle that I'm having right now - yes, I'm out of work - is bumping up against a slow market - hiring freezes, general layoffs, delayed projects - but, I'm able to look at a wide range of positions.

      Maybe the difference is that I have setup a unix box, installed a database instance, and touched a router all in the last several months and have spent a career avoiding management.

      I've also been an SE at an ISP. For the first year it was the best, most fun job I ever had, but I got tired of talking about things technical all day and wanted to get my hands dirty actually doing it.

      --
      WWW
    5. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by Meatlog · · Score: 2

      This is exactly on the mark. It was these "soft" jobs, such as those in marketing, sales, etc that were vastly overpayed. In addition, all these inflated titles and positions such as "Director of E-Commerce Applications and Business blah blah blah" when in reality they were a 22 year old, recent college graduate with no real experience. Face it, the economy got totally out of hand for a few years. It is SUPPOSED to be hard to get a job right out of college, it isn't normal to walk in to a 50K a year job. Everyone got a huge ego (myself included) when looking for a job a year ago when recruiters were knocking down your door and you felt like a rock star, everyone wanted to talk to you. Now you feel like Vanilla Ice.

    6. Re:Soft Skills no longer needed by geomcbay · · Score: 1
      This is true, but even if you do have 'hard' skills its often much harder to find a job now than it was previously simply because so many companies were hit by the downturn and have hiring freezes, cost cutting, etc.

      People with real skills still can find employment, but the actual job search has become relatively far more difficult, the options for employment (I mean, options for doing what you want to do, not stock options) are less, and the pay has generally turned downwards, even for highly skilled people.

      But in terms of the original article -- yes, it sounds like these people in homeless sheltered were the bandwagon-jumpers of the dot .com boom and not people really driven by technology.

  15. Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5
    Only the cookbook dotcomers are being laid off right now. You know the ones I mean. The ones when asked why they're reading a book on Java or HTML coding say "Oh, becasue I wanna buy an SUV" or "Cause I need to move to a better neighborhood." Give me a break.

    As the veteran hacker (12 years) at my company, I've been tossed too many of these techno-wannabees to train. They are clueless. They ask me why I don't rewrite the Perl form processor in Java. When I ask them why I should do that, they say "Because Java is better." That's it. No qualification beyond that. Geez.

    I call these people "buzzword employees". All they do is spew buzzwords to try and look 31337 and all they do is fuck everything up. It's like high tech Boomhauer CB lingo. "Yeah man, we gotta ODBC the IIS enterprise with the Sequel (SQL) Server and ramp up the TPS count and interface it all to the Excel Template for report generation for the CIO, I tell you whut."

    Yeah sure, you go whip up some powerpoint slides, while I ignore you and keep the system up running normally, just as it has been. I will not upgrade my system just to make it buzzword compliant.

    Well, not the shakeout is in full swing and these cookbook guys are the first to get the boot. Good riddance, I say. They were never really useful to begin with. Hope they got a Starbucks on skid row.

    1. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

      What city do you live in? I'm just curious if you're in one of those high-tech meccas which is probably flooded with other dotbombers. I believe here, in the midwest, the job market is looking just peachy. You're not going to be demanding $100k to start but you could easily get $50-$70k if you have enough experience and know what the fuck you are doing. That's enough to live rather well, buy a nice house in the suburbs, have two cars, raise some kids, etc. I love the standard of living in the midwest. Much cheaper than those high flying dotbomb neighborhoods in the east and west. :-) Gas is affordable, food is cheap, water is inexpensive, electricity is affordable (and our electric company doesn't shut the power off randomly.. we have plenty of power and they're building more). Come to the midwest and prosper. Raise a family. Live the American dream. The days of high school kids making $150k without a degree are over. It's time for people to wake up and move on to getting back to reality.

    2. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by The+Man · · Score: 1

      Funny, in my experience it's been the opposite. The people with real skills are the ones looking for work and the buzzword-compliance staff are still going strong.

    3. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Dankweed · · Score: 1

      Oh jesus! That has to be one of the most beautiful things I've read on slash dot! TOo bad it was posted anon, but I whole heartedly agree. DOWN WITH THE BUZWERDS.

      --
      -- Object known as a camera. Vintage uncertain, origin unknown. - Twilight Zone
    4. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by nanun · · Score: 1

      Sure, I'll accept, for the sake of argument, that layoffs are happening everywhere. Think of it as normalizing. Frankly, a lot of those who are being laid off, would not have even been hired were it not for the dotcom/VC feeding frenzy.

      I've seen big-money engineers get the axe and lowlife techs like myself kept on. Where does their workload go? To the lowlife techs. At a fifth to a quarter of the pay the engineers got, the PHB's get to look like heros. I won't even claim to be qualified to do the work of the big-money engineers, so when you see product quality go in the porcelain seat, now you know why.


      --

      You mean you'll put down your rock, and I'll put down my sword and we'll try and kill each other like civilized peo
    5. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by sheldon · · Score: 2

      As the veteran hacker, I've been tossed too many of these techno-wannabees to train. They are clueless. They ask me why I don't replace our Windows sytems with Linux. When I ask them why I should do that, they say "Because Linux is better." That's it. No qualification beyond that. Geez.

      Heh. Welcome to my world. :)

    6. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by JSC · · Score: 1

      Hey, Adalger, I'm sorta curious how, based on the comments I made, you think you know all about me. Just for the record, you're wrong.

      I do consider myself a working stiff. Sure, I work with technology, but I don't feel that it makes me better than the guy that keeps the pretty flowers growing or cleans up the bathroom. Or the guy that fixes my minivan (I don't/won't own a Saab). I go to work, earn a living, support my family, mow my lawn just like the other people on my block. How does this make me better than my neighbor that works construction...or the retired steel worker down the street. Or, for that matter, my wife the hairstylist, my brother-in-law the mechanic, his wife the aqautic biologist, my mother the nurse, my sister the travel agent, my father-in-law the meat cutter or my mother-in-law the teacher? Sure, I've got skills and training that make me a valuable employee in today's world, but so do they. Truth to tell, if it came down to cases, my father-in-law has a more vaulable skill than I do. You can live without a computer but just try to live without food.

      You seem to think that just because someone works with technology, they're better than everyone else. BTW, if I'm wrong about this, I apologize. It's just the impression I get from what you wrote.

      Maybe it's a cultural thing. I live in West Virginia - definately not a hotbed of high tech. Around here, everyone has had the dubious pleasure of being laid off - many of them for over a year. Have you pulled your head out of your computer long enough to hear about the depressed market for domestic coal and steel? I live 10 miles from a steel mill and 5 miles from a coal mine. I've got friends who have been laid off for a lot longer than my own 5 months. It's not something we whine about, it's just a fact of life in the Ohio Valley.

      Sometimes we do end up buying 25 cent mac and cheese and Campbells by the case, but that's life. It's the price we pay for wanting to live in a beautiful part of the country where there's virtually no crime, people are friendly and you don't have to worry about your kids playing outside after dark.

      As for knowing how to run a company, I don't claim to know how. I just have a problem with bosses who make such bone headed decisions that someone with even my limited business sense can see how stupid they are. Does that make me a suit? I don't think so.

      Like I said, I'm just a working stiff. I get to do work I enjoy, playing with great toys all day, but I still work to support my family and pay my bills. No different and no better than my neighbors.

      --
      Time's fun when you're having flies. - Kermit the Frog
    7. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by JSC · · Score: 2

      Well said. I didn't work for a Dot.Com but got laid off 5 months ago because of poor business management practices - a new CEO started hiring 6 figure VPs, Senior VPs, Second Assisitant Senior VPs, etc. Suddenly, the office building that we were building wasn't going to be big enough for all the suits and we had to buy a bigger building while continuing the construction of the original building. Along with that, there were plans in the works to centrally administer all systems (voice and data) which cost an obscene amount of money and, in the opinions of the people in the field that did the actual work, wouldn't work worth a damn. That idea has since been canned as unworkable/too expensive.

      I'm a Network Engineer/System Administrator/Jack of all Trades with over 15 years of experience. I got cut as a cost cutting move in the first of three (so far) rounds of layoffs. It's taken me all of these past five months to find new work. I start my new job in about a week.

      So, don't think it's just the Dot.Com'ers that are getting the axe. Everyday working stiffs are getting cut as well.

      Admittedly, things probably wouldn't be so bad if it wasn't for the market downturn/Dot.Com fallout, but it's still bad. Companies are panicking (sp?) and the suits are cutting experienced tech personnel to reduce overhead. Funny how they never realize that one overpriced VP costs as much as 3-4 skilled techies. Hell, the day before I got the axe, a new VP hopped on the corporate jet and made a flying tour of several of our field offices. I figure that my yearly salary just about covered his expenses for that day.

      Keep your heads down, ladies and gentlemen. It ain't over yet. Until the suits realize that technology companies need experienced technology people to operate - and don't need a Second ASSistant Senior VP of Button Counting - things ain't gonna get appreciably better.

      --
      Time's fun when you're having flies. - Kermit the Frog
    8. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by sharkey · · Score: 3

      ramp up the TPS count

      Yesssss, you see, it's just that, hmm, we're, ummm, putting new, ummm, coversheets on the, ummm, TPS reports now.

      --

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    9. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by emc · · Score: 1

      PREACH ON MY BRUTHA!!!!!!!!!!!!

      You've just said it ALL

    10. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by david.heyman · · Score: 1

      Of course Macs really are kewl.

    11. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Foxman98 · · Score: 1

      And I'm sure that you, at 17, know everything.

      --
      S.t.e.v.e.
    12. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by nuintari · · Score: 2

      "Well, not the shakeout is in full swing and these cookbook guys are the first to get the boot. Good riddance, I say. They were never really useful to begin with. Hope they got a Starbucks on skid row."

      Dude, there is a Starbucks everywhere, isn't there one on the international space station now?

      --

      --Nuintari

      slashdot : where an opinion can be wrong.

    13. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by JWW · · Score: 1

      Uh-huh. I hear ya. It may surprise some people, but there are actually good jobs out here in the midwest, and I'm not talking big city midwest either, I'm talking South Dakota.

      You will not make as much as the big city, but It's only six blocks to work. Plus you're right about the power thing, and all the other cost of living stuff, plus the air is clean.

      Maybe these people should broaden their search for new jobs, but It goes without saying that there are fewer jobs out here, but they can be found.

    14. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Kendroid · · Score: 1

      Yeah, umm... didja get that memo?

    15. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by VAXman · · Score: 2

      Only the cookbook dotcomers are being laid off right now. You know the ones I mean. The ones when asked why they're reading a book on Java or HTML coding say "Oh, becasue I wanna buy an SUV" or "Cause I need to move to a better neighborhood." Give me a break.

      What's really remarkable is just how few skills any of these people had to begin with. I've seen resumes on web sites of sobbing, laid-off dotcommers, and many of them have nothing more than HTML, JavaScript, Perl, and maybe a little PHP. Probably one of the main things which happened is market saturation of workers with this knowledge (since it is so easy to learn).

    16. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by delong · · Score: 1

      Bull. I was laid off from UUNET, a network analyst. There were THOUSANDS more under the MCI/Worldcom umbrella. Here in Houston, Compaq laid off 2000+. Dell cut to the bone in Austin. The list goes on. These are not HTML For Dummies.

      The IT industry had a meltdown, across the board.

      Derek

    17. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Nerds · · Score: 1

      Sequel Server?

      Think of it as economy of syllables. Actually saying the letters S-Q-L just takes way too long...

      --
      My other .sig is 'The Art of Computer Programming'
    18. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by KwisatzHaderach · · Score: 5
      While you make some very good points here and lots of people have agreed, I still say you should think about this.

      I was one of those "clueless" guys who got an opportunity to join a dotcom in the early days. And no, I didn't know much (liberal arts degree). I didn't run around using buzz words and acting like I knew more than I did. I listened intently when the more knowledgeable ones spoke, and I asked thousands of questions. And yes, I bought books. Lots of them. I installed Linux. I signed up for a night C++ class. I busted my ass.

      And you know what. I'm still around. I have no sympathy for the "cookbook" folks as you have described them either. Laziness and pretentiousness should never be tolerated. There were several people let go like you (more technical experience) who I'm sure roll their eyes and complain that I was spared.

      Lets just say I'm glad that not every senior dev guy as much of a whiner as you seem to be. Doesn't it say anything about your own skills if none of those people you were given to train amounted to anything?

      I agree with your point that there were sevral freeloaders amongst the dotcom ranks, but your vitriolic disdain of everyone with newbie skillz is a bit over the top. Tone it down a notch, eh?

      Comin' at ya from TX!

    19. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by Salsaman · · Score: 2
      Yeah and have you noticed, 99% of them think Microsoft is the greatest thing since sliced bread, Macs are 'kewl' and Linux is a toy OS.

    20. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by ScourgeOfGod · · Score: 1

      I don't think that too many of the business failures in the last year can be attributed to the code not being cool enough. If the worthies with the mbas and hairdos drive the business into the ground, everyone is out of work. Maybe competence helps in securing new work, but I suspect often price wins out and the job goes to the cheapest alternative.

      --
      If you're happy and you know it, think again!
    21. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by zoftie · · Score: 2

      People who do not have inherent interest or
      qualifying knowlege standing behind them as plus
      some logical skills on top are ones who struggle.
      Some have more luck than others, but otherwise.

      As for old schoolers, we have 2 old timers and
      really they are more clueless than ones with 2-5
      years of expeience in the field. Old timer status
      does not mean that you will do a better job, faster.
      I know of quite a few old timers, that have ~20yrs
      behind their backs, and I will know that will not
      hire then no matter how desperate I get in business, if I have one.
      I know really of a handful of people who have
      have decent grasp on techologies, and apt to get
      job done right and fast. Just because you can sit
      in a chair for twenty years, since mainframes were
      there does not mean you have inquisitive,
      open and flexible mind to find decent solutions
      fast.

      A rude awakening out of the hyperbole that .com
      was is good thing that it happend now, not later,
      so less damage would be done. I have queasy
      feeling in my stomach 'bout that tho, wondering if
      this has irreversibly damaged computer market,
      from healy codition that was in pre-dotcom era...

    22. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by man_of_mr_e · · Score: 2

      I have to greatly disagree with you.

      People from all sectors are being laid off, primarily because hundreds of dot-com's are going out of business. Just because you're good, doesn't mean you won't get laid off if the company closes its doors.

      Once you are laid off, finding a new job, even for those with a decade of experience and very relavant skills is still quite difficult. Where a year ago I couldn't get recruiters to stop calling, today they won't return my phone calls. The jobs are *REALLY* that scarce.

    23. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by mikemsd · · Score: 1

      Couldn't have said it better myself =)

    24. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by BPhilman · · Score: 1

      What a nasty post. It reminds me of when I lived in Arizona, and people on Sunset Boulevard I was walking with, on finding out where I lived, started calling me a "fucking Zonie" with no provocation. You Californians just hate everyone else, don't you? And, you blame all your problems on outsiders, instead of looking inward and solving them.

      I'd like to make a point or two.

      First of all, California has always been a place of hellacious traffic, all the way back to the twenties and thirties. LA was throttled with city-clogging traffic back in the twenties, for instance, and built the highway system in lieu of a train-based transit system to take the pressure off. It was reasoned that a distributed city would have less traffic. This worked for only a few years, and the traffic ended up being clogged all over the city anyway. I remember being stuck in LA traffic back when I was in the Marines. I thought I'd never get out. And, I'm originally from the NYC area, ok? LA traffic puts the cross-Bronx expressway to shame in terms of sheer buildup.

      Second of all, you've got all your power blackouts not because Midwesterners came to live with you, but because your brain-dead state government deregulated power. Now, wholesale prices are skyrocketing and you want consumer price-caps, which results in bankrupt utilities. Hey, I live in New York, and I understand the issue. What's your excuse? Don't you read the papers?

      Quit whining about outsiders coming in. Look back along your family tree and I bet you dig up some Spanish explorers (giving you a lot of credit there) dust-bowl okies, or maybe some gold-rushers, all of whom who are no different than the dot-commers you hate. Get used to the idea that unless you're a native american, you're not native to California, period.

      Don't be such a snob! I mean, really!
      crazyphilman@programmer.net

      --
      crazyphilman@programmer.net
      Sort of fat, good looking in a disheveled sort of way.
    25. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by haruharaharu · · Score: 1

      No, he said ' I'm 17 and they know less than me.' Learn English.

      --
      Reboot macht Frei.
    26. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by NeRFaGe · · Score: 1

      I don't agree with this logic entirely. Yes, alot of under-qualified people are losing their jobs, but they hardly comprise the entire group. Where I work, I have watched many qualified people lose their jobs simply because of the downturn in the economy. No one was making obscene salaries, but they were making enough to put a dent in the books. 2 of my good friends were laid off, spent 3 months looking for positions in the Bay Area, and then moved back to where they came from. They both have jobs now. I was actually informed just this past Wednesday that I'm the next casualty and that I won't have a job come the end of the month. You might say that I'm just as unqualified, but since I'm the last technical employee carrying a department once staffed by over 30 hard-working professionals, I feel I can hold my own. The difference with my story is that I'm leavin immediately. The day after my last day I'm loadin up the moving truck and returning to Arizona from whence I came. I think a big part of this whole situation IS the Bay Area itself. It has become an environment that can't support itself. Yes, there may be some jobs around, but I'm not about to waste 3 months of savings just to find out.

      --
      All your base belong to my 3rd cousin twice removed
    27. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by adalger · · Score: 1
      Hey, Adalger, I'm sorta curious how, based on the comments I made, you think you know all about me

      I don't think I know all about you. I think you can afford to go five months without a job, because you said so.

      You seem to think that just because someone works with technology, they're better than everyone else

      Nope. Most of 'em think they are. That's pretty much the crux of this article.

      I love in Northwest Ohio. We know all about your steel troubles, because our Jeep plant uses a lot of it. We're part of your problem, I guess, because we're laying off auto workers.

      My point was not that you somehow don't earn your money because you work with technology. My point was that five months is way too long to be without a job and still think that you're a "working stiff." The rest of us start thinking McD's looks like a pretty darned good employer inside of a month.

      --
      -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
    28. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by adalger · · Score: 2

      My god, now I've seen everything.

      Network Engineer/Senior Administrator is a working stiff?! Hell, no! The guy who cleans up the bathroom after you is a working stiff. The guy who keeps your pretty office building's pretty shrubs looking pretty is a working stiff. The guy who fixes your Saab is a working stiff. You, sir, are a techie in a suit. You may not actually wear a suit, but you've got a suit attitude.

      It's taken you all of five months to find a new job? Well, boo-fucking-hoo. A working stiff would, quite literally, starve to death with no income for five months.

      If you want to know what it's like to be a working stiff, try this on for size. The day they tell you you're laid off, you've got about two weeks to find a job before you start stocking up on the instant 25-cent-a-box macaroni and cheese and the ten-for-a-dollar Ramen Noodles. For variety you might pick up about eight cases of Campbell's if it goes on sale for a quarter a can.

      You think you know how to run a company better than your CEO? Go start your own and see how long it survives. Then come here and see how sorry we don't feel for you.

      --
      -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
    29. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by tofu-X · · Score: 1

      hehe.. I know what you mean. I've seen it, and it is really sad. I myself am only coming up on 17, but I talk with these egotistical dick heads who somehow managed to get hired somewhere, who know less than me. D:

      It sucks, but I know they will be joining the shelter-goers soon.

    30. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by baumanj · · Score: 1

      So, don't think it's just the Dot.Com'ers that are getting the axe. Everyday working stiffs are getting cut as well.

      I think this is a valid point. I worked at an evil banner-making dot com for about six months as an IT intern (I'm graduating in about a year). The problem with the place really wasn't the IT issues (though IT was far from perfect), but how things were managed in general. For a company whose sole purpose was to design banners and buy ad space (none of that tricky hosting stuff, leave it to DoubleClick), we sure had a lot of pointless departments. Nobody I ever talked to seemed to know what "Data Solutions" did.

      Anyway, the issue was definitely one of trimming the fat. In the time I was there, there were about 3 rounds of layoffs, but they were largely ineffective, because they laid off the wrong people. When I started, there were around 16 developers, and 4 managers in IT. By the time I left, there were 5 developers and 3 managers. After all the layoffs, they just couldn't understand why we couldn't meet the demand for all the various pet projects. "They have three managers for god's sake! They should be producing much more". Of course, it wasn't just IT that got the axe; plenty of people who pushed paper were out on the street too. The real problem is that the company was started by people who's perception of their own internet savvy-ness was far greater than its actuality. Dot com entrepreneurs need to be saved from themselves.

      I just hope nobody from my old company is savvy enough to be reading slashdot

      --
      "The general contract of the method run is that it may take any action whatsoever." -- Java 2 API
    31. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by guitfiddle · · Score: 1

      Dude, I agree with mostly everything you described except the tag- "Cookbook" dotcomers. I've got the (Perl/Javascript) Cookbook and don't read it for those reasons. Now, I'll be paired with "Cookbook dotcomers." DjM

    32. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by tageine · · Score: 1

      This isn't a personal attack on your comment - you have some very valid points. My take on this is - "Well, what did you expect?" Let me explain. Every cycle in the job market is basically a "game" with new rules being laid down each time a new, "hot" thing comes along. For instance, college degrees were the thing about 20 years ago - ANY college degree in ANY subject to get a "good" job. Bam! People reacted and a glut emerged! Then only CERTAIN college degrees guaranteed jobs. Then, came the technical school craze - and, BAM! - techno-glut. In this latest craze, it started with computer certifications only a handful of years ago - $50,000 for an MCSE with 0 to 6 months experience! Well, what did you expect? People react - if you put such a high price on so little training, you'll get the market glutted in no time. It's not THEIR fault that YOU changed the rules. It's just a game employers play. People aren't bad, stupid or even LAZY! They're just playing by the "rules"! If employers would hire people for "character" reasons and train them rather than hire them to fill their latest "techno-angst", we'd have a lot less people changing careers every couple years. Now that the rules have changed, this new generation of "cookbook" 20-somethings, who were promised big salaries for little training, have to drop back and regroup. This was referenced in a FORTUNE magazine article: "The Humbled Generation". Employers are not philanthropic enterprises, they are in business to make money - period. My gripe about that is the "H/R" departments. Who's hired and WHY? The basic HR department philosophy has not changed in over 20 years. This has FORCED people to take every shortcut imaginable in order to get the highest-paying job with the least training in the shortest amount of time. Unfortunately, this does NOT lend itself to long-term, stable workplaces. It's "get rich quick" - or - "Everybody ELSE is getting a piece of the pie with a little training, why not ME!". Something has to change - or else, people will adapt again to next "hot" thing once they understand the NEW RULES of employment and we will have gluts and layoffs again eventually with that also. What ever happened to working for the same employer for 30 years - those days are gone! This current glut of I.T. sector, cookbook techies is only a symptom of the overall employment culture in the U.S.A. My point is that we need a change in employer/employee philosophy. People aren't happy in their work - they just got enough training to get a reasonably well-paying job, NOT because they wanted to DO that job! What did you expect, afterall, YOU put so much emphasis on IMAGE ("I'm successful because I'm making a lot of money") or SUV's ("You ARE what you drive") or material posessions ("I've bought ALL the right THINGS - Why aren't I happy???"). In a few decades, we will be able to objectively state that we really DO need character, that T.V. advertising WAS harmful in promoting unnatural acquisition of "things" and that people should work at things they LOVE to do, not because it makes a lot of money.

    33. Re:Only the "cookbook dotcom'ers" were laid off. by tageine · · Score: 1

      Derek,

      You're OK! I promise you WILL work again. Good people always do. In the meantime, if you are still without job, get work doing anything. It will be good for you psychologically and emotionally.

  16. Many of the comments here are absurd... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5

    After reading many of the comments here, I've come to the obvious conclusion that many people here are talking out of their posteriors. I'm here to set the record straight and in doing so, punch a hole in a couple of the ridiculous dot-com myths that seem to thrive here and elsewhere.

    "Good people don't get layed off" This is one of the most absurd generalisations floating around. People need to get a clue about how layoffs work. The people making the decisions about layoffs don't know shit about how good people are. All they see are numbers next to names and a burn-rate they have to go below. These guys can't pronounce half the stuff on the resumes of their technical staff, much less judge their competence.

    "I saw the dot-com bust coming long before anyone else and the dotcommers are getting what they deserve" This is classic I-told-you-so-syndrome that pops up in all facets of life, whether you're talking about the dot-com bust or telling someone how you alone predicted the Rams would win the 1999 Superbowl before anyone else. The fact is that most dot-com worker saw a chance to do something they loved, in an atmosphere they enjoyed with an opportunity to make tons of money. Some jealous-folk wipe a bit of sweat from the brow in reassurance when these young people did not end up as successful as the hype of a few years ago was leading the public to believe. Using other people's misfortune for self-justification only shows how pathetic YOU are.

    "Layed off workers living in San Jose should work at McDonald's to make ends meet" Trust me, if you're working at McDonald's in Silicon Valley, you'd still be in a homeless shelter, believe that. Your time is much better spent looking for a decent job either in Silicon Valley or somewhere else.

    This post isn't meant to crap on ALL the comments here. Many of the comments are obviously spoken by those who've gone through layoffs or at least have true familiarity with them. Yes, there are people out there who turn down decent jobs just because they aren't paying their overpriced salaries of a year ago. And yes, people who only know HTML are in trouble while the market for C++/Java programmers is still pretty solid. But unfortunately the legitimate commentary is in the extreme minority.

    1. Re:Many of the comments here are absurd... by Trepidity · · Score: 2

      "Layed off workers living in San Jose should work at McDonald's to make ends meet"
      Trust me, if you're working at McDonald's in Silicon Valley, you'd still be in a homeless shelter, believe that. Your time is much better spent looking for a decent job either in Silicon Valley or somewhere else.


      I agree, this should be revised to "move to somewhere with a sane cost of living and work at McDonald's to make ends meet." I have a friend who's doing just that in Houston, working fast-food to pay for an $800/month 3-room apartment.

      Sure, it's not high-class living, but it's not a homeless shelter either. And jobs in fast food are really damn easy to find.

    2. Re:Many of the comments here are absurd... by bnenning · · Score: 2
      "Good people don't get layed off"

      Of course that's not true, but "good people" will have a much easier time finding another job than somebody who just memorized the MSCE test books.

      "I saw the dot-com bust coming long before anyone else and the dotcommers are getting what they deserve"

      I'll have sympathy for somebody making $30k working customer support who got laid off. I have none for engineers who were making $100k. When you're making that much there is no excuse to not have a substantial amount saved up for when you hit a rough patch.

      "Layed off workers living in San Jose should work at McDonald's to make ends meet"

      I agree, that isn't terribly realistic. The first step should be to move somewhere that has a sane cost of living.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    3. Re:Many of the comments here are absurd... by The+Wing+Lover · · Score: 1
      "Layed off workers living in San Jose should work at McDonald's to make ends meet"Trust me, if you're working at McDonald's in Silicon Valley, you'd still be in a homeless shelter, believe that. Your time is much better spent looking for a decent job either in Silicon Valley or somewhere else.

      Well, people who do work at McDonald's in the valley are living somewhere.

      --

      - In Capitalist America, law violates YOU!

    4. Re:Many of the comments here are absurd... by blair1q · · Score: 2

      Well, people who do work at McDonald's in the valley are living somewhere.

      Like he said, homeless shelter, or, from what I've seen from the number of cars parked on an average Silicon Valley side street, 10 to a 3-bed, 2-bath house.

      SV rates for fast food are higher than the norm; the banners proclaim $9.25 an hour at In-n-Out, but under $20k/year around here isn't going to get you an apartment you can leave after dark and food.

      Everyone else that replied to this thread said what I was going to say: if you're out of a job in the Bay Area, MOVE OUT.

      It's not going to come back here. The crazy money is gone forever. You're living in a dying shipyard, and it will be a century before anyone considers gentrifying it.

      And maybe you'll change your luck. Much of the crazy money that piled up and went down the toilet here in the meantime created an international infrastructure that means that most of you can do the same sort of work in another state without any change in the virtual qualities of your career.

      My home is in another state, and I'm here only because the client insists and pays my expenses. This place, believe me, is a step down. If I didn't have a fear of flying, I'd do what my partners do and air-commute.

      There never was a good reason that dotbomb.com had to be located here. The only reason it happened was so the local VC's could see the drywall in person and dump funny money on the con-man in charge. Real online companies can be anywhere. Why grind yourself on the roughest economic emery wheel on earth when you can go to Kansas City or Penang, pay 20% as much for the same apartment, and work your options from there?

      --Blair

  17. Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5
    *sigh* Dammit, people, this is for REAL. I've seen a LOT of posts chortling at all the PHBs and Marketroids finally brought down.

    Those of you doing this chortling obviously haven't actually been looking for work.

    Things changed, changed badly, in the past three or four months. The job market right now is TERRIBLE, at least for Internet-related jobs. I'm a Solaris admin with 6 years experience in Solaris and >10 years total in various flavors of UNIX, and I can't find a position. (A highly skilled sysadmin, mind you, with great professional references. I'm no experience-poor hobbyist calling himself a sysadmin or a clueless tech-wannabe with a padded resume.) I stopped looking for something specific to my skill set weeks ago, and am now looking for ANYthing, even a LAN job. And still nothing. The recruiters don't call you back. Resumes are thrown in the circular bin. That flood of calls that always used to follow posting your resume on any job board has been conspicuously absent.

    Hiring freezes are everywhere. Companies that aren't in hiring freezes seem to be looking for Supermen-- sysadmins and programmers that can fill the shoes of five people, simultaneously. Some of the job descriptions I've seen are INSANE. Positions for senior-level sysadmins that are also senior-level network engineers while also being Oracle DBAs with certification! I have to assume this has something with the downturn... knowledge-poor management assuming they can combine positions and Save Bundles Of Cash[TM].

    It's bad, people. Pay attention. This could be you next.

    The lesson I learned from this? I still don't have a job, but I know that as SOON as I can, I'm going to acquire expertise in a UNIX other than Solaris or Linux, and in a context other than the Internet. I just hope I get a chance to do so. (That's not intended as a slam against either... it's just that there seem to be a lot more jobs for the other flavors than those two.)

    And I'm getting OUT of this goddess-forsaken, PHB-ridden industry as soon as I can.

    1. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by Lando · · Score: 1

      This is true people.

      My company took a slump in sales in November while people were preparing for the holidays, December was so-so and most of the contracts had to wait for the January budget. January came and the tech stocks crashed, which in turn meant that the contracts we signed in December all went away.

      Okay, so sh** happens. I figured I would go out and work at a real job for a while and suppliment the company's income. I posted my resume' and waited for the offers to flood in.

      Over the past 5 years anytime I have actually posted my resume' I have been flooded with inquiries and offers. Most of which I turn down, ie I know what environments I like to work in and money I like to make... Call me a prima-donna if you want...

      What suprised me was that I only received 3 inquiries in the last couple of months. Normally my resume pulls 60-80 requests a week. So something is obviously going on here.

      In the last month or so, my business has been pulling in new work, so it appears that things might be turning around.

      I think most people just got scared of putting money into tech and were holding back. Things are starting to loosen up now and I expect things to be back on target by the end of the year.

      Lando

      --
      /* TODO: Spawn child process, interest child in technology, have child write a new sig */
    2. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by HiThere · · Score: 2

      Please remember that technical skill and optimism are not correlated. Also, being skilled techincally doesn't translate into being a skilled manager. Or salesman.

      I appluad you for your ability to make that work. I know that I never could. OTOH, my retirement is vested, and I saved for retirement. When the stock market recovers, I may retire. (Well, I plan to work 1 day per week, average, but I don't intend to need to.)

      It's also true that I picked a fortunate time to be born. See how wise I am! And isn't everyone who was so silly as to be born later stupid. ... Please! Lecturing the less fortunate is not nice. A practical answer would be nice, but I don't believe that the world offers such at the moment (and, no, I don't count Ms. Rand as one who offers such).

      P.S.: About your guarantee: What does it cost, and how reliable is it? And to whom is it available? You needn't answer me, but please consider the answers carefully. The passengers on the plane do not even meet the pilot. But somehow they must be able to trust him.


      Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    3. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by scoove · · Score: 4

      Bravo!!!

      I played that game for the past couple of years - being a PHB-enabler. Things like:

      - working 80+ hrs/week (no weekend free-time either) to restructure the god-awful business plan written by clowns so the PHBs could get that critical $50 mil to keep *their* business alive.

      - fighting millions tossed at worthless vendors for every little PHB fantasy, like a $2.5 million "system to automatically download call records from a switch and change their format so it can go into the billing system" - that I replaced with a $2,000 Linux box, ftp and grep, only to see the stuff bought anyways and put on my budget while the PHB got a free trip to Disney on the vendor's behalf (never mind that theirs never did work despite several visits by just-out-of-college $225/hour techs).

      - solving PHB-induced crisis after crisis with no fanfare, often using my own funds, contacts, whatever, only to prove to the PHBs that their incompetence has no consequence

      Imagine their horror during layoffs when I walked over to a fully functional company I own that afternoon (hey, I saw the writing on the wall a half-year in advance).

      I'd swear, they were mad at not getting the satisfaction of my agony. Somehow, they feel the need for people like us to suffer so they can rationalize that they're somehow of value.

      It's time to destroy the PHBs. Withdraw your expertise. Don't give them your minds. Don't enable their parasitism. Brilliant tech people are a direct threat - we represent intelligence and reason. Don't underestimate or think for a second that they aren't threatened by us and seek our destruction.

      Instead, be accountable for yourself - either contracting, consulting or building your own company with other competent people. Work only with other competents; don't enable or empower these parasites. It's time to slay the PHB culture.

      *scoove*

      Click here for a guaranteed cure for unemployment

    4. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by ccoakley · · Score: 1
      I agree that government contracts are quite stabilizing. Unfortunately, they are stabilizing in both directions. I work for a contractor. Mind you, it isn't a very big one, but we still get effected by the recession. Why? Because you can't grow a small company on just defense contracts alone. A big company that sells billion dollars in Airframes can have decent profit margins. We can't. Sure, we don't have to worry about being downsized or paying the bills, but we do have a lot of talent and would like to do a bit of IR&D. Fortunately, our president is one of the best management types I've met. He's managed to secure a bit of funding and found an avenue for commercial products even in this economy.

      --
      Network Security: It always comes down to a big guy with a gun.
    5. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by blair1q · · Score: 2

      the job descriptions I've seen are INSANE. ... I have to assume this has something with the downturn... knowledge-poor management assuming they can combine positions and Save Bundles Of Cash[TM].

      Actually, they're right. In another thread we worked out the following calculation, which was meant to be funny, but turned out being dead serious:

      We all know that,

      Time is money.
      Knowledge is power.

      So if by money you mean cost, you can work out that,

      Knowledge = Power = Work/Time = Work/Cost

      And therefore

      Cost = Work/Knowledge

      So once you know how much work you need to do in order to survive, you can minimize the cost by increasing the knowledge of the workers applied to the job. An engineer with 50x the productivity usually only costs 10x the salary, and if you can convince him to take half of his pay in risk (stock or options), you save on hedge insurance, too.

      --Blair

    6. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by russh347 · · Score: 1

      I've been in industry almost 20 years. I've survived many layoffs (including two within the last six months), and _never_ been laid off myself.

      I'm not laughing... I'm shaking my head sadly.

      I watched quietly as the dot-bombs boomed. I kept my head, my job, and my house.

      I could say I told you so, but I never did tell you so. All my friends also kept their heads, jobs, and houses.

      I can say I saw this coming. I didn't know exactly when or how it would come. But it was clear that the dot-bomb mentality was unstable and would eventually collapse.

      For me, ... things actually haven't changed at all.

      I don't relish the idea of looking for a job in the current climate. But then, I don't have to.

    7. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by MorganBlackhand · · Score: 1

      I would have to agree I have serval friends in the Bay area that are in the Tech sector. They haven't had any problems with employment, they are skilled on a wide varity of technologies (Cisco, MS, Unix/Linux, and the various application servers). Oddly most don't care what technology they are working on and can do anything that needs to be done in the netwok engineering/admin roles. I left a .com that happened to be a recruiting company and found a job paying more within 2 weeks. I think it is funny that the people who had the attitude "The comapny owes me! I can go to xyz with my paper MCSE and get 20K more a year!" are now finding that employers actually require skills to hire a person. The UNIX people who scoffed at the 100K plus salaries offered to them are now getting a hard taste of reality. Just my observations... - Morgan

    8. Re:Go ahead. Laugh while you can. by negativenine · · Score: 1

      People have to much pride, if you have to work as a burger flipper to get by you do it, don't just say poor me I used to be an admin poor me I used to be a programmer poor me I used to do x rated porn and now the industry has dried up, suck it up and move on, well the x rated industry will never dry up.

      --
      Windows I got windows, I got curtains too
  18. Re:Folks..let's not forget it's a job 'market'.. a by whoop · · Score: 1

    Been there, done that. I have been turned down even for Jr Admin jobs because I don't have 3-5 years experience in a large facility. I work with half a dozen small businesses, setting up their LANs, connecting to the internet, ssh'ing in to do this or that, etc. They work so well they don't call me much anymore. =) But oh, that counts as zero experience in any "real" company's HR department.

    I don't know, I guess there are a lot of people with that much experience willing to work for 30k. To me, you should be able to move up to at least a normal admin after 5 years...

  19. Silicon Valley by Mike+Hicks · · Score: 2

    Well, if the rent is so high in Silicon Valley, then get out of there! The United States is a big country, it's certainly possible to find a good job somewhere out there. In most places, the rent is certainly cheaper..

    This appears to me to be like many of the mini-recessions that have hit specialized industry centers over the years. A decade or so ago, many areas of Michigan got hit as sales of American cars slowed. Sometimes, it just takes a restructuring of an industry, such as when textile mills on the east coast grew by an order of magnitude and moved away from the rivers that had been their main source of power until electricity came into widespread use.

    Other than that, I think I have to follow the opinion of others posting here -- lots of people don't have the skills they say they do, only have a very narrow skill set, or just don't want to lower their standard of living by getting a cheaper car or smaller apartment.
    --

  20. Intern Market by Shaheen · · Score: 2

    I am currently an undergrad at CMU. I was also in the internship market this last semester (as I have been the past two or three years).

    Overall, no matter what job market there has been, finding an internship has been damn easy for me. Here's what I think really helped me get those internships:

    Find a job you're interested in. Sounds pretty easy, and it was for me - I'm interested in pretty much everything in computer science. However, I think this is the most critical thing to do, because of the next reason:

    Know what you're talking about. This sounds pretty obvious at first glance. However, there are a lot of idiots out there that have no clue what the fuck they are talking about. If you followed my first piece of advice, then you have a better chance of having this part taken care of. Also, if you are interested in the job, and know what you're talking about, this really tends to come out during interviews.

    Have a good resume. Well, this seems to be less important to me, but you should have a resume that's easily readable and gets straight to the damn point. HR people don't need your life story, but they need more than your last job and why you quit. I personally have had internships in the past, which have been pretty good for dressing up my resume. If you're looking for your first one, then highlight the best stuff you've done - contests you've done, community work you've done (at school or whatever), etc. Independent projects (ahem, open source projects) are especially good.

    Go for it. I personally hate online job applications. The reason is that I feel my resume just gets lost in the sea of crap. I don't mean to sound better than everyone else, but that's the way I feel when I compare my skillz against other people applying to the same job. Find a way to make your resume stand out. Send it to a friend at the company, or if it's a startup, have the audacity to send it to one of the founders - I think they get a kick out of that.

    Bleh, that's all I can say. I've interned for MetaCreations (graphics software), Akamai, and now I'm interning for Microsoft (hey - I couldn't pass up Xbox, would you?).

    Also, I had three internship offers this year, so I don't see where all this "crappy job market" stuff is coming from. I think that all the idiots are being filtered out, for the most part.

    --
    You should never take life too seriously - You'll never get out of it alive.
    1. Re:Intern Market by brianvan · · Score: 2

      Damn that's a rosy picture... but then again, you're at CMU.

      I just graduated from a respectable school with a good CS department, and here's what I found about internships... I couldn't get any. Well, actually, I did get TWO, but I struggled every summer to find them, and had little to no luck.

      Yea, the one internship was with school for a class I had, and I had to take a lot of initiative to get into that program, but I did it, and that's a feather in my cap. The other internship, well, I had to PAY out $200 to get it. Oh, and both were totally unpaid. And I've been looking during the summer for the past three years, and in the past two years I've gotten absolutely stonewalled looking for internships or part-time tech positions. Maybe because I was living in one place for college and looking in another place where I wanted to be, but I had constrictions on where I actually had to live for the summer and that's just my tough luck.

      The internship market is NOT easy. Companies doing massive layoffs are not quick to take on interns, as they represent an expense they don't need at this point. The lack of companies to accept internships after the recent failings is killing the market as well. Finally, there's a whole bunch of kids like you competing cutthroat for these positions... and I didn't want to go here, but when it comes to me, Mr. Normal whitebread college student who has a non-tech related part time job and has friends in his spare time, I can't compete with any of those foreign-descent kids at CMU that work all the time, dedicate every second of their being to being a total CS freak, and who never stop to smell the roses. Those are unrealistic expectations to lay on myself, and I'm glad that I am who I am, at the expense of me not being a smug, cocky bastard who doesn't know how to talk to real people or hasn't seen the sun in 5 years just so that they can work for someone else the rest of their lives.

      Not that I'm insinuating you're a smug cocky bastard, but I've met many of that type. Especially from CMU. Hopefully working at MS doesn't do worse things to your demeanor.

      Oh by the way, I got into CMU, but I chose not to go there... no girls and no social life. But it's a good school for people willing to put in that level of work. I'm just saying, not everyone can be that guy, and not everyone should have to be. And I disagree with the concept that only the top 1% of applicants should be offered anything decent at this point... which is pretty much what happened in your case. The wealth and knowledge should be spread a little.

      Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go buy the newspaper and look through the classifieds...

    2. Re:Intern Market by brianvan · · Score: 2

      Wow... and this is from someone at U.Penn as well, which is regarded as a better school than mine. All I have to say about my ability to get a job is: Yikes!

      That was very well put, I attempted to say it better but I didn't quite. While it's certainly nice for some students to be lucky, it's still a bit shortsighted for a student at the best CS school in the world to say that, based on his experience, there's plenty of opportunity out there. The internship market AND the job market suck right now, and it doesn't help that I can't see myself working at half the jobs I apply to in desperation to get rent money. A year ago it wasn't like this, but right now we're paying for all the mistakes that were made in the dot-com boom.

      Good luck on your job searching.

    3. Re:Intern Market by daemia · · Score: 1

      I am currently an undergrad at UPenn engineering. I was also in the internship market this last semester (as I have been in the past two years). Overall, no matter what job market there has been, finding an iternship has been damn hard for me.

      Find a job you're interested in

      I'm also interested in practically anything related to computer science. I sent out about 30 resumes in the past two months alone, all to companies with openings that I would love to be in. Not one response. The job I have now was due to an accidental meeting, and barely pays enough for my rent, much less food. And I'm living in pennsylvania. Not exactly the height of luxury here.

      Know what you're talking about

      This is good advice, provided you get an interview in the first place. I didn't even get that far, so I had no chance to prove to anybody that I knew my stuff. You'd be surprised at how many recruiters that you call simply won't let you have even a first chance.

      Have a good resume

      Unfortunately, my resume doesn't have CMU stamped across the top. I don't think you realize how much that may do for you when an employer puts your resume alongside mine. I have been very active in school, and have quite a bit of fine arts experience alongside my cse classes. Community service and club activities and independent projects have done jack shit for me in terms of employment. I would never give up being an editor or a research advisor or any of the things I do that are unpaid. But those activities don't mean anything to an employer, at least in my experience. It's a Catch 22 - I haven't had any decent work experience in the field, so people don't want to hire me. But since people won't hire me due to my lack of experience, I will never get experience out in the field.

      Go for it

      You assume we all have connections and friends who can get us "in." I have two friends working at M$ right now, and there's nothing they can do about getting me hired, either at M$ or at any other software company. I hate to burst your bubble, but friends != job in many cases, despite what may have happened to you. And sometimes putting your resume into the "sea of crap" lands you a good job. It worked for my friend at Unisys, it just hasn't worked for me.

      Bleh, that's all I can say. You have been very lucky, and I do not doubt that you also are very gifted and intelligent. Unfortunately, your positive experience with the job market does not mean there it's easy for the rest of us.

    4. Re: Intern Market by daemia · · Score: 1

      Actually, the job I have now is with research at CIS under a prof. It's very interesting work and I'm learning a lot, but that doesn't hide the fact that it still doesn't cover my rent (which is very modest - under $300 a month). University research is great, but it doesn't always feed you. And as stated before, I didn't get my job through my resume, I got it by accidentally being in the right place at the right time - through a chance meeting and a misdirected e-mail. I was hired because the research is government funded and requires a certain quota of females/minorities on the staff, therefore they managed to squeeze me in on a team that was already full.

      Almost every company that is worth interning for has recruiters.

  21. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by Tony+Shepps · · Score: 2
    Technical people are incredibly underappreciated - to the point where that term "techies" is used by everyone, including technical people. I find the term offensive and am arguing for a new term to reflect the engineering inherent in most tech positions.

    From now on, "techies" who work in software should be called "software engineers". "techies" who work in hardware should be called "hardware engineers".

  22. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Except that "software engineers" and "hardware engineers" are far more than merely "techies" who work in software and hardware, respectively. The term "engineer" denotes an understanding of the theoretical underpinnings of the field. If someone calls themselves a "hardware engineer," I expect them to be able to design at least some simple circuitry and explain to me how a CPU works internally. Someone who can build computers from components is certainly not a hardware engineer.

  23. Re:$600?? by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Yeah, Houston is damn cheap. I know some people who pay around $900 for a 3-bedroom apartment in Austin though. The rates near the UT campus are abnormally high due to high demand from 50,000 students, but the rates in the rest of Austin are reasonable. Not as cheap as Houston ($900 vs. $500 or $600), but not $1400 either.

    -delirium

  24. Re:$600?? (correction) by Trepidity · · Score: 2

    Err, I meant 3-room (1 living room, 2 bedrooms), not 3-bedroom. =P

  25. No Worries Here by Tony · · Score: 1

    It can't be that bad-- we're trying to hire a PC tech where I work, and recieved almost no applications.

    Meanwhile, I keep getting cold calls from headhunters (still). I could get work fairly quickly, if I were willing to leave Sitka.

    I think the issue is this: these people suffer from a combination of problems. First, they weren't necessarily good to start with. Second, they were making way more than they were worth, and aren't willing to work for a paltry $45k/year. Third, they're living in fucking San Jose, fer crissakes. Rent there is outrageous, and there are another 10 thousand unemployed ex-dot-commers pounding the pavement looking for work, too. It's a buyers' market.

    C'mon! Pick up stakes and move! There's no reason to stay in Silicon Valley. The tech industry is a distributed economy. Move to Anchorage; there's work there, for those who want it. Move to Cleveland, or move to Berne, or Dublin. Move to where the work is. And don't expect to make $100k for a job that's really only worth $45k.

    Consider the alternative-- you could make $16k flipping burgers at McDeaths.

    Hey. Fries are up.

    --
    Microsoft is to software what Budweiser is to beer.
    1. Re:No Worries Here by jefflinwood · · Score: 1

      Hey, is there any possibility for some part-time short duration temp techie work in Sitka? I'm planning to be up there in August, would love to hang around Sitka or Juneau. And I don't think I want to work in a cannery :)

  26. Re:Several things... by Wansu · · Score: 2

    The days of employment-for-life are over in the post-industrial economy. It's simply a fact that everyone in the first-world countries will very likely pursue multiple careers within their lifetime (as an aside, this is why continuing to learn throughout one's life is healthy and good). There are some exceptions to this, of course - some academic, science, clergy, military, and bureaucratic careers come to mind - but even many of these aren't forever, or change a lot over time. But, for most of us, we'll change careers two to five times during the course of our lives, and we'll like the changes.

    Yeah, I read Future Shock too and even got fired up about that. Then I did it some. I've had several careers and done well in them. I've made some mistakes along the way but I never deserved to be laid off. I picked myself up, dusted myself off and got back on the horse. I think I might be able to do it one more time but I don't think I can do it 3 more times. Why? Each time took alot outta me. I'm not getting any younger and neither are you. Since I became a developer, I work longer hours than I did as an engineer. Retraining sounds good in the saying but when you go do it, it gets old fast and employers will not hire you on the basis of having taken refresher courses. They want actual work experience. I have done what you describe twice. You're right. It CAN be done. But the cost deserves discussion. I will contend that most people I have worked with over the last 25 years could not have done what I have done to stay afloat in some kind of technical field. They were forced out into non-technical jobs paying much less. So I'm not saying your way won't work. It did work for me. I'm saying it is not a viable approach for many if not most people who find themselves in similar circumstances. They will not land on both feet and start running. They will fall flat on their faces and get hurt. Is that how it ought to be? 15 years ago, I would have said yes. Today, I'm not so sure.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  27. There's a clear solution by alewando · · Score: 5

    It's sad to see dot-com workers lining up for spots in homeless shelters, since such spots are scarce enough as it is. There must be a better answer, and I think I've found it:

    It's time to resurrect the modern leper colony.

    Today, Molokai island stands as a pristine isle off the coast of Hawaii's main island. Well into the 20th century, people who had contracted Hansen's disease (leprosy) were corralled and left to fend for themselves apart from the rest of civilization. Though the leper colony became obsolete with the advent of modern antibiotics, it remains a powerful idea with a powerful purpose.

    Geeks are little different from lepers, when you look at it. Both suffer from an incurable disease (at least in classic times), both are shunned by mainstream society, and both are wont to have random body parts die and fall off. A leper colony for geeks would be the natural and proper solution.

    But how to get them there? Unlike in ancient times, we can't just throw them on a boat and leave them off on the shores. We need strong incentives. Part of the job is already done for us: Hawaii's pristine beauty and untrampled (except by zillions of tourists) lands are unparalleled in popularity and acclaim. Advertised as an island getaway, the leper colony could attract a large number of geeks on that fact alone. The rest of the mopping up could be done with promises of excesses of bandwidth and numerous sexually available local fauna.

    Once isolated, the geeklepers would live out their natural lives. Since we all know geeks don't have sex, we needn't fear the propagation of their species. After one or two decades, the last remains of an unwashed mass of pimpled sociopaths could be collected and used as compost.

    Above all, homeless shelters would again be free to admit truly down-and-out members of society who didn't go to expensive colleges and didn't recently live in the lap of luxury. That is a world worth fighting for.

    1. Re:There's a clear solution by Leper · · Score: 1

      > Geeks are little different from lepers, when you look at it.

      Won't argue with you there. ;)

    2. Re:There's a clear solution by isorox · · Score: 1

      Oh no! - its $5 a gallon here.

    3. Re:There's a clear solution by Dolly_Llama · · Score: 1
      Since we all know geeks don't have sex

      There may be no geek sex but there IS GOATSEX!

      --

      Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known. -- Carl Sagan

    4. Re:There's a clear solution by flacco · · Score: 1

      For beach property in Hawaii, I'd more than happy to live in a geekleper colony.

      --
      pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
    5. Re:There's a clear solution by adalger · · Score: 1

      Why?! Where the fuck is there to drive?!

      --
      -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  28. Re:A view from the recruitment side. by Kyril · · Score: 1

    When we wanted an experienced C++ programmer, some of the applicants' resumes (from one recruiter) listed a score on some C++ test.

    The higher the score, the fewer the clues.

    And the last time I took a computerized C++ test (for the computer consulting arm of a company more known in the financial markets, though it wasn't Andersen), it had several questions where none of the answers were right...

  29. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Where are you going to put a roommate in a $1500/mo apartment in the Valley?

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  30. Re:Look to other similar fields..... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Being in demand certainly beats being in a homeless shelter. Idealism is nice and all. However, most of us in the real world have bills to pay (like student loans).

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  31. Re:Seperation of stupid people... by jedidiah · · Score: 1

    Why do you people insist on fixating on a number taken out of context? 100K in the Valley isn't what you seem to think it is. At the very least, progressive taxation will eat away at your effective income.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  32. Rent actually increased since 2000 by heroine · · Score: 2

    You ever see The Grapes of Wrath? Well that kind of thing is happening now, thousands of programmers coming here in search of better luck. Houses in Pleasanton which sold for $1 million in 2000 are now selling for $2 million. Houses in Conta Costa County sell for $1.5 million where in 2000 they were only $1 million. An equivalent rise happened in rent, with most places rising 18%.

  33. Interesting comment about 100 men in the shelter by heroine · · Score: 2

    Because it shows how while most of the country expects men to win the bread, it's an almost psychotic obsession in Calif*rnia. You don't see any women in homeless shelters because

    #1 unless they God forbid want to become engineers they can't live here unless they're married to a male breadwinner who can pay the mortgage and

    #2 the wives expect R.E.S.U.L.T.S. Marriage in CA 2001 means wife not having to enlist in the workforce at all.

    #3 in order to cut the mustard their wives expect, the male breawinner has to be so competitive as to never get laid off, a kind of super edgy provider.

  34. Re:From what I've seen ... by X · · Score: 2

    There's a difference between no training and what RIP is talking about. When I'm interviewing someone who supposedly has been coding for 5 years, I expect them to have learned a thing or two in that time. If they haven't, what are the odds I'm going to be able to train them now?

    --
    sigs are a waste of space
  35. Re:price of rent???? by Stu+Charlton · · Score: 1

    $2200/month, a loft just outside of New York City.

    --
    -Stu
  36. Re:From what I've seen ... by mors · · Score: 1
    There's a difference between no training and what RIP is talking about. When I'm interviewing someone who supposedly has been coding for 5 years, I expect them to have learned a thing or two in that time. If they haven't, what are the odds I'm going to be able to train them now?

    In other words: there is a huge differnce between 5 years experience, and one years experience repeated five times.

  37. Re:Interesting comment about 100 men in the shelte by dangermouse · · Score: 1
    In short, by and large women aren't the strategic dumbasses we men tend to be.

    Or did I read that wrong? ;)

  38. And likely political too.. by Eric+E.+Coe · · Score: 1
    Sounds like a "crisis" - just the sort of thing for a big new federal program involving more transfer payments and cushy jobs for goverment insiders. Plus lots of political credit to the "warm and sympaththetic" politicans that freely promise lots and lots of money (our money, grrr) to "solve" the problem.

    The 2002 election cycle is getting into gear...
    --

    --
    An esoteric scratched itch:
    Homeworld Map Maker Tool
  39. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by sheldon · · Score: 2

    I guess one thing that bothers me. It appears to me that this "GNU movement" led by the likes of Richard Stallman, et al. is actually working against those of us in the tech world who would prefer to be paid commiserate salaries based on our actual knowledge. At least I view his attitude as being one of "you should do this for love, not money." and in so doing undercuts us.

    Anyway, I guess I feel I'm one of the tech people who does have no problem understanding the business. I just find it rather boring and have no interest in doing that sort of work.

    But I don't believe that someone who understands the business side is somehow worth more than someone who understand the technical side. They both have different types of domain knowledge and both play an important role for the profitability of the company.

    I honestly have no disdain for the work of the business managers. Sometimes I wish they would be more focused. But I certainly do not appreciate disdain being shown towards technical staff such as the above poster mentioned.

  40. Wow. 4.2% unemployment rate. by Forge · · Score: 5

    Jamaica hasn't seen unemployment that low as far as I can remember. Right now we are floating somewhere around 35% and have never been in single digits. At least not in the last 40 years.

    Worse yet they have a screwed up way of measuring unemployment. If you work even 1 hour out of every 3 months you are called employed. Nobody wants to count the way I suggest. I.e. If you earn minimum wage or above you are considered employed.

    They are afraid to reveal that more than 1/2 the population is unemployed or at least not earning a living. At my company we have gotten applications from people who graduated university in 1998 and have never had a job.

    So next time a valley worker gets laid off just stop whining jump in the car you don't actually own anymore. Draw out all the cash in your account. Dump your most expensive toys in the trunk and start driving. Stop and look for work at every town you come to. Ask about rent and other expenses too. If you find a place where you can hold $1000 per month after paying the basic expenses (Light, Rent, DSL) just settle down.

    New York is paying $50,000 per year for veteran schoolteachers. Find out if you can get the government to foot the bill on a teaching degree so you can go get the $35,000 or thereabouts for an entry level classroom victim.

    Money isn't everything but when the glamor goes a little of it is all you need. Better yet servicing printing equipment for a small town newspaper or going door to door for a utility company will leave you enough time to write a book, talk to people, perhaps even have sex.

    OK. That last one may be wishful thinking.

    I guess what I am trying to say is that for an educated man to suffer he must be forced to stay in a place with limited upertunities (like Jamaica with can get only so many visas availeble to our citezens) or he must give up and surender to his circomstances.

    --
    --= Isn't it surprising how badly I spell ?
  41. compare and contrast by xeno · · Score: 3

    Is it that bad? Yes and no. And I'll give you examples of both:

    A young relative of mine graduated from a respectable state university three months ago with a BS in Chem and a minor in CS. She moved into my Seattle basement and started sending out resumes for "web designer" jobs. I tactfully cautioned her that the market for such jobs was becoming *very* tough and that she might be better off looking to a chem-related company and work towards her development goals over the next few years.

    Over the next few weeks, I became a bit more worried, because of several factors. Foremost, she lacks any experience in the real job market, and thus lacks the basic understanding of how to interview, and how to position herself as a desirable candidate. She's shooting for technical/dev design jobs when she needs to be looking at entry positions. Secondly, like many of her age-mates, she vastly overestimated the depth & value of her technical skills. Since I've done quite a bit of technical interviewing, I gave her my 10-question interview for an entry-level web-app developer. Basic stuff like "What kind of development do you want to do?" and technical zingers (not) like "What does SSL do?" If it has been a real interview, I would have ended it at question 5 in order to save her further humiliation. Finally, her salary expectations are completely unrealistic in the current environment. She's watched her friends with similar skillsets graduate over the past 2 years and walk into $40-70k jobs, so she feels like $40k is a reasonable minimum. This combination frightened me (I want the best for her, but I don't want her living in my basement forever), and I tried to give her some sense of reality. I pointed out that many of her friends in those $40-70k jobs are now unemployed. It didn't take. She continued searching for jobs that don't exist anymore.

    Then I got laid off.

    My company of 300 people had a major financial fuck-up (we grossly overestimated the target market for a new bet-the-company service and instantly saturated it in 4Q2000), and it finally hit hard with a layoff in April. I doubt the company will survive to see 1Q2002; the CFO has the brainpower of a barnacle and the money should run out sometime around September.

    Now my situation is a little different. I have a mixed background (2/3 Tech/Sys+Net + 1/3 Security/InfoMgmt), with 10yrs experience. I don't have an MCSE, CCNA, or any of that crap, but I have experience that I can demonstrate, excellent references, and a heap of work samples. I know my shit, I know how to use it, and I play nice with others.

    But I was blindsided by the layoff. That was stupid; it should not have been a surprise that a large number of the senior staff (read: expensive) would be let go. But I learn from my mistakes, and am relatively self-aware. I went home with my two cardboard boxes of personal belongings and worked on the yard for a few days. When the anger had left, I set about looking for a job in a careful and targeted manner. Yeah, most of the wads of cash are gone, but it took me 5 weeks to find a job with a *better* pay+bene package than the dot-bomb that gave me the heave-ho. It could have been worse, I know, but then again I'm not so proud that I wouldn't have taken work as an electrician or similar if nothing turned up.

    Three months on, my relative is still looking for a job. She can get a job tomorrow at $25+k working for the state as a Chemist I, but she won't apply for it. She clings to the fiction that the fluffy web-dev Javascript-and-Photoshop jobs she wants are still out there. And she clings to the absurd notion that a just-graduated kid deserves $40-60k+. Shit, I graduated in '91 with a triple major at a US-top-10 private university, but I landed right smack into the Bush Sr. recession. It took me 2 months to land a $20k job. I could have held out for a better job then, but I don't regret taking the one offered for a moment. This isn't some sage BS about how I suffered this way or that -- you just have to take a realistic look at your situation, use your brain, and exercise your best options.

    She's got another month, and I'm kicking her out. If the entire US economy were taking a complete shit, instead of a minor dip that's hitting tech kinda hard, maybe I would feel differently. But I have the same sentiment for her as I hold for every other whiner who thinks their trivial grasp of logic and knowledge makes them a technical genius deserving of huge wages. She can go take her unrealistic, job-market-clogging expectations and go live with her parents until she gets a clue. If there are ex-tech-sector workers who would rather go to a homeless shelter than move home or take a job that offends their out-of-balance sensibilities, I only feel sorry for the actual involuntarily homeless folks who have to listen to their whining.

    J

    --
    I think not...(*poof*)
    1. Re:compare and contrast by xeno · · Score: 3

      "Homelessness is not always a choice. "

      This is precisely my point. There are a lot of people for whom homelessness and poverty are an unavoidable reality. I have a lot of sympathy for them, and I do my part to help on a regular basis. Just a few weeks ago, I assembled and donated half a dozen working computers to a place that provides them to economically disadvantaged families.

      What brings out the bile are these displaced tech workers who would rather take food out of the mouths of the *actual* poor rather than move back in with their families or take jobs that provide less than the cushy overblown comfort they're used to. To me, that's someone who is actively doing damage to the community.

      If you read the original article, one of the tech workers admitted that he's in the homeless shelter because he doesn't want to worry his mom. That's pathetic. There are *hungry* people out there, and this fool considers his career embarassment to take precedence. Are you defending that?

      J

      --
      I think not...(*poof*)
  42. Re:What "collage" did you attend? by stripes · · Score: 1
    They sure as fuck didn't teach spelling!

    I'm sure they did, but I didn't take any english classes, or even the full set of CS classes before I left for the work force.

    The real reason I can't spell? I'm dyslexic. So I mostly leave it to the spell checker. The plus side of being dyslexic is I have a pretty good error correction filter (since everything comes in with errors), and I'm really good at the word unscrambling exercises.

    Of corse a disproportionate number of mathematical geniuses are dyslexic, but I apparently didn't get that lucky.

  43. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by stripes · · Score: 2
    4.2% is bad, but not for the reason most people think; with only 4.2% unemployment, it's hard for the economy to grow, because most of that 4.2% are the hard-core untrainable.

    I doubt it. Not for the reason most people think either :-)

    Oh, I believe there may be more then 4.2% of the population that is untrainable for jobs. I don't believe the unemployment rate counts many of those people. The unemployment rate tracks job seekers, so people who have given up (my wife for example) and aren't looking for work anymore are not counted as unemployed.

    A lot of those people are the untrainable, and I believe most active job seekers are trainable (or pre-trained) for something.

    Calculating the unemployment statistic this way has its advantages (decent measure of how many people are competing for any given opening), and disadvantages (doesn't show how many people really are out of work).

    I'm no economist, but I bet the "ideal" unemployment rate is somewhere between 5% and 7%. Remember, 5% unemployment doesn't mean 5% starvation due to months of being out of work; it means 5% are out of a job some time during a given time period. That includes anybody who leaves one job before they find another, and then finds a new job two weeks later that pays more.

    That's not the same unemployment number that gets published. I got counted as unemployed for a few months because after getting layed off I marched down to the unemployment office and signed up to get my money back (in VA at least the unemployment pay pretty much came out of your paycheck, and you can never get back more then you gave in). I have some friends who are too proud/stupid to do the same, so they aren't unemployed, they just have no job. I also know people who quit work out of disgust and are without jobs, and are not being reported as unemployed (they aren't eligible for unemployment insurance benefits, as the quit).

    P.S. yes, I did find another job pretty quick. Actually I had my first offer (no stock, but more cash then my last) within a week or two, but it took three months to find a job I really wanted. I think if you have the same skills it took to get a job in 1992, you can get one again now. Well not quite the same skills (SunOS 4 knolage won't get you anywhere unless you call it Solaris and forget the "1"), but a similar set.

    Go into any American fast-food restaurant or convenience store right now, and it's quite likely that you'll be dealing with idiots who can't even work the cash register without their manager present. If they treat you like crap, they won't get in trouble, because the manager knows he'll have trouble replacing them.

    That may be pretty true, but I think it is more a matter of they can't get better for the money. Fast food service has been crappy for as long as I can remember. That includes a few times of high unemployment. Why? Well I'm guessing that the service can be crappy and the place keeps pulling in money, so enough money is offered only to get a minimum level of service. If they payed enough to get bright cheerful people they would have to pay as much as a real restaurant, which would drive the prices of the "food" up to close to real food, and fewer people would go eat McProtoplasam when they could pay almost the same for real food.

  44. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by stripes · · Score: 2
    1. Why didn't they put any money away for a rainy day? If they bought their own hype, expected to live off stock options, and didn't put any savings away, then they deserve to suffer for their own lack of foresight.

    A fine idea. One not followed often enough in the USA (if you believe government statistics almost nobody has more then two months savings, few even have one months!)

    Why aren't they staying with friends or family who are still employed? If they don't have any in the valley, why don't they move away

    A lot of people have friends pretty much only in the same industry (mostly at the same company). Chances are they were mostly all layed off together.

    and to my mind it's far less injurous to your dignity than mooching off government handouts

    Note that in many places the government handouts came directly out of your pay check (or very close to it), and you can't get out more then you payed in. In fact you can't even get as much as you payed in back (in VA you can get the last 18 months back, then your screwed). Also note that unless you are taking these handouts you aren't unemployed (that is you don't count that was in the government statistics).

    Even if you have saved up, it is pretty foolish not to march off and get your handout while looking for work. Or at least it's foolish not to find out for real what is involved. In VA it is about an hour and a half to set it up, and one brief phone call per week (assuming you are approved to do "resume searches").

    You can get a dog that's just as cute and friendly at the SPCA for under $100

    Or at least not a whole lot over. I beleve my mutt was $130, closer to $200 with shots and all. Much smarter then the (~$300) purebreed I had as a kid too.

    "3.2 percent unemployment rate"? Poor frigging babies! Go over to France, where they have all sorts of welfare and unemployment benefits. And, directly related to same, unemployment around 15%.

    Be sure those numbers were calculated the same way. Fifteen of my friends have no jobs. Ten of my friends have no jobs, and are looking. Only four of them are unemployed. How is the 15% number for the french calculated?

  45. Re:Why would "experienced" risk working @ VC start by stripes · · Score: 2
    Take a job at the big megacorp or a small company that's been around for 10+ years (before the dotcom craze). These people at these places are not getting the axe.

    Wrong.

    Worldcom is over ten years old. It is a really big company. It is the number two US long distance carrier. It is not only the largest ISP, but it is larger then the next twelve ISPs combined.

    It also layed off a ton of people about three months ago. Nice severance packages though.

    The megacorps will not (for the most part) go bust, but they will lay people off as part of their strategy to not go bankrupt.

    Polorid is more then ten years old. It may be 100 years old. They announced layoffs last week (I think).

    Kodak is over 100 years old. They may not have had layoffs yet (I think they have though), but looking at their annual reports, they will.

  46. Re:From what I've seen ... by stripes · · Score: 2
    What is wrong with returning a pointer that you used malloc to allocate?? as long as you remember to free it later.

    When you are asked to do the modification in line the caller isn't going to free a return'ed buffer. In fact it may not look at the return value at all.

    How many programs would break if strcat started returning a malloc'ed buffer?

    P.S. send me your name, I'll make sure you don't get an interview :-)

    (yeah, it was a joke, I expect you would pay more attention during a real interview, plus there are other questions)

  47. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by stripes · · Score: 2
    I got laid off, was laid off for well over a month (ya I know not long), before I took a pay cut and generally bent over to take it up the arse so to speak just to get a job. (Try having about 20% of my salary held as a completion bonus/aka we'll screw you if you can't meet our insane deadlines).

    Either you are in a bad area for jobs, don't interview well, or arn't as good as you think. Like I said I was unemployed for three months, that was basically through the end of May...

    You try saving up 4 months of income, lets see how well you do at it, sure you won't be tempted to work on that car loan with that money will you?

    I have about two years income saved. I would like to save enough to live on by the time I reach retirment (I don't think the social security I'm forced to pay will do much for me). My car and my wife's are payed for.

    I'm a programmer, and you'd be amased what a pain it is to get a decent job, they send you into technical tests made by some idiot with a book that has syntax errors in the questions and no right answers because the test is wrong. (I know I took the same test at 2 different companies and 6 of the questions were wrong, and 1 was completely irrelevant -- Who was the original author of Perl?).

    If you aren't interviewing with your coworkers it doesn't sound like it is a job I would be aiming for. If that's the best in the area maybe you should think about moving? If you don't want to move maybe you should think about what it's costing you. I know what my refusal to move costs me (it's humid here, cost of living is high, traffic is bad).

    It's rough to cut income/expenses, I cut as far as I could go, you say move out of that expensive place, does the word LEASE mean anything to you? If I move out it costs me more with the lawsuit insuing my abondoning on the property.

    Your writing a reply to someone else. I didn't say move in my last message. Of corse I did in this message...but this would be a planned leaving, not right in the middle of a lease. Later at the end of the lease, or when you get hired some place that will pay the fee to break the lease as part of moving expenses...

    Sell that expensive car? Hrmm great when I paid $22k for a 2000 Cougar last June, I owe $3250 on it (tanked spare money into it), and I could sell it for about $10k today, that'll do me a lot of good, net me maybe $6500 to buy another wreak? Great idea there.

    Again, even though you clicked "reply to" on my message, you are quoting someone else.

    You could sell that car, I use to drive a $700 car, it sucked, but was livable. Today's junk mail shows a used Saturn for $5000, if that is the cheapest car you can find swapping it for your car and $1000 may not be a good idea because you know your car is in pretty good shape, and reapirs should be both rare and free.

    Why can't we CLOSE THE BORDERS!!!!!

    Well it would be rather cruel to the rest of the world, plus we can't produce enough oil and other things for domestic use. Plus we make a fair amount of exports that we would lose. Closing the borders would make the current economic downturn look like the golden age, you know back when we all had food...

    Or did you mean why can't we just protect jobs in your field, and keep screwing everyone else?

  48. Re:Here come the (resume) liars! by stripes · · Score: 2
    Isn't there something wrong with a resume that boasts of 6-7 years of experience, but the person has only been out of school for 3 years?

    I had three years of experience before entering collage. It may have been mostly CS and QA, but it was still technical.

    I've dropped all of my pre-collage experience and some of the stuff from collage in order to keep my resume to two pages. I hadn't realized it would keep me from being falsely branded a liar as well!

  49. Re:From what I've seen ... by stripes · · Score: 2
    I think the real problem is that you didn't know good code when you saw it. The best people were not the ones who looped over the string to find the length, but the ones who called strlen(). As the AC just said, strlen() is optimized, written in assembler.

    No, when I said "one pass" I didn't mean it had to be their loop, calling strlen is "one pass". As far as this question goes yes calling strlen is better then doing it oneself, for pretty much every possible reason (maybe faster, far more readable, and less likely to get the call wrong). However I normally don't count off for doing it with a loop.

    If I had asked for it to be as fast as possible, or asked for something where work can be combined with the length calculation, then I might have cared.

    I do tend to ask why someone made a choice, and not so much care if they make the same one I do, just if they have a good reason. Well, except if the choice is "mallocing something and not freeing it" or other things that are ever so clearly bugs.

    After all surprisingly few people manage to get the bloody thing right. If it works, and doesn't leak memory, the answers to the other questions tend to be more important (esp. the two sort questions, and the trick regex question...).

    One of the sort questions is "in any language you like", and the other just requires a description of the algo.

    Otherwise, you've got what seem to me to be good ideas about interviewing.

    Thanks, it seems to be the only thing I have produced at my new job -- three interviews in my second week.

    But you've made what seems a dangerous assumption to me - that there's one correct solution to the problem, and it's that one. I would say some of those people had better solutions, though I would still consider your way acceptable.

    Nah, I'm more lax on what is correct then you think. Normally I'm pretty happy to get O(...) right. In this case I'm slightly more strict then O(N), I want to see O(2N) -- which I know is technically the same as O(N), but I don't know the right notation.

  50. Re:From what I've seen ... by stripes · · Score: 3
    Neither should you hand a programmer pen and paper and tell them to code. Set them down at the devel environment, with access to all the man pages/language reference you normally have, and let them code. Forcing them to work in an unfamiler environment just because it's an interview is silly, and will probably lose you many qualified applicants.

    Depends on how trivial the code should be. "Write a function that reverses a C string in place" should be OK with no references to the man pages, up on a white board. In the past I have asked exactly that question, given the interviewee a xterm with vi or emacs running and let them at it.

    On the whiteboard I would forgive simple syntax mistakes and the like. There don't need to be any function calls (a lot of people call strlen, which is fine, but not needed). I'm looking for things like "did you malloc a buffer you don't need, and then forget to free it, or worse yet return it?". If they did the online version, did they test it? With both even and odd length strings? A zero length one? A single byte?

    A lot of people who claimed to know C couldn't get the syntax right for the function (given a compiler, I expect one to be able to compile edit compile until you at least get syntactically correct code!).

    More people didn't know what "in-place" means (hint, if you aren't sure what you are being asked to code, ask for a clarification).

    Still others merely used a poor algo, like malloc'ing a second buffer, copying the string in reverse to that buffer, and then moving it back to the first buffer. Those people are minimally qualified. If they do well on other questions the may still get an offer.

    Remarkably few made one pass over the string to find the length, and then a single extra pass to do the reverse. Those are the people I was looking for :-)

    The thing to remember when interviewing is any environment you give them will be unfamiliar. They will be under a whole lot of pressure (esp. now, the three people I have interviewed since my multi-month unemployment have received more simpathey from me, but not easier questions). Don't base the whole outcome on a single question.

    Seriously don't base it all on a logic puzzle. They may have heard it before. Two flash lights, five people blah blah. Why are manhole covers round? So on... You may end up with a drooling idiot that red the same interviewing books (or logic puzzles...with answers!), or who got asked those same questions last interview and at least was smart enough to find the answers later!

    I do show potential maintance programmers a buggy line of code and ask them to spot the bug, or short functions with obvious bugs. But these are clear bugs (like if (a or not a) then x), and not the whole interview.

  51. Re:Sam Kinison would know how to put this by marmoset · · Score: 1

    Tschuh! Way to start an inverse "Grapes of Wrath", bud.

  52. Re:It is really that bad by CaptTofu · · Score: 1

    there's tons of jobs in Merrimack Valley - did you try Fidelity? I would even check in Hanover (Dartmouth) with the University. Also, consider down in Mass - Westford, Andover, Burlington, Acton, Marlborough, etc... All are within a 30-60 minute commute.

  53. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by CaptTofu · · Score: 1

    Nova Scotia? New Brunswick? Man, I really want to visit (I'm in NH). It must be really nice there.

  54. The job market is great... by sinnergy · · Score: 2

    ... but most of those that can't find money in dot coms are often the folks that
    - don't really have any marketable skills
    - Decided to drop out of college because they thought they could make just as much or more without a degree (sorry, it still matters to any real employer)
    - Don't have enough capital to start up their own consulting firm (about 2 to 3 months salary)
    - Never really had any talent to begin with and bullshitted their way to their dot com position anyhow.

    This isn't to say that there aren't people out there that *are* qualified and still can't find jobs, but in my experience, those are also the same people that can't/won't move from an area with a glut of people that are technically inclined to another area where their skills might be appreciated more (Yes, we know you like the Valley, but bite your lip a little more move to Des Moines, or Cleveland. Give another city a chance).

    I am always of the opinion that if your work ethic is good, you have some kind of marketable skill set, you MARKET that skill set properly (no, that does not consist solely of posting your resume on monster and thingamajob) and are willing to be flexible, you can get a decent, well paying and fulfilling job. It's all yours for the taking if you have the desire.

    And if for some reason you DO have 2 to 3 months of living expenses in the bank, start your own company. Learn from the mistakes of your other employers and do it better. Realize that their failure could be YOUR ticket to success.

  55. Re:Several things... by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1
    OK - here's my jobs list, in chronological order: paper boy (afternoon), paper boy (morning), HS projectionist (carbon arcs!), HS radio announcer and disc-jockey, summer field-hand, commercial announcer, materials handling office-manager / salesman / driver, coffee shop short-order cook, data-processing operator (tape-ape), DP night manager, H200 assembly and COBOL programmer, DEC TOPS-10 computer operator, DOS/VS computer operator, DP supervisor, COBOL Programmer trainee (twice, let's not get into that), network install manager, network support manager and programmer, OS/VS1 systems programmer, MVS systems programmer (three different companies), Big-8 IT senior consultant, Big-5 IT manager, IT consultant for a small private firm, and now an IT management consultant for a large multi-national firm).

    Hehe, check it:
    • product tester for CTW Apple ][ computer games, age 9
    • paper boy (morning 7 days/wk), age 10-12
    • computer tutor for public library (volunteer), age 10-13
    • computer tutor for hire (consultant), age 11-current
    • computer repair guy, age 11-current :)
    • dishwasher, chicken rack cleaner at KFC, age 13-15 (my folks forged my papers to be 16+ so I could work with heavy machinery and earn more $$$.. Helps being 5'10" at age 13..)
    • cashier, cart pushing guy at supermarket, age 15-16
    • token guy at amusement park, concession lacky, age 16-18
    • car valet, age 17
    • skeet trap loader, age 17
    • dockboy, age 20
    • campus computer consultant (pc/mac/sunos/vax), age 19-21


    And that doesn't even count my more boring (yet more lucrative) "career" as a sys/netadmin (have ssh client, will travel).. Hell, I'm still looking forward to 30..

    Life's a funny ol' thing, innit?

    Your Working Boy,
    - Otis (GAIM: OtisWild)
  56. Re:Have you ever tried to survive on minimum wage? by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    Move to Buffalo, NY.

    You can buy a fucking HOUSE there on minimum wage.

    And they're wired pretty well: wangle some night course action and you can hop onto a Ultra5 in Bell Hall ;)

    So far, I've been pretty lucky. I pretty much gotz my sysadmin/netadmin sk33lz in many flavors, and I don't drool or smell much. My current gig is a blast. I actually took a big NOC provider to school on VPNs recently, though that isn't really saying much :). Still, if everything went totally pear shaped I woudln't have too much trouble relocating up north and finishing my degree, playing Shadowrun, and otherwise geeking out until broadband actually rolls out ;)


    Your Working Boy,
    - Otis (GAIM: OtisWild)

  57. Re:Here's what you do. by Kiwi · · Score: 2
    Also, if you turn hamburgers long enough, your work skills become obsolete, and your potential employers know that.

    Very, very true. Back, before I got a tech job, I was working at a gas station. We had a very intelligent, older gentleman who worked graveyard. Since I worked Graveyard also, I got to know this person fairly well. He used to talk to me about programming mainframes and about operating systems and languages I never heard of (the letters PL/I spring to mind). However, he now has (and still has, I just went there yesterday) a job manning the gas station, being the person behind the counter who handles "10 on pump 5".

    He is in a trap. He works graveyard (late at night), so he can't take day classes to become up-to-date on his computer skills. He is from the generation of "keep the same job forever", so it is difficult for him to move to another job. Point of reference: He is the only person who still works at this Gas station who worked there when I worked there, six years ago.

    I also met another person, in his 40s, who used to work for EPYX during the video game boom of the 1980s. In 1990 or so, EPYX finally went under, surviving the post-video-game crash for six or seven years, and he lost his job. He never recovered from that to get another technical job. He is, last time I talked to him, a janitor who cleans buses.

    However, I do not believe the job market is as bad as some people say it is. I still get "cold calls" from recruiters. A friend of mine recently posted avability at dice.com and received 20 calls. People with solid technical skills are still being hired.

    - Sam

    --

    The secret to enjoying Slashdot is to realize that it should not be taken too seriously.

  58. Re:Here's what you do. by Kiwi · · Score: 2
    However, I do not believe the job market is as bad as some people say it is. I still get "cold calls" from recruiters. A friend of mine recently posted avability at dice.com and received 20 calls. People with solid technical skills are still being hired.

    Some other data points from my circle of friends:

    • One friend whose dot-com went completely under got a job within one or two weeks.
    • As I mentioned, another friend got 20 calls after posting availbility on dice.
    • A non-techniical friend found a job about two months after losing their dot-com job.

    Maybe I just hand around the kind of people who have what it takes to get good jobs.

    - Sam

    --

    The secret to enjoying Slashdot is to realize that it should not be taken too seriously.

  59. From what I've seen ... by dustpuppy · · Score: 5
    it's only those who have no real IT skills that are getting shaken out of the market.

    I attend job interviews (as an interviewer) on a semi-regular basis where my role is to ask the technical questions. Out of 10 people I may interview, only 2 or 3 will have any decent knowledge in therr area - the rest really struggle with even basic concepts/situations.

    I find it really depressing that there are so many people in the IT industry with useless skill sets or with no in-depth knowledge. And to make it worse, most times they don't even realise (or want to accept) that their skill base is so poor.

    From what I have seen, skilled IT people have no problems getting jobs - it's (generally) the unskilled ones who do.

    1. Re:From what I've seen ... by kneeo · · Score: 1


      I'm looking for things like "did you malloc a buffer you don't need, and then forget to free it, or worse yet return it?".


      What is wrong with returning a pointer that you used malloc to allocate??
      as long as you remember to free it later.

    2. Re:From what I've seen ... by kneeo · · Score: 1

      damn... I was just asking a question. I never claimed to be a programmer. Im still in school, and just had a serious programming question. Yeah, Im still learning. I know.

    3. Re:From what I've seen ... by kneeo · · Score: 1

      inline...yeah but...

      int main()
      {
      char *temp=NULL;
      temp=someFunctionThatReturnsCharPointerByMalloc();
      free(temp);
      return 0;
      }

      this is not inline. Isnt this how some standard C functions work??

    4. Re:From what I've seen ... by The+Cat · · Score: 1

      False.

      There is a very thin band of time between "skilled" and "too old" where, if you don't get a solid stable job, you will not get another offer.

      The more experience you have, the more likely it is that you're too old and too "expensive." Of course, I've never quite understood that last one since its the company that decides how much salary to pay.

      As usual, bureaucratically-operated businesses have it totally backwards. Hire the young, inexperienced people to work long hours for low pay, and lay off the guy that just figured out how the product cycle works.

      Besides, even if you get the job after tap-dancing your way through four interviews with a big smile.. BIG SMILE (while you're paying your electric bill with a credit card) and signing an 87-page agreement, you're out after the project is completed anyway. Who are they kidding?

      I say, guaranteed contract or forget it. Pay the full annual salary plus 20% as severance REGARDLESS of the reason for concluding employment, or find some other poor sap who's willing to put up with this crap and have his family depend on some semi-ethical, whining simp's day-to-day mood for their livelihoods.

    5. Re:From what I've seen ... by skullY · · Score: 3
      We give them a pretty basic test in their interview (write a function that can do some-trivial-task, taking these inputs and giving this output; you have 30 mins, a pad of paper and a pen. If you get the order of arguments to fgets() the wrong way around, don't worry too much, we look that stuff up as well sometimes, even when we're not under interview pressure) and then talk to them about it afterwards.
      You're an idiot. You wouldn't hand a backhoe operator a shovel and tell them to dig a small hole to judge how well they'll operate a backhoe (Besides, that fiber is too far down to hit with a shovel). Neither should you hand a programmer pen and paper and tell them to code. Set them down at the devel environment, with access to all the man pages/language reference you normally have, and let them code. Forcing them to work in an unfamiler environment just because it's an interview is silly, and will probably lose you many qualified applicants. (How many months have you been looking, now?)
      --
      When I was able to do my own spam-armoring, you got a chance to email me. Now you can only hope I see your reply.
    6. Re:From what I've seen ... by david.heyman · · Score: 2

      One of the things that this points is the fact that with the rise of IDEs and so many people having learned programming with IDEs instead of with vi we have an army of people that can't program from their head. It is like having people walk around with language translation dictionaries instead of having them rack their brain trying to come up with the word. The best programmers I know are those that use IDEs as if they are using a plain text editor. It CAN give them all sorts of ways to finish that line of code but they still just write it out.

      The same goes for people that learned HTML only using Dreamweaver et al. They couldn't dig down into the code to figure out why something was misbehaving for their life.

      BTW US Citizen with skills/experience and looking for work. Hire Me!

    7. Re:From what I've seen ... by Karellen · · Score: 1

      You're an idiot

      Well, fuck you too.

      Other stuff

      Yeah, but you might hand them a backhoe just to see if they know which way around to hold it.

      We're not asking for rocket science level algorithms here, and not that bothered if the code will compile or not - we just want to see if they at least have some semblance of a clue about what they claim they can do in their resume. In the talk afterwards we generally ask them about what they thought of their solution to the problem, where possible errors might be, where their algorithm might be improved, how they'd test their solution and stuff.

      While, yes, giving them access to a dev environment and a copy of K&R would help them somewhat, it would be nice to know that they can do the basics (which is all we're asking) without having to look it up.

      I went through the same thing at my interview for the company and did fine. Being out of my element didn't bother me at all. I kind of liked the challenge. Hell, it was nice to get a fucking technical interview where I could show my interviewers that I could do what they were looking for.

      --
      Why doesn't the gene pool have a life guard?
    8. Re:From what I've seen ... by Karellen · · Score: 2

      Can't be bothered. WTF _is_ a backhoe?

      --
      Why doesn't the gene pool have a life guard?
    9. Re:From what I've seen ... by Karellen · · Score: 4

      We were looking for just a competent C programmer for the last 6 months now. Just someone who can code in C.

      We give them a pretty basic test in their interview (write a function that can do some-trivial-task, taking these inputs and giving this output; you have 30 mins, a pad of paper and a pen. If you get the order of arguments to fgets() the wrong way around, don't worry too much, we look that stuff up as well sometimes, even when we're not under interview pressure) and then talk to them about it afterwards.

      The number of people we get in for a C programming job who are totally incompetent is astounding. We weren't really fussy; we _really_ needed someone. But nothing. Just a stream of totally clueless people, claiming to be C coders with 2 or 3 years commercial experience. Some of them couldn't even get a for() loop right, would read 20 bytes into an int using fgets() (why 20? Who knows. It's just a number they picked out of the air) and just have _no_ idea at all.

      If you're competent, you can get a job. But most people, in my experience as someone who was looking for just semi-competency in the end, aren't.

      --
      Why doesn't the gene pool have a life guard?
    10. Re:From what I've seen ... by CyberLeader · · Score: 2

      Dustpuppy's observations match what I've seen both as director of e-business for a couple of companies and owner of my own. When the Web was new and hot and certain skill sets were short, the threshold for entry dropped waaay down and anyone who could pick up an HTML book and manage to make Dreamweaver do something would be employed.

      On top of that, however, the same mistakes were made at the company level, and I'm not just referring to the dot coms themselves: lots of body shops, staffing firms, head hunters, recruiters, and contracting companies sprung up overnight and were deluded into thinking they knew what they were doing, buoyed along first by the artificial Y2K bubble and then the temporary dotcom bubble. The bubble has now burst, and entire companies are suddenly discovering that, crap, they don't know how to sell IT services, and worse yet their stable of talent is full of JavaScript hacks and PowerPoint kings.

      The challenge for most recruiters these days is separating the hacks from the hackers; if you have solid skills, the market is still fine - you just need the patience to separate yourself from the hacks.

      --

      Software Shouldn't Suck

      E-mail: frank at jacquette dot spamless com (remove the spamless!)

    11. Re:From what I've seen ... by slamb · · Score: 1

      Isnt this how some standard C functions work??

      Not really. A lot of standard C functions do stuff like this:

      struct hostent *gethostbyname (const char *name) {
      static hostent retval;
      [...]
      return
      }

      They return an argument, but it is not dynamically allocated. Calling free() on it would be a bad idea. Advantage: callers don't need to worry about calling free(). Disadvantages: they need to duplicate it if they want it to be valid after the next call to the same function. You need to use a thread-specific data key to be safe in threads.

      In fact, the only standard C function I can think of at the moment that returns something it malloc()s is strdup() (well, aside from malloc()/calloc()/realloc() themselves, of course).

    12. Re:From what I've seen ... by slamb · · Score: 2

      On the whiteboard I would forgive simple syntax mistakes and the like. There don't need to be any function calls (a lot of people call strlen, which is fine, but not needed).

      Remarkably few made one pass over the string to find the length, and then a single extra pass to do the reverse. Those are the people I was looking for :-)

      I think the real problem is that you didn't know good code when you saw it. The best people were not the ones who looped over the string to find the length, but the ones who called strlen(). As the AC just said, strlen() is optimized, written in assembler. Plus, hat loop is just slightly harder to read than strlen(str) and a typo could cause a bug. This is much more true with more complicated functions. Use the existing stuff unless you've got a good reason not to. The standard C library functions are well-written and well-tested.

      Otherwise, you've got what seem to me to be good ideas about interviewing. But you've made what seems a dangerous assumption to me - that there's one correct solution to the problem, and it's that one. I would say some of those people had better solutions, though I would still consider your way acceptable.

    13. Re:From what I've seen ... by jasontheking · · Score: 1

      RIP the concept known as "training".

      This really shits me. I had over a year of being refused for every job that I went for, because of "no experience" , even when they were specifically asking for graduates.

      One place had the nerve of asking for graduates , and then asking them how to fix problems with aircraft flight sensors (the company was an airline) in the interview. Yeah , like I'm going to know that...

      Being unemployed was so @*&^% depressing...

    14. Re:From what I've seen ... by ccoakley · · Score: 1
      a backhoe is a metal monster weighing in at several tons. It is used for such tasks as digging out ditches and wells. It runs on deisel and is not generally *held*. I think that is why the AC said you were embarassing yourself. The origional poster below you was inferring that asking such trivial questions were likely to get wrong answers (a similar analogy: you don't interview pilots by asking them to fly a kite). I see his point, though the manner was a bit rude

      --
      Network Security: It always comes down to a big guy with a gun.
    15. Re:From what I've seen ... by jeremyp · · Score: 1

      Not bad except because the linefeeds all seem to have disappeared everything after the opening brace of the for loop is commented out. Also, the addition of one itty bitty char variable would mean you could use normal assignments instead of that exclusive-or crap.

      Oh yes, and the &lt has been munged by slashdot, use that preview button....

      --
      All I want is a secure system where it's easy to do anything I want. Is that too much to ask ~~ Randall Munroe
    16. Re:From what I've seen ... by akuma(x86) · · Score: 1

      void reverse_string_in_place(char *str) { int length = strlen(str); for (int ii = 0; ii (length/2); ++ii) { // Swap str[ii] with str[length - 1 - ii] str[ii] ^= str[length - 1 - ii]; str[length - 1 - ii] ^= str[ii]; str[ii] ^= str[length - 1 - ii]; } }

    17. Re:From what I've seen ... by Kraft · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, would you care to list some of the questions you ask during an interview?

      -Kraft

      --

      -Kraft
      Live and let live
    18. Re:From what I've seen ... by coffee17 · · Score: 1
      You only see 2-3 out of 10 people with any knowledge. Well, that alone makes it seem bad; but consider just how many HR are weeding out before you even get to them.

      But on the note of HR, I wonder how often they inappropriately weed out people who actually have honest resumes in favor of someone who blatently lies "to get my foot in the door." Bah, I interviewed someone to potentially be my junior admin, and his "extensive background in UNIX" turned out to be that he used 'pine' to read his email an a university solaris server. "But I just said that to get my foot in the door, give me a chance, and I can learn." Sorry, while junior is an entry level position, someone must no *something* or they will be far worse than useless. I asked him if he had a computer, he said he did. I then asked why he couldn't have put linux or freebsd on his home machine and try to learn on his own, and he didn't really answer. I explained that I wasn't going to gamble on someone with no knowledge and no apparent inclination to learn, and I certainly do not want to deal with people who try to say what they think I want to hear, and went to get the next interviewer, with 25 minutes of my 30 unused. Sadly after I told HR my opinions, the insisted on wasting other people's time interviewing him, as they might find some other position for him. Bah, HR didn't even seem to be upset that he lied about the primary requisite for the job... "everyone lies a little." "I didn't" "Yes, and we would have passed you over if you hadn't come from such a good school." ... WTF, the school I come from doesn't mean shit about what I know. I know many people who graduated from my suposedly good school who primarily passed by taking as many classes as were offered which had group projects. Bah, there's gotta be a better system to find people. I hate to say this, but perhaps a centralized system which actually did fact checking is the answer. Sure, in theory this is what head hunters are supposed to be, but they only factcheck by hounding one's references, and you can easily get friends to lie for you as references, just pick people with old-sounding voices.

    19. Re:From what I've seen ... by VampireByte · · Score: 2

      So how do you like working as a software developer at Microsoft?

      --

      Run and catch, run and catch, the lamb is caught in the blackberry patch.

  60. VISA's by doomicon · · Score: 1

    Man, I'm sure glad we allowed more VISA workers to come and help our country during the shortage of technical labor. Companies such as Sun, Lucent, Nortel etc.. sure knew what they were doing lobbying for more VISA's, now they're laying people off left and right.:-D Before you start flaming, this is comical, NOT political:-D

    --

    Awesome!
  61. Silly Valley rents: a factor? by Apuleius · · Score: 4

    Just how much of this is due to the insane
    rents in the SF Bay Area? I'm (almost)
    willing to bet that no such story is happening
    over in Boston, which certainly saw enough
    of both the boom and bust, and where
    rents are high but not insane.

    1. Re:Silly Valley rents: a factor? by UnifiedTechs · · Score: 1

      The idea is solid and eventually it will lower rents, but the problem is like the one we are in. We pay $2400 a month for a small 4 bedroom house for me and my room-mates. Our landlord bought this house in the middle of the housing rush and payed WAY to much for it most likly, they are a young couple and probably figured it to be a great cash cow. When our lease is up I plan on renegotiating a cheaper rent, but with the inflated price they payed I bet a fair value will not pay the morgage. If they lower the rent they make no money or even lose some, if they try to sell it they lose a fortune (If they CAN sell it, the one accross the street has been for sale for 4 months which used to be unheard of) either way they lose so they will try to keep it up, enough people in the bay area are probably in the same deal and will try to keep prices inflated. Why don't I move out? I have 2 semsters of school left till I get my degree and I don't feel like transfering with all the hassles involved. My Degree?? Telecommunications managment, lol..

  62. Re:Several things...(re Vegas) by Driph · · Score: 1
    Like the idea of Las Vegas? There are all kinds of IT jobs seeking your skills there.

    Minor quibble.. actually, Las Vegas probably isn't the city you want to be in if you're searching for work in the industry. We've gone through quite a few dotcoms that brought in people from all over the country and then collapsed with the rest of the em. With Xuma going under and PPro laying off their staff, that's even more unemployed workers to the fold. Casinos can only hire so many (although it is a bit easier to find IT/admin type positions out here because of em). Trust me, unless you are coming to work in the service or construction/development industry, Vegas is fairly dry these days. :/

    --

    --
    driph
  63. Re:Sad.. Really Truly by juuri · · Score: 1

    80k after taxes?

    ...that means they were making around 130k with cali taxes... no way any of these guys were making that. they were the 100k skimmers, cashing in on the opportunity.

    --
    --- I do not moderate.
  64. Why the hell not? by juuri · · Score: 1

    Boy oh boy is slashdot full of some jealous little know-it-alls. Sheesh you guys come crawling out of the woodwork to trounce and despire these dotcom yokels who made a lot and spent it all.

    Why? They did their duty as Americans. They made money. They spent it. The consumed. What more could you ask of them?

    The fact is the dot com bubble and the senseless overpaying of undertalented people was a great thing for the economy of the US and especially that of California. Thanks to the dotcom fiascos Cali made it up to being the worlds 5th largest economy. Thanks to Cali the US prospered. You guys seem to forget, in your bitter jealousy over not getting paid too much to do little, that these people were in the upper tax brackets.

    They paid a shiet load of taxes. 100k a year is 41.5% taxes in cali. That means they paid in one year what some people pay in 2-4 years of employment. Thats great for everyone.

    They spent all their money on homes and cars they couldnt afford. Well someone built those houses and someone watched a robot build those cars ;) They bought $200 dinners in places like Bix and Elisabeth Daniel in SF. Some waiters got some kick ass tips. Cab drivers made out like bandits. Even the homeless did pretty good (homeless populations increaded near record percentages).

    Now its all returning to normal and everyone who moved here for the money with no plans is getting chewed up. Oh well at least they were here long enough to pump money into the economy that will help some social services for a couple of years.

    Personally I've lived on less than half of what I make now in SF. There are lots of people that work in the service industries here, who get by. It is possible. Its good to see rents on studio apartments near me drop from $1500 back to $900 in a couple months.

    Ahh you got to love it, its America in all its glory rolled into a 3 year bubble. I wonder where the next one will be.

    --
    --- I do not moderate.
    1. Re:Why the hell not? by WildBeast · · Score: 1

      Thanks for your post, at least it's not full of flamebait like the others.
      What can I say? You said everything I wanted to say and even more.

  65. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Angst+Badger · · Score: 2
    You say the jobs are there... no, these are "junk" jobs.

    It's exactly people with this sort of pompous, bullshit attitude who deserve to be homeless. I worked restaurant and retail sales jobs until I got my first tech job (web design and programming) in 1996, and my salary went up and up until this past year. Since then, I've been through four tech jobs after leaving a stable but relatively low paying job with a public school system to work at Intel, getting laid off there, and then getting laid off by another startup, and finally ending up at a web entertainment company that is actually pulling a modest profit. I never saw the gigantic salaries of the Silicon Valley people -- I was never willing to put up with that lifestyle -- but $65k/yr wasn't too bad for never breaking a sweat or forming a callus and seldom working over 40 hours a week.

    In between "real" jobs, I grabbed any temp opportunity I could, and flipped burgers a few times, too. I didn't have any trouble finding "junk" jobs on account of my background -- low-level retail managers expect a high turnover rate anyway, and there's no "couple years" of training involved in working a cash register. I'm still behind on a lot of bills, but not nearly as far as I would have been if I had sat around believing that I was actually worth what I had been paid during the bullshit-fueled internet boom.

    The real world isn't Disneyland, no matter how much it might have looked that way to the VC junkies in parts of the tech industry. Reality -- and what is so far a pretty minor downturn -- has come home to roost, and if these cream puffs are throwing up their hands and getting in soup lines because they're too full of shit to wash dishes, I don't want to know what they'll do if the economy goes into a full recession.

    --

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
  66. Re:Mission, full of teachers, cops and now dot.com by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

    Found the article about shelters and housing.
    http://www.com-dyn.com/html/pages/newHousingstrain frm.html

  67. Mission, full of teachers, cops and now dot.com'rs by BrookHarty · · Score: 3

    Ive been reading articles about teachers, police officers, ambulance drivers and other public workers living in missions in California. The rent is too high for these lower income jobs, that people are sleeping in thier cars, staying at missions.
    Here in Washington State we offer Police Officers in Cali, houses (with local credit union bank loans) and moving expenses to move up here, and live in our smaller cities where they need trained police. Works great, better or same pay and they can now own a house, and afford to have a family.
    I havnt been worried about dot com'ers ive been worried about all those people who make the cities run on a daily basis, not being able to ame ends meet. Sounds like a total collapse waiting to happen.

  68. Anecdotes VS statistics. by crovira · · Score: 2

    Been There, Done that.. Its a bitch ...

    The problem with anecdotal evidence is that nobody believes the problem is widespread. (Like the dust bowl pictures of Okies in Life magazine right next to ads for luxury items.)

    Then the problem with statistics is that nobody believes them because they're just faceless numbers.

    Having spent the first six months of Y2K in Manhattan ($ all around but none for a job for me,) I was an anecdote. I found something but the burn rate hurt like you can't believe. I can no longer afford to retire for twenty years and I'm living from paycheck to paycheck retiring debt instead.

    But now that companies, including the one that hired me, have stopped "wasting money" for head hunter commissions, life for the recently unemployed (some of whom are head-hunters,) has got a lot tougher.

    The objective reality is that its chaos out there.

    I have house cats with a higher IQ than the most powerful man in the country (USA.)

    He's out in Europe making Canada look good, trying to sell a useless pork barrel boondoggle that nobody wants and which utterly fails to address the threat from smaller nations rightfully angry about being so callously abused for their resources.

    McVeigh didn't use a missile. He used a truck. Will the missile shield cover the interstate too?

    Hurtling to oblivion racing to get there faster than the heat death of the universe.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  69. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Syberghost · · Score: 2

    There have been consumer satisfaction surveys that show that consumer satisfaction with fast-food restaurants goes down during low-unemployment periods, and goes up during high-unemployment periods.

    I maintain that the reason for this is that during low unemployment, the better workers have all got jobs, and the job pool has fewer good workers left in it. Therefore the fast food places have to hire the best people they can get, but those aren't as good as the best people available at 5% unemployment.

    Further, you can't fire them, because they'll not only be hard to replace, but the pool of replacements mostly consists of people who couldn't get a job.

    I'm not the only person who has reached this conclusion:

    Here's a link to an audio recording of a National Public Radio "All Things Considered" segment on the subject.

    Here's Cnet's Mike Yamamoto talking about it.

    Here's ADT Mag's Charles Trepper on the subject.

    You'll find that below 3%, it's hard to put ANY warm body into a job, much less find a good employee. Somewhere close to that percentage, you find the people who are pretending to look for a job, so they can collect unemployment assistance, but deliberately sabotaging their interviews or even outright defrauding the system so that they'll never be employed.

    Personally, I think they should subtract another 3% from the figures and report 3% unemployment or less as 0% unemployment. They already don't count people who are unemployed and not filing unemployment claims or applying for jobs.

    -

  70. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Syberghost · · Score: 3

    c'mmon, 4.2% unemployment is not that bad. In my country, unemployment is around 10%.

    4.2% is bad, but not for the reason most people think; with only 4.2% unemployment, it's hard for the economy to grow, because most of that 4.2% are the hard-core untrainable.

    Go into any American fast-food restaurant or convenience store right now, and it's quite likely that you'll be dealing with idiots who can't even work the cash register without their manager present. If they treat you like crap, they won't get in trouble, because the manager knows he'll have trouble replacing them.

    It's a little better at 4.2% than it was at 3.3%, but the principle still holds.

    I'm no economist, but I bet the "ideal" unemployment rate is somewhere between 5% and 7%. Remember, 5% unemployment doesn't mean 5% starvation due to months of being out of work; it means 5% are out of a job some time during a given time period. That includes anybody who leaves one job before they find another, and then finds a new job two weeks later that pays more.

    I'd further be willing to bet that 3% of the potential job pool are people who couldn't hold a job as a greeter at Wal-mart if it paid $50,000 a year, and that if any one of 'em were taking your order at McDonald's you'd consider physical violence.

    -

  71. San Jose up to SF: Dysfunction personified by FreeUser · · Score: 2

    Last fall I took a 3 week vacation and just flew around the country: myself, a sleeping back, a small pup tent, and a small plane. Sometimes I would camp out next to the plane, other times I would find a hotel room.

    When I went to visit my grandmother at her nursing home in San Jose I discovered that there was no hotel room available anywhere within an absurd distance. Had I wanted to get a room I would have needed to book months (!!) in advance. Months, long before I had even considered making the trip.

    I've been around the world twice, and in all my travels I have never run into such absurdity. No accomodations, at any price.

    The result? I spent the day with my grandmother, slept on the couch at the airport's FBO (no camping on the ramp at San Jose International :-)), visited my grandmother again the following morning, and then pointed the plane eastward toward Yosemite, vowing never to return.

    I am not surprised at the cost of rent, or the other problems (economic and otherwise) afflicting the region. There is a serious supply/demand dysfunction in the silicon valley area, whether it is living accomidations, electricity, hotel rooms, or what have you. While I doubt I could identify all of the causes myself, the pattern was clearly recognizable after being in the region for less than twenty four hours and long before the dot.com bust.

    To those living in silicon valley and scratching by desperately looking for work I can only say this: run. Run like the wind and don't look back. Pick any city in the United States, any at all, that is not within 100 miles of silicon valley, and you will find conditions much more suitable to human life. And if you're absolutely in love with the region (having been born in Palo Alto I can sympathise), you can always return again for vacation ... assuming you've booked that hotel room four or five months in advance.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  72. Why not move? by Gulthek · · Score: 1

    Heck, the valley can't be all *that* great. Especially when viewing it from the inside of a homeless shelter. Most of these people are in a much better position than many homeless, some have methods of transportation and even contacts within those that are still affluent. So use the transportation, borrow a little money (50-100 bucks would be enough for gas and a little food), and strike out for better pickings.

    As Americans are we somehow immune to the forced relocalization to those areas with enough jobs to live off of? Or maybe former dot-com wealth and the dream of recapturing it is a powerful enough lure to trap them there.

    Well there are a ton of ways to make money that have nothing to do with the computer industry (directly). True, working outside of your field of expertise would probably be less enjoyable but, as far as these people are concerned, they might be a little more economically viable.

    Working odd jobs (waiting tables, doing dishes, etc) may not be glamourous but it can get the rent paid and spare time can be used to research how to best "get back in the game".

    To end this comment with an annoying platitude:
    If your life plan hits a bump, slowdown, broken bridge, whatever; don't spin your wheels trying to charge forward. Change your perspective, change your plans, try something else. Life isn't a script, it's ad-libbed all the way.

  73. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by Samrobb · · Score: 1

    Leave.

    Hard as it may be to believe, California is not the be-all end-all of the technology world. Just off the top of my head, you might consider Boston, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Washington DC, Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix, Seattle...

    --
    "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
  74. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by Samrobb · · Score: 1

    Seeing as I feel the same way about Pittsburgh, I can sympathize... have you thought about northern California? From what I know, it's not nearly as insane as SoCal, and would still put you only a couple of hours from friends and family.

    --
    "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
  75. Re:Get out of California by Dionysus · · Score: 1

    Linus Torvald lives in CA.

    --
    Je ne parle pas francais.
  76. Re:price of rent???? by Panaflex · · Score: 2

    I have the best of both worlds. I work for a Irvine California company at California wages. But I live in Texas (home of the real deal, the Alamo, and lots of tasty animals to eat).

    Texas: No income tax. Low sales tax (6.25 + 2 MTA), Low housing (3/2/2 for 100k are common) and I am sorry to say, but Californians have no idea about BBQ.

    Pan

    --
    I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
  77. Have you ever tried to survive on minimum wage? by MO! · · Score: 2
    I can't speak for all when I say that it's not only about pride, but about realistic income requirements.

    Personally, I left full-time employment and started contract-based jobs back when the Y2K "bug" was an issue. It was steady work until right around the 2K turn. Suddenly I found myself without any contract opportunities because everyone had projects "on-hold" until after the turn. Once 2000 came and nothing blewup/melted down, it took a couple months for things to start moving again. So, I was without work for 4 months. Not too long compared to some, I'm sure, but enough to through me behind in finances towards the end of that stretch. I had saved enough to cover short-term breaks between contracts - but apparantly not enough.

    Do you think a burger flipping job would have covered even my mortgage alone? If so - you're smoking something seriously illegal (according to Drug War Inc). I spent most of that time searching for a job meeting my income needs. If I had taken "something", yeah I'd have been working, but I wouldn't have had the time to hunt for a "real job".

    --
    I AM, therefore I THINK!
    1. Re:Have you ever tried to survive on minimum wage? by BIGJIMSLATE · · Score: 2

      No, you won't be able to "pay your mortgage", which means you can't KEEP the nice house/appartment you once had. You have to make sacrafices. You can't keep the BMW, the nice computers, and all the LUXERIES you had before. But at least if you're earning minimum wage, you have SOME source of income beyond what the government GIVES you. I'd rather be working my ass off and living in some shithole than ever recieve government aid because I don't feel like working "only" minimum wage. Besides, fine me one fast food place that pays minimum these days. I've got dozens within 5 miles of my place, and all advertise for starting at $7 an hour.

  78. Not hardly by MO! · · Score: 2
    Sorry, I live in CA and a pizza delivery job would have gotten me at most 12-15k - meanwhile my mortgage was based on an income of 65k - so NO it wouldn't have made a dent.

    As for not attempting to find temporary income - Umm... contract work by it's very nature is temporary. I just chose not to waste my time in a minimum wage job rather than meeting daily with recruiters and going on interviews. I must have interviewed for at least 15-20 jobs during that 4 months. I was perfectly qualified for all but a few, and was even the intended hiree for a couple. But lack of movement on the part of the company interviewed at resulted in lots of "we're reevaluating our project plans and resource needs" responses. When I wasn't in an interview, I was preparing for another, or following up on a previous one. This takes quite a bit of time.

    Bottom line, a part-time low-wage job may have dragged my savings out a bit more and made things a bit easier, but at the expense of other efforts I had going. Make not mistake, however, it in no way, shape, or form would have sufficiently replaced my needed income levels. THAT is the point I'm making - you cannot expect someone going from 60-80K to drop down to 10-20K and expect them to survive. At least not without losing all they own and... living at a homeless shelter! The entire point of the article

    --
    I AM, therefore I THINK!
    1. Re:Not hardly by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2

      >you cannot expect someone going from 60-80K to drop down to 10-20K and expect them to survive.

      Thats the point others here are trying to make. You can survive on 10-20K. You can't live like you used to when you were making 60-80K.

      Big difference.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  79. I'd still like to see where by MO! · · Score: 2
    Fortunately in my situation, I didn't have a wife and kids - so my savings was drawn out quite well. However, if I did have a wife, and even one child, I don't know where it is I could live off of 10-20k. This has nothing to do with "how" I live - I'm pretty frugal as it is - I'm talking housing and transportation costs. It's not as simple as stating "Well get a job flipping burgers!" - there are a lot of obstacles in the way.

    As a child, my father screwed up at work and was fired for allegedly giving company bid info to 2 former co-workers who left to start a competing company. The simple fact that he still spoke to 2 guys he had established friendships with at work was all the grounds his employer had to fire him. Getting another job was impossible, since his reputation was harmed so badly. So he and my mother, along with their 5 children, lost their home and other assets in bankrupcy court. We then moved from the nice middle class neighborhood to the ghetto. We got by, survived as you put it, on Welfare as it existed in 1975 and the few part time jobs he and my mother could get with minimal transportation. I was nine at that time - it took 6 years for my father to clear his name in court and return full time to his chosen field. During that time, I myself was nearly shot in the head by some punk who decided a little blonde-haired, blue-eyed white boy didn't belong on "his" bus on the way home from school. The devastating impacts upon my entire family, not to mention the severe depression experienced by my father, is indescribable. That we all "survived" is in a large part due to the timeframe involved - 1975 to 1981. Given the current social climate, I'd seriously doubt we could have handled the same in todays world.

    Bottom line - It's not easy to make that kind of drop and emotionally hold together. It's not easy to find affordable housing on such low wages. It's not easy to obtain government assistance if you're not a minority (should have seen what I went through getting financial aid for college - "what do you mean your parents aren't contributing, you're white?" - YES I WAS actually asked that!).

    The story all this was posted under was that out of work techies were flooding homeless shelters. That would be the case whether they had a job flipping burgers, or cleaning bed-pans - there is NO available housing in most of the places these people are located. The point I was making was that it is not a simple matter of taking a minimum wage job - that cuts into the time available to run around interviewing for a real replacement. There are many factors involved in each individual case - lumping it all together and calling these unemployed people lazy for not taking shit work is ludicrous.

    --
    I AM, therefore I THINK!
    1. Re:I'd still like to see where by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2

      I'm not saying that it would be easy or anything but it still would be possible. Society has changed from 20 years ago, but you would have been raised in a different society too.

      >It's not easy to make that kind of drop and emotionally hold together.

      I can barely see what you are saying here. If this was true then every change in life would be hard. "I _need_ my SUV and espresso" is then a valid need and taking that away would be a cruel punishment. Out of the grand scheme of life, a drop (not a total lack) in income is a minor annoyance. You have big issues if its not.

      >there is NO available housing in most of the places these people are located.

      Then they have to move. You can't expect to live where you can't afford. And moving into a homeless shelter is pretty low IF you are taking it away from people who truly need the emergency and temporary protection.

      >The point I was making was that it is not a simple matter of taking a minimum wage job - that cuts into the time available to run around interviewing for a real replacement.

      That is true, but I didn't say anything about getting a job or not. Its going from lots of money to very little.

      >calling these unemployed people lazy for not taking shit work is ludicrous.

      I'm calling them dumb and inflexible if they didn't even think that they would be ever unemployed and need a money cushion.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
  80. Or St. Louis... by Skeezix · · Score: 2

    I live in St. Louis, MO where I pay $450/month for a spacious, nice but older apartment with hardwood floors in a nice neighbourhood. The Market's a bit stagnant here but not horrible and the cost of living is excellent.

  81. Um...MOVE! by NMerriam · · Score: 2

    I hate to be overly critical, but why the hell aren't these idiots moving?

    They're not married, dont' have kids in school or a house or anything else to tie them down. There is no sane reason any one of these morons should be staying in a homeless shelter taking up space and food that a truly needy person could use.

    News flash: its an expensive city, and there are about a million other people with your exact qualifications looking for the same jobs in that city. All the companies in that city are not hiring for those jobs because they are the ones who laid you off in the first place!

    I know that folks in NYC and Silicon Valley can be myopic about the world, but to stick around in a homeless shelter when plenty of other cities and states are still desperate for tech workers is sheer lunacy.

    This is like guys who actually get upset because they cant pick up a girl at a strip club. No kidding, did it occur to you that a thousand guys a day ask that girl for her number? Why don't you TRY SOMEWHERE ELSE where the odds are a little better?

    ---------------------------------------------

    --
    Recursive: Adj. See Recursive.
    1. Re:Um...MOVE! by runestar · · Score: 2

      Moving may not be possible for some.

      I was laid off in Nov 2000. I had a gig for a month before the management team decided to cut some costs and the new guy had to go. Well that was me, I'm back on unemployment trying to find a new job, and consequently a new place to live.

      I've had to beg for moving expenses from a third party because moving while unemployed is not economical.

      I am a technical person. I may not have the certificates or the degrees but sit me down infront of a computer with resources avalible to me and I can find out what's wrong with it's network, its internal issues, and its operating system with little effort.

      Any company that doesn't hire me is foolish. I was never in it for the money. Hence I didn't jump my low paying gig until I was laid off and have been pinching pennies, robbing peter to pay paul pretty much since the lay off. Now I admit I was foolish for not saving money but there wasn't alot to save in my books atleast.

      My biggest obsticles at this point? First and formost my lack of certifications. Most jobs I see for even Technical support want Certified MCSEs for some god unknown reason. I've tried breaking into the telecom networking houses out there but without the certification they don't seem to want to touch a person. My second biggest obsticle is the lack of programming. What a Technical Support needs to know about coding a GUI interface is beyond me. I can read code just fine and even tweak code to what I want it todo in some cases. I'm not in SillyValley or SillyAlley, but instead in one of the other tech states in the Union.

      I'm looking and if I can free up my 401K money that's currently frozen due to the IRS needing to authorize the shutdown of the fund, I will look in other states but as it is right now I don't have the money to relocate, nor are there many companies willing to take the risk of relocating someone.

      Runestar

  82. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by HiThere · · Score: 2

    What age group are you assuming? I couldn't have joined the Army or Navy even when I was young (eye problems), but I did learn that they are quite reluctant to take anyone over 30, ever. I suppose that it's possible that this has changed, but I rather doubt it.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  83. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by HiThere · · Score: 2

    Actually the practice of miscounting the unemployed dated back to at least the 60's. And that was just when I heard about it. The details may have changed at some point, but I never heard that they did, and what you are describing sounds like the statistical method that Kennedy inherited from Eisenhower. And I'm not saying that Ike started it.

    It's been broken for a long time, and nobody's wanted to fix it, because it's always to the benefit of whoever's in charge. It makes things sound better than they are, or in good times, it gives an excuse to make things worse.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  84. Re:Waaaaaaaaaa! by HiThere · · Score: 2

    a) Moving costs money
    b) Moving removes any benefit to the resumes that you already have out
    c) Moving disrupts any networking you are doing
    d) Moving doesn't free you of the obligation to pay off your lease, etc.

    Don't assume that everyone is in your situation. (And even if they were, I would consider your response quite impolite. Traumatized people are not at their best, and take longer to come to the best decisions. A bit of patience costs nothing.)

    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  85. Re:It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by HiThere · · Score: 2

    I don't have a wide experience. But it's reasonably deep. In my experience it's not unusual for a manager (or other person in a position of power) to assume that since they have the power, it is somehow "right" that their whims always have precedence. Whether or not there is a good reason for doing otherwise. I usually find that one can assert one's opinion, provided that one doesn't insist on it.

    But I sure don't think much that's printable about them. And I'm quite looking forwards to retirement. And nobody yet knows it. I'll give sufficient notice, as I intend to leave with a clean rep. I expect that if I need a reference for some reason, that I'll be able to get one (not certain...my current boss may also retire). But I'll believe most things said about the stupidity of the decisions that bosses make, and their unwillingness to be guided by experts away from disaster. And their unwillingness to accept responsibility for their own decisions.

    But guess what? Have you looked in a mirror recently. That's a description of people, not of any particular sub-category of people. People believe what they believe, and it's quite hard for mere facts to persuade them. People claim credit when things work out well, and try to duck responsibility when they don't. All people that I've had a chance to examine have these characteristics. Bosses aren't anything special.

    Another characteristic that people have is a desire to blame the victim. It somebody is out of work, then it must be his fault. If it's random chance (or some close relative) then it might happen to me, and that's too scarey. So if I can make it his fault then I won't need to worry about it. So this is basically a way to feel safe in a dangerous world.

    Don't expect people to behave differently. Some will, but not many, and even those will need to constantly work at it.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  86. Re:Wow. 4.2% unemployment rate. by HiThere · · Score: 2

    I don't know how Jamaica measures unemployment. If they say it's up around 35%, then they may be telling the truth (noting your comment about: "for at least one hour in 3 mo.s). The U.S. lies about it more creatively. Nobody outside the government has any idea what the real figure is. The official figures only tell you whether more people have recently lost their job than had awhile back. And even then they don't count everyone. Only those that officially qualify for unemployment.

    I have no idea whether the real unemployment is 6% or 60%. All that I know is that it's guaranteed by the govt. to be higher than 4.2%.

    P.S.: My comment "Nobody outside the government ..." should not be misunderstood. I don't know that anybody inside the government knows what a real number is. I just know that nobody depending on the official figures does.


    Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  87. Solaris is for VCs. Try learning about business. by alienmole · · Score: 2
    > I know that as SOON as I can, I'm going to acquire
    > expertise in a UNIX other than Solaris or Linux,
    > and in a context other than the Internet.

    Quite right. Solaris was used in the dot-com boom because VCs felt that it covered their asses. It had nothing to do with technical strength and everything to do with "Nobody ever got reamed out by their investors for using Solaris". When you hear how it cost "donthaveabusinessmodel.com" $10m to set up their web servers and store application, that's because the VCs and their lackeys spec'd Solaris, Oracle, and some nice expensive old-school brand-name non-commodity Unix hardware. Woulda cost $25K max if it had been done in any non-dot-com business.

    In the real world, there are many businesses that turn over billions of dollars annually, have heavy-duty information processing requirements, yet run entirely on Windows LANs, for example. These aren't Fortune 500 companies, they're just medium-sized. The problem is that dot-coms tried to emulate the Amazon "instant-Fortune-500" model, which ended up with the ridiculous scenario of little companies with 50 people acting as though they were General Electric. "Do you think we need an HP Superdome, or will a farm of Sun Starfires do the trick?" Business sense didn't go out the window - it was never there to begin with.

    My advice to people in this market is to learn a bit about business yourself (read the Wall Street Journal or The Economist or something) and make your own, realistic assessment of the business that's hiring you. How do they make their money? Who are their customers? How are they going to survive the next economic downturn? Also, try to determine what value you're adding to the business. Being a kick-ass sysadmin means nothing if you're administering machines that aren't necessary in the first place.

    Many people tend to accept jobs with a charming but foolish degree of trust. They trust that the company really needs them and that they're not being hired due to some political whim. They trust that the company isn't going to go out of business within the next 12 months ("Surely they would warn me?") Trusting your employer to know what's best for you, or even for themselves, is a 1950's hangover from when IBM employees all got together every morning in their suits with mandatory white shirts to sing inspirational company songs. Get with it, people! You're an independent economic entity and the only person responsible for your economic survival is YOU! If you take a job at a doomed company, you have nobody to blame but yourself!

  88. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Hunting for a job is itself a full time job, especially as bad as the market is right now. Even headhunters are losing their jobs.

    If you do have to go to work in some job that pays very little, the problem with that is that it takes so many hours at the job just to make enough money to pay the rent and buy some food, that there is no time left to do job hunting for a real job for which your technical skills apply. When you do get an interview (and remember, count on at least 20 interviews on average before you get an offer) you have to take time off work, you lose some of the precious pay, and you risk losing that job as well. Do that 10 times and you can count on being back on the street.

    You say the jobs are there... no, these are "junk" jobs. In fact, getting such jobs isn't even that easy. The managers will know you're not the kind of person to stick around for a couple years to make the training worth while. The "real" jobs ... are just not there right now, unless you know one of the fad skills which are in overdemand, like Java.

    Reality is, a lot of the techies are not needing to support families. So they can at least go work on hunting for a real job ... while living in the shelter.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  89. Re:IT worker shortage! by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I don't believe it was. Perhaps they evetually came to realize that the supposed IT worker shortage was a big fraud manufacturered to force techies to accept lower pay.

    But wait ... if the pay was so high, doesn't that mean their were more jobs and fewer people, like ECON 101 taught us? Not really. There were a number of issues that tipped the scales to make the appearance of higher demand ... when in fact even during the peak, lots of techies had trouble finding work. One problem was that the suits jumped into the Internet mess so fast, they had no time to learn enough to even figure out who was smart and who wasn't. The very recruiting process they loved so much was falling apart because not enough non-techies knew enough of the new technical stuff to understand the techies to figure out who to hire. Then the bigger companies couldn't attract people with stock options very well. Sure they had stock options available, but those companies were too big (diluted with assets) to ever have spectacular growth.

    The job market was just totally distorted, and is in shambles now as a result. The cause? Mismanagement on an enourmous scale caused by the rush of the ignorant to buy into the Internet craze.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  90. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by Skapare · · Score: 2

    The unemployment rate is NOT 3.2%. During the first year of the Clinton administration, the government changed the formula for how they determine unemployment. Essentially it comes down to measuring people only if they specifically seek government assistance of some kind as a result of unemployment, and only if they do so within 6 months of being let go. And when their unemployment benefits run out (about 3 years now I think), they not only no longer get anything, they don't get counted any more, either.

    Unemployment is really closer to 6% or 7% right now, and upwards of 30% in some technical fields like Internet, E-commerce, and Telecom. Need to verify this? Go to the retail/consumer stores like Sears or Walmart or Best Buy and ask the managers how their sales have been doing the past year.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  91. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by Skapare · · Score: 2

    When a whole company goes under, as many have done, those who are let go happen to be everyone. It doesn't matter if you are clueless or a genius. And in big companies, the same thing also happened on a project basis. The decisions of who to let go had almost nothing to do with whether you were clueless or a genius. If you were on a project that got scrapped, then you got the pink slip. It's easy for a company to do this because it's perfectly defensible. If they had instead shuffled people around to try to keep the geniuses, that means they would have had to let some clueless go in continuing projects. And that would have opened them to legal liabilities because quite often people sue over these matters. The people who were let go were the ones specifically associated with a job that was eliminated.

    By the way, the unemployment rate here in the US is figured on the basis of how many people are eligible for and seek government assistance, not how many people would take a job if there was one. This was done by the Clinton administration to prop up labor unions and help them bargain for higher pay.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  92. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Obviously you are the clueless one. You missed the quotes around the term "junk". That means that's the common phraseology used.

    I never said there was a couple years of training involved. There is some, and it varies by job. There are jobs even better than cash register, but they need a week or two of "training" which means they are non-productive until the training period is over, and it costs the employer money. The "year or two" is how long the management hopes the employee will stay on. If they are sure the candidate will be leaving as soon as the tech jobs pick up again, and another candidate perceives this job as a good career for the next 5 to 10 years, guess which one the smart employer will hire. I've been on both sides of employing, and I know how it works. And back when employers were not afraid to tell candidates why they were not chosen (back before all the lawsuit threats) some of the things I heard frequently are "overqualified" and "this would not challenge you enough" and "you'll be bored here". Good hiring managers know how to measure people (though I suspect a lot of that didn't happen during the peak of the crazy dot-compensation-extreme days).

    I'm glad for you that you do have at least some other skills, like sales. Most techies would never survive in sales, if they could even land such a job, not even retail sales. To those who can, of course they should.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  93. Re:The Jobs Are There by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Last month at the local Internet Society meeting, over 50% of the jobs that hiring managers were seeking to fill were for e-commerce positions involving programming in Java. Java was 3 times in demand as PHP and C++ combined, and nothing else was. Of course that's one small meeting job/forum. And they were all server side jobs. There is apparently nothing going right now for client side Java. Besides, I have all that disabled and I know a lot of other people do, too.

    But maybe you're right. I've heard some horror stories with regard to various Java facilities. So maybe those Java jobs that can be gotten will end up being doomed because nothing will end up working and the company will go bust. I think I'm still glad I didn't get into Java.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  94. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I didn't say it was proof. The whole process is very empirical anyway. The point is that there are more people out of jobs than the unemployment figures tell about. If you want to know how many, you have to find a way to measure them somewhere. The drop in consumer demand is one possible way to do that. But also beware of the shift. For example the demand for essentials like housing, food, and soap (well maybe not soap for some) will remain up or at least not drop as much, while the demand for optional and luxury goods will drop a lot. Just watch the figures on the financial web sites and see what is going on. It's not pretty, but at least it kinda looks like it has begun to level out. But you can be sure (well, I sure hope so, anyway) that it won't be as crazy as before.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  95. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I'm not sure what numbers you're looking at. For some jobs like McDonalds, sure, I can see 100% in many places. But there are lots of stores I go to frequently and the same people have been there for years. At the local electronics store (not Radio Shack), half the people working there last month were there 7 years ago when I first went to the place. Maybe the other half does turn over entirely in a year, but there is a solid core staff there. I sure hope they get paid well (but somehow, I doubt it).

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  96. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    So what makes you think I am in California? I am not.

    So what makes you think I live in a homeless shelter? I do not.

    So what makes you think I am whining about my situation? I have not.

    So what makes you think I am not in the midwest? Actually, I'm not, I'm in Texas, the state that sells power to California.

    So what makes you think I'm unemployed? Well, maybe technically. But I do have 2 part time contracts and am building my own business. I don't need that job at McDonalds. If I took it, I'd be depriving you.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  97. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I don't think those companies want the high turnover. So they're sure to be using the risk of leaving soon factor at a higher weight when making the decision to hire someone. I know I would. It's the non-techies that in general will make the better employees in those jobs. Good workers are hard to find (at least legal ones), and when you have a choice in hiring, you choose the better ones for what the job is. And it ain't flipping CPU chips at McD's.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  98. Re:IT worker shortage! by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Of course I don't want the US technology industry to be hurt. And you make a good argument for why we should bring in H1B's. But given the fact that there were quite many very experienced technical people looking for working during even the peak, tells me that the difficulty in finding good people was not as a result of there being a lack of numbers. There were likely other factors such as not wanting to spend the time working within a rather bad system we have of actually finding people, as well as people just plain not willing to relocate to places like California, which perhaps did deplete its resources (we know they tend to deplete other things like electric generating capacity).

    I got a few job enticements to go to California for pay as high as $275k/yr. I'm glad I didn't waste my time with that. They sure seemed too good to be true. I bet those are the places that failed first.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  99. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by Skapare · · Score: 2

    People who truly have given up, and don't want to be employed anymore, of course should not be counted. But those who decline to seek government assistance, perhaps because they are smart enough to have savings to live on, or can go back home to live with the parents, or even did grab a part time job dumping fries into a vat or stocking the shelves at the supermarket, should be counted. But they are not the way the system works.

    The tweak that was made a few years ago did change the unemployment rate result about 3 to 4 percent. The political analysis of the time primarily focused on it being a means to let labor unions bargain from a stronger position. Face it, lower unemployment figures do drive up wages and salaries. That's not necessarily a bad thing for "the people", but the less accurate the measurement is, the less stable the economy will be because other measurements will be more inconsistent depending on whether they work with, or work around, the unemployment figures. For example, consumer buying went down right after the unemployment went down, which is an inconsistency that can destabilize things.

    What we need are accurate figures that correctly categorize how many people are in each of the various groups of unemployment (even if living off smartly retained savings) or underemployment (i.e. working to pay the rent but not in their proper career path).

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  100. Re:IT worker shortage! by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Why do you classify these jobs (web design and system administration) as not ...jobs which require more skills.? Is it because you see them being mostly currently filled by people with lower skill levels? Just what job functions do you see as ...jobs which require more skills.?

    IMHO, you'd be insane to start a CPU design company, and possibly even a software company, even here in the US ... unless you're going for a small niche that won't attract the Intel's, AMD's, Transmeta's, IBM's, Oracles, Microsoft's, of the world to compete head on against whatever you come up with.

    I'd agree about keeping the skilled workers here. And there are certainly advantages for us to bring the skilled foreign workers here (though in reality I've found quite many of them less skilled than out of work people here, because the foreign workers are also known to be good brown nosers, and unlikely to sue for anything). But let's get people back into the workforce here, and get those w/o jobs who want them employed. People*time is a resource we are currently wasting. And that includes web designers and system administrators (and there are some out there who are exceptionally skilled in their field).

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  101. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by Skapare · · Score: 2

    I do attack the methodology. Just not here because the topic here is not about the methodology. Here, people have used those false numbers as if they were truthful, and I don't accept that.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  102. Re:It is really that bad by Skapare · · Score: 5

    Sorry, I can't moderate and post the same thread. Besides, you're at 4 as of when I'm replying. That and I didn't get any points today, anyway :-)

    One of the problems in the technical fields is that there has been a huge influx of new products, tools, languages, features, and systems to learn. Then businesses end up making (usually stupid, and often horrendously assinine) decisions about which of these things to commit themselves to, then when they look for a techie, they demand only someone who has precisely that set of skills. If one skill is missing they can't "hit the ground running". And if they have excess skills, they are "too expensive". This greatly complicated the effort to find technical talent. For every 100,000 people out there with hireable technical talent, maybe 5 to 10 actually were exactly what they were looking for (because they were so picky about an exact match) and of course they were not in the local city.

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  103. Move to INDY by sharkey · · Score: 2

    Almost every single McDonald's, Wendy's, White Castle, Wal-Mart, Meijer's, etc. have "Now Hiring" signs up. I was at Kohl's (dept. store) yesterday, and they're hiring third shift right now. Maybe a person won't be able to buy 6-figure cars and 7-figure homes working at that kind of job, but they'll be able to eat. Are there no jobs out there in fact, or are these "dot-commers" unwilling to work at anything but their first choice of employment?

    --

    --

    --
    "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  104. Good thing they weren't in the Great Depression by GuNgA-DiN · · Score: 1
    Hey brother, can you spare 2 grand for rent?

    Or, how about

    Say buddy, could you spare $10 for a triple latte?

  105. Not necessarily true by bkocik · · Score: 2
    While I do agree with what you're saying about techno-wannabes, I have to disagree with this statement:


    Only the cookbook dotcomers are being laid off right now.


    At the beginning of the downturn, that was true. But it's not the case anymore. I have three friends out there who are out of work right now. One of them is a Solaris/AIX admin with about ten years of experience, and he's *really* sharp. The other two are very good DBA's, one with about 9 years and the other with something like 20. They're having trouble even getting interviews. It's just plain bloody over there right now. Noone is safe. I'm personally thanking my lucky stars that I fled to the east coast about two months ago, and am happily employed here. (That Solaris/AIX admin I mentioned worked for the same company I did, and was laid off just a couple weeks after I left along with dozens of others.)


    But as for everything you said about techno-wannabies, rock on my brother.

    Regards,

    1. Re:Not necessarily true by NoProblem · · Score: 1

      Your friends must be looking in the wrong place. I'm still employed just thought I would test the waters to see what else is out there. My experience is with Solaris, Tru64, and linux administration. Just posting my resume got me about 35 responses in the first 4 days. Most of them were of no interest to me but I have decided to interview for 3 of them. All great jobs.

      Of course it may well relate to that truism "It's easier to find a job when you already have one."

  106. No Virginia, the market is NOT that bad... by emc · · Score: 1

    See, here is the unfortunate, but real problem:

    All over, in the Silicon Foo's of your local area, about 2 years or so ago, ther was a market boom going on.
    This boom caused a huge need for employees. If you knew someone, who knew UN*X (i.e., HS graduate who played with linux), you got them jobs as UN*X Engineers...
    Rinse and Repeate this same situation for many, many different careers...
    Most of the people that I know that have been laid off, never should have had the job in the first place. There are exceptions... Company X can't afford $175k+ for the CCIE anymore... or $120k for the Principle UN*X Engineer... or so on.
    I feel bad for these people, as they had it really good, then reality kicked them in the face.
    Like I try to tell these folks, In 'n' Out Burger pays $11.75/hr in Mountain View, and $9.75/hr in South Man Jose...
    ...it's not the $65k you were making before for knowing "kill -HUP `ps aux | grep named`" or how to add users, but it'll pay the bills... but you'll need to move out of that $1675/month apartment in Mountain View...
    I have received many inquiries into moving on to a new job. I have no desire to do that, at this time. I like my company.

    The moral of the story:
    There are jobs out there, for qualified individuals.

    (Please don't mod this down because you think I'm cold hearted)

  107. Re:always have a backup. by emc · · Score: 1

    Why in the name of all reason would you work at a place that does not pay you?

    I once told a former boss, "I"m here for the money, nothing more" when I was informed that my paycheck would be split over 1 month, and was then delayed.

    He quickly became my former boss, after that.

  108. Re:It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by The+Cat · · Score: 1

    No, he or she doesn't have an "attitude problem." This is exactly what its like. I am technically better qualified, in most cases, than the recruiter, everyone else at the agency, the hiring manager, everyone else on the team they are hiring for, and the CIO.

    These people are not qualified to evaluate my technical skills, so they make it a personality contest, or just outright waste my time.

    They are not interested in getting the work done. They are interested in finding a "team player," which means "someone that will agree with us when we're wrong."

    If the companies over-compensated, tough. Its their responsibility. Like I said, let 'em program their own databases and polymorphic objects if they're so #%*&#% qualified to judge other people's technical skills.

  109. Yes by The+Cat · · Score: 2

    Waste of time too. TOTAL waste of time to try and have a job in an industry where all the technical decisions are made by non-technical people for all the wrong reasons.

    So you get a job in the "IT" industry? What have you got? A flimsy promise that there'll be a paycheck for a while? Other than that its "one week of bad economic rumors and you're out on your resume." Bah. Forget it. Let 'em figure out how to develop their own n-tier databases with MS Project.

    Ironic too, we just published an article on this:

    http://www.heavycat.com/cattracks/ (in case the link doesn't work)

  110. Well.. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    It is a mistake to assume all the 'dotcom poor' are techies. Many many dotcoms hired *lots* of people, at rather higher than average salaries, for technical support, phone handling, etc. Businesses are far more than just their programmers you know...

    I mean, what do you expect? You have silicon valley, a huge influx of people move in to work because of the boom, and then things return to normal.. what do you expect is going to happen?

    People with solid skills will find work. People without them will be in the same position they were in before this all happened in the first place.

  111. Folks..let's not forget it's a job 'market'.. and by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    experience counts. This is not a negative against anyone...but no matter how 'good' you are at youre generalist job, many companies are not about to hand you a high level admin position with no experience, period.

    I said much the same thing as you 8 years ago or so.. 'aww but look at my mad unix skills! I know tcp/ip inside out! I want the lead job'.. well, tough.. the guy who's 10 years older with a few more years experience actually doing the job gets that spot, and that's how it is. Why?
    Sysadmin is more than the hardware, and the technology.. it's keeping it all together, management skills, doing the job. It's just *assumed* that you know the technical details.

    This is not new to any profession either.. what do people think, you leave University and go straight to the top? Not likely.

    Now, I'm not saying I didn't bitch and complain too.. but now, after a few years of working perhaps not the greatest jobs, I managed to get to the point where I actually can apply for high level positions and get interviews. I can attack the Sr. Admin position for some company with serious intent.

  112. Re:Bad? That's an understatement. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    Wow... so, a month from graduation, they have no jobs, and you determine this is bad? What did they think.. they'd all be snapped up instantly?

    Did you do no job research before you did Comp. Sci? There is nothing in your local town.. was there during the big boom?
    Do you think that Yahoo, Microsft, etc are going to answer calls from the tens of thousands of applicants they get each week?

    Do you have relevant job experience, or are you green? Are you trying to be a programmer, or an administrator, or what?

  113. Not to offend, but.. by mindstrm · · Score: 2

    the reason many people say this is because they think they can get a top-level tech job straight out of school, be it a university degree, or their MCSE.

    Sure, a few might. Most won't.

    You get an entry-level job, and work your way up. I don't mean necessarily at the same company, but if you do grunt low-level admin work somewhere for a year, your odds are a lot better for getting that mid-level admin job the next year.. and so on and so forth. Within a few short years, you can command (if you are any good) top level admin positions wherever you want.

  114. Re:It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by cruelworld · · Score: 1

    Um, sometime when people say they're looking for a "team-player" what they really mean is someone with interpersonal skills.

    From your post above it appears that you lack these. No one wants to hire an asshole. and no one wants to work with an asshole.

  115. Re:Here come the (resume) liars! by johnburton · · Score: 1

    We see this all the time. People not exactly telling lies but telling the truth in a way meant to mislead.

    A resume with 3 actualy years on but saying

    3 years c,
    3 years c++,
    2 years visual basic
    2 years oracle
    2 years html
    2 years object oriented design

    etc.

    We know what they mean but its not fooling antone and just makes the candidate look stupid. It's a good way to not get an interview.

    On another point, if you're applying for a programming job and you actually want to do programming talk about programming on your resume. Don't go on about project resonsibilities, and the fact that you managed a team of two people.
    People will assume you want a job with management responsibilities and not take you as seriously for a programming job.

    --
    Sig is taking a break!
  116. A view from the recruitment side. by johnburton · · Score: 2

    I've been interview people for the last year or so for what is basically a c++ development job. The main skill we need is c++ but databases, ood, java, web based skills, php etc. are all things we use and are bonuses but not requirements. We need at least a years c++ experience but we're not too fussy on the details or the exact skills.

    I've probably interviewed about 100 candidates for the job over the last year and only found about 6 that were suitable.

    Many candidiates described themselves as c++ experts or claimed many years experience of c++ but were unable to answer a simple question such as "what would you use a virtual function for in c++". Or we've had a few candiates who claimed to have several years database knowledge who were unaware that database queries could involve more than one table.

    Put simply, about 75% of the candidates seem to have little actual knowledge of the subjects on which they claimed to be experts.

    The other problem we have is with people who clearly don't want the job on offer and just see it as a way to getting another job. We have seen quite a lot of people who are clearly more interested in becoming a "team leader" than in actually developing software. Well that's fine, but not if you've applied for a software development job.

    Finally we've had quite a few candidates who have the required technical ability but have not managed to convince us that they could actually work in a commercial environment. For example we usualy ask something like "what would you do if half way through a project it became apparent that you were not going to be able to meet the deadline for your work?". Quite a few candidates have basically said they would change nothing because clearly the deadline was wrong.... Well that's one answer and sometimes true but misses the point that you must at least inform the person managing the project of the problem. Not sure I explained that very well but the point is that quite a lot of people just seem unemployable.

    So for every person claiming to be an expert at c++ we have found about 6 that actually are.

    So, if our experience is in any way typical and you are a software developer who actually knows how to do your job, don't worry too much. You appear to be a rare breed.

    --
    Sig is taking a break!
  117. Where are the savings? by zericm · · Score: 1

    I find it real hard to have sympathy for someone who thought the money would flow forever. How come a person making $100,000 a year did not save enough money to live without a job for three months? Take home pay for such a person is about $5k a month. Assuming that they are paying the $2k in Bay Area rent, what the hell did they do with the other $3k? eric

    --
    The welfare of the people has always been the alibi of tyrants. - Albert Camus
  118. skilled and unskilled by sohp · · Score: 1

    There's no doubt that the psuedo-talented dot-com chaff are the biggest part of this. Companies hired whomever they could at outrageous rates with little regard for true skills, and the credulous greedy masses believed the "we'll all be rich enough to buy our own tropical island" hype. And I'm sure those folks earning six figures but saving nothing are getting a necessary lesson in economic realities. And with no support system, either private (friends and families) or public (homeless shelters nearly bankrupt because the hugely overpaid never had the compassion to toss them even a measly crumb of a donation), I'm not crying crocodile tears for them.

    However, it's not all about the underqualified and overpaid getting what they deserve. Last week I received a resume from a man who'd been laid off when his company was bought out by a foreign company, and the new owners laid off all the programmers. This programmer had been with the company 7 years, prior to that had done some top-notch work for extremely desirable companies. He has a Masters in Computer Science, four patents to his name, and some twenty years in the industry. I'd love for my company to hire him, and I'd love to work for/with him. But it's nuts that this kind of skill is discarded so easily.

    Find shelter in the old economy and hold on, it's getting to be a helluva bumpy ride.

  119. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by crawling_chaos · · Score: 1
    By the way, the unemployment rate here in the US is figured on the basis of how many people are eligible for and seek government assistance, not how many people would take a job if there was one. This was done by the Clinton administration to prop up labor unions and help them bargain for higher pay.

    Funny, my macro-econ professor told me this was the way that the US calculated unemployment, in 1985. I didn't realize that Clinton had invented a time machine and hypnotized Reagan.

    Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wagn'nagl dominos.

    --
    You can only drink 30 or 40 glasses of beer a day, no matter how rich you are.
    -- Colonel Adolphus Busch
  120. 6 Figures, No Savings? by ONOIML8 · · Score: 1

    Some guy makes six figures for several years, gets laid off, and in less than a year he winds up in a homeless shelter.

    If that is true then I would take from the article that the guy was laid off for being some sort of dumbass. Come on, if he was making such good money, after even a single year of employment he should have had enough cash savings built up to sustain him for at least a year. (Yes, it would require a lifestyle change and moving out of California, but he would be far above living in a homeless shelter.)

    If we're to believe this piece of "news" then the people they quote for examples in the story are either stupid and needed to be canned for being stupid or they are abusing the support system in place for the homeless and maybe got canned because their employers recognized this lack of moral fibre and didn't want that kind of person around when times do get tough.

    --
    . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
    1. Re:6 Figures, No Savings? by ONOIML8 · · Score: 1

      On the one hand, you two seem to point the finger at the IRS. It is true that the IRS is an unconstitutional agency using unfair methods to extract unreal amounts of money from anyone comming close to living the "American Dream"(tm).

      But then there is the other hand, and you've only eluded to it. It's a game. And anyone smart enough to be worth that kind of money should be either smart enough to play that game or hire someone to play it for him/her. That's how it's done.

      My opinion that the people used as examples are dumbasses stands.

      --
      . Quit playing Monopoly with Bill. Switch to one of many non-Microsoft products today.
    2. Re:6 Figures, No Savings? by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

      Yes, those drug habits can really burn a hole in the old savings account.

      I agree that the tax code *screws* the single, non-home-owning taxpayer. I also understand that a lot of dotcom salary money moved directly from the worker bees' pockets right into the coffers of the IRS, as newly flush employees had more money than sense, given the tax consequences of the alternative minimum tax, taxes on options, buying stock on margin, short term stock trading, flipping, etc.

      It has been very possible for someone to owe the IRS far more than his options/securities are worth.

      He who pays the least taxes (legally, of course) wins the game, at least financially. Given the evils of the tax code, it is very easy to see how someone earning $100k+, even in San Jose or SF, could wind up with no money at all.

  121. Re:No, not that bad by mrzaph0d · · Score: 2

    but no former CEO would catch himself dead flipping burgers or working retail, even though they're perfectly good jobs for anything...but its a freaking INCOME.

    i hate to say it, but this applies to more than just former CEO's. My sister's boyfriend was without a job for 4 years because of a dislike of any work in the "food service" industry (flippin' burgers). the only job interviews he'd go to were for jobs he couldn't possibly get, but he refused to "demean" himself by settling for anything less. so instead, my sister got the lovely job of supporting his lazy ass until i convinced her to make him get a job, any job, anything at all.

    every fast food place i go to nowadays has signs up looking for employees. i know it's not a lot, but its got to be better than nothing. most of them claim to start at a minimum of $7-8 an hour.

    --
    this is just a placeholder till i send back my real sig from the future.
  122. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by tauzell · · Score: 1

    Then don't tell perspective employers that you are a generalist. Tell them, "Yes I can do that!". Tell them that you are the greatest. Then, if you get the job work hard to become the greatest.

  123. Boston market by snopes · · Score: 2

    I don't have a sob story, but it's definetely not the same here that it was. I changed jobs barely over a year ago. Many phone screens. At least a half dozen serious interviews and two great offers to pick from by decision time. It took 2 months.

    I start my next new job 6/25. Again it was only two months, but I had only two interviews (one of which I think was bunk from the start; feeling the waters maybe?). I'm doing well, getting a raise on this move, and generally feeling I'm getting into a higher quality company, but I do get the strong sense I was lucky.

    My skills? Network engineering, multi flavor unix admin, and perl programming with between 3-6 yrs. exp. on them. Not a ton of time behind me, but I've done large scale data management and compute environments, built big complicated networks, and have written perl code with many layers of logic. I got 1 interview and 1 offer in 2 months. Certainly got me thinking a bit more about the ol' savings account.

    But to your original point, I think it's valid. I only started saving money at all after coming to Boston from SF. It's very hard to get your head above water out there and once you do it is (was) tough not to let it run away with you. One of the first things I noticed coming back to Boston was how less common Porche, Mercedes, Jaguar were on the roads. The people with the mansions on the hills like I used to see along rt. 280 out west back east are the same old money people that have always had them, not 27 yr. old CEO's. My perspective at least...

  124. Re:there's a restaurant down the street with a sig by JatTDB · · Score: 1

    Or he can take a low-wage job right now, while the tech bust is fresh on everyone's mind, and work like hell in his spare time to find a job in the tech field. Hell, if he works nights at a restaurant he won't even have to take time off to interview if he finds something. Just because you're employed doesn't mean you have to stop looking for something better.

    --
    "That's Tron. He fights for the Users."
  125. Re:What about porn? by JatTDB · · Score: 2

    Maybe because the porn site owners realize you don't need a huge staff of technical people to run a site.

    I know a few people who run porn sites...usually they are the *only* technical person involved. They do all the site design, server stuff, etc. They realize that successful website design does not necessarily require 5 people sitting around in a conference room for a week trying to decide which shade of off-white is the perfect shade for their background.

    Now admittedly there's some porn sites out there that are ugly as hell...but you know what? It doesn't really matter. In porno, we can really see that it's all about the content. Good pics in well-organized libraries, with frequent new additions. If you have what the customer wants, aesthetics becomes a secondary concern.

    --
    "That's Tron. He fights for the Users."
  126. Re:Here's what you do. by PovRayMan · · Score: 1

    Work UPS :)

    You sure did that, and they promoted your ass like.. how many times? hehe.

    Anyways my buddy Restil is right, work UPS in the meantime. You lose weight, gain muscles and if you speak english and spanish they'll promote you.

    ----------

  127. Here's what you do. by Restil · · Score: 2

    I've done this, so nobody need quip me with any "thats easy for you to say".

    The biggest problem I see here is that the people are looking for a job. But its not that simple. They're not looking for A job, they're looking for a job that pays them what they're used to with the skills and qualifications they have to offer.

    Instead of swallowing their pride and picking up a job, ANY job to pay the bills, and in the mean time cutting way WAY back on their expenses so they can survive on that job, meager as it might be, at least they will be able to keep a roof over their heads.

    Oh.. but nobody can afford rent of $1800 a month. Option, if you're living in your car anyways, it really doesn't matter WHERE you live. Rent is much cheaper elsewhere. In fact, its cheaper pretty much ANYWHERE else than smack dab in the middle of Silicon Valley. Move. Fill
    up your tank with gas and drive somewhere else.

    This also falls to the issue of living beyond one's means. Just because you're banking $100,000 a year doesn't mean you have to spend all of it. It might be nice to think that everything is on the up and up and nobody will ever have to suffer again, but thats just sadly not the case. Be prepared for the bottom to fall out beneath you. At least if you're prepared you can cushion the fall. And when you're out of a job, get into another one. If you spend 2 weeks looking for something in your field and you're simply not getting anything, GET A JOB. McDonalds, UPS, mow lawns, stock a grocery store. It doesn't matter. What does matter is that you'll have a steady revenue stream. It might not be able to meet your expenses, but it will make your saftey net last MUCH longer, and when you finally find a job you can leave your temporary job with little to no notice.

    -Restil

    --
    Play with my webcams and lights here
    1. Re:Here's what you do. by Restil · · Score: 2

      Don't have to speak spanish.

      Hell, you don't even have to speak english.

      You just have to show up everyday.

      -Restil

      --
      Play with my webcams and lights here
    2. Re:Here's what you do. by maX_ · · Score: 1

      Actually I've always threatened to make my next career as a truck driver. Someday I may actually have taken enough crap from PHB's to do it.

    3. Re:Here's what you do. by magi · · Score: 2
      They're not looking for A job, they're looking for a job that pays them what they're used to with the skills and qualifications they have to offer.

      Instead of swallowing their pride and picking up a job, ANY job to pay the bills, and in the mean time cutting way WAY back on their expenses so they can survive on that job, meager as it might be, at least they will be able to keep a roof over their heads.

      It's not that simple. You can't run around looking for a job if you're turning hambugers from 9 to 5.

      Finding a job is a full-time job. I've been now preparing for one interview for two weeks; buying airplane tickets, finding a hotel, collecting and printing work and study documents (hard as I don't own a printer), finding cheap place to send faxes, learning a little German, reading about the job company and what they are doing, reading their technical specs, going through all the special softwares they use or which I would need if I get the job, etc. etc. And then the company might have 500 applicants, 20 going for an interview, and one gets the place. Two weeks wasted (well, almost). Income zero, rent $300/month. Next month I couldn't afford to buy plane tickets to get to another interview (even if they pay it back afterwards).

      Sure, just in case I don't get the dream job, I'm applying for a dozen not-so-interesting IT jobs. The problem of course is that they usually look foor permanent workers, and I can't honestly promise more than maximum of 2-3 years.

      Also, if you turn hamburgers long enough, your work skills become obsolete, and your potential employers know that. Therefore it's much better to stay unemployed, perhaps study new techniques (even the buzzwords...Java, XML, CORBA), perhaps train on free software projects, and have top trimmed skills to offer to the employers.

      But of course, it's just not your choise, as it depends on the unemployment support policy of your country. I really pity the americans in that respect, but it's not always easy here either (I don't qualify for unemployment benefits because of certain technical difficulties).

  128. Re:No, not that bad by adjusting · · Score: 1

    Working full time for 8$ an hour will just about cover rent in Silicon Valley. Now how are you going to eat?

  129. Re:Mission, full of teachers, cops and now dot.com by sela · · Score: 1


    Gee, it seems like the homeless in California are really having bad time - they started with teachers and cops, and now its dot-coms...

    "Hey Freddy, look at the new guy"
    "Oh no! It's another dotcommer!"
    "I tell ya, Freddy - since those damn dotcommers started flocking, the shelter isn't like it used to be"
    "Yah, it's time we do something about it"
    "I already wrote my senator. You think they give a damn?"
    "I liked the coppers. At least they shared their daughnuts with us"
    "You think he'll give us a ride in his SUV?"
    "Not in your lifetime ..."

  130. Unemployeed Dot-com employees by sela · · Score: 5


    I find it hard to believe someone that used to earn around 100k is now homeless.

    Don't you have any savings?

    And what are they doing in the sillicon-valley anyway? Move to somewhere else, find a decent job, if you where good enough to earn 100k, you're good enough to do lot of other jobs - c'mmon, 4.2% unemployment is not that bad. In my country, unemployment is around 10%.

    So don't work in what you used to do - find some other job ... I belive the problem with this people is more of a mental fixation than anything to do about the market condition.

    1. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2
      That's not so at all. While you might think, "Hey, it's easy to get a job at McD's, they'll hire anyone," this conception is false. They won't hire anyone, and it's not easy to get a job there; they'll hire anyone that won't threaten their management position (middle management or otherwise), and they won't hire anyone that is overly qualified for a position for that same reason. (In many instances.)

      -------
      Caimlas

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    2. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by GoofyBoy · · Score: 2


      I have to agree with this AC.

      There is a difference between crying over no money at all and not enough money.

      Move to a more affordable city.

      Cut back on everything.

      You past, although you can't do anything about it now, is your own fault.

      --
      The surprise isn't how often we make bad choices; the surprise is how seldom they defeat us.
    3. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by eomir · · Score: 1
      c'mmon, 4.2% unemployment is not that bad

      Not that bad? IIRC, the "natural" unemployment rate is like 5% so I'd say its pretty damn good.

    4. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by EyesOfNostradamus · · Score: 1
      > I routinely have my "physical address" associated with my PO box be my LAST physical address

      Or a completely made-up address altogether. Just make sure the Zip code matches the city and street. Hey, if it works for E*Trade, why wouldn't it work for a P.O. Box ?

    5. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Ozwald · · Score: 3

      I find it hard to believe someone that used to earn around 100k is now homeless.

      Don't you have any savings?


      While the salaries were a little high at the time, humans tend to match their spending to the earnings. I've done it, I used to get along with $500 a month to live on (student loans) for quite a while. Now I make a lot more yet I am still broke. Not that I am complaining, I consider myself lucky to have experienced life like that; I know what life could be like again, and if so, would know what to do.

      Just as a comment, if people are really at the end of all resources, why don't they join the Army or Navy? They almost never turn down anybody and I'm sure they have technical positions waiting. I know the Navy would just love to know what a BSOD means.

      Ozwald

    6. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by LMariachi · · Score: 1

      Cutoff for US Navy enlistment is 34, but there are a lot of internal job-specific cutoffs younger than that. I think pilot is 26 and diver is 29, but then, most /. readers would probably be going into intelligence or engineering anyway. Not as much fun as getting to actually blow stuff up on purpose.

    7. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Foosinho · · Score: 1
      I know the Navy would just love to know what a BSOD means.

      Believe me, they do.

      The Navy had a ship that was completely computer controlled (part of a future-systems testbed), running some Windows flavor. Well, somehow the entire system crashed, and the ship was dead in the water because the propulsion was also under complete computer control. IIRC, it took them over a day to get the ship back underway.

      A quick google search came up with this: http://www.gcn.com/archives/gcn/1998/july13/cov2.h tm

      Cheers,
      Brian

    8. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by spiro_killglance · · Score: 1

      Move somewhere cheaper. Another city maybe, or rent a room in farm in the sticks. Get rid of the car. Buy a 100$ rust heap that can still move. Learn to fix the it yourself. Do they have Post Office boxes in america? If so use these to send your resumes. Hell move to Goa in India until the job market gets better, you can live like a king there for much less than $1000 per month. Don't let your savings disappear just to hang on in your current livestyle.

    9. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Fred+Ferrigno · · Score: 1

      Sadly (for me), it seems even the fast food places I''ve attempted - yes - would rather hire someone just at the point of being able to do the job, than someone with more experience at anything at all.

      This is well known and well understood. The idea is that over-qualified people will just use the job as a stepping stone and leave soon after being hired. The barely competent, on the other hand, cannot likely land a better job and so will be stuck there for quite some time.

      --

    10. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by paranoic · · Score: 1
      Why are they unemployed?

      Because they still think that the $100K+/year job is still there, so that's what they are looking and waiting for.

      Interviewer: So tell me a little about what you did at the last company you worked for.
      dot-goner:Well we started a company from scratch, going from 0 employees to 500 in 6 months.
      Interviewer: So what did you make?
      dot-goner:thinking: Yippeeee, talking money already $100K + stock options.
      Interviewer: No, what product do make?
      dot-goner:Oh, well I wasn't involved in that part. I was too busy building the company.
      Interviewer: Ok, how about the company before that one.
      dot-goner:Same thing, I helped build a company from 0 to 500 employees in 6 months.
      Interviewer: Well what did they make?
      dot-goner:We were going to capture 98.9% of the widget market, by streamling the build/sell/buy process and enpowering the customer to enhance their quality of life.
      Interviewer: What's a widget?
      dot-goner:I don't know, I wasn't involved in that part, I was too busy building the company to worry about that.
      Interviewer: And you got paid to do this?
      dot-goner:Yes, we raised over $100 million in venture capital at both places.
      Interviewer: So what sort of job are you looking for?
      dot-goner:I would like to build a company from 0 to 500 employees in 6 months.
      Interviewer: And what would they do?
      dot-goner: Do? Why spend $100 million in 6 months. Isn't that what business is all about?

      For all of the dot-goners, I apologize. I just found out my current boss is a PHB and need to get some outlet for my frustration.

    11. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by Ziest · · Score: 1
      IIRC, the "natural" unemployment rate is like 5% so I'd say its pretty damn good

      "Full employment" is around 3% unemployment. 4.2% is pretty good. 5% is ok and anything over 6% is bad.

      --
      Another day closer to redwood heaven
    12. Re:Unemployeed Dot-com employees by yali · · Score: 1

      Go into any American fast-food restaurant or convenience store right now, and it's quite likely that you'll be dealing with idiots who can't even work the cash register without their manager present. If they treat you like crap, they won't get in trouble, because the manager knows he'll have trouble replacing them.

      If this is the case, what are the homeless ex-dot-commers complaining about? They should have no trouble finding a job at McDonalds.

  131. I just can't feel bad by nbvb · · Score: 1

    I graduated from the University back in May of 2000. Of course, this was still before the dotcom bubble burst. I posted my resume on Monster, just to see what kind of hits I could get.

    By the end of the next day, I had 34 (!) phone calls on my answering machine. 33 of them were from headhunting firms, trying to place Unix admins in dot-coms. 1 call was from an HR rep from a rather large telco company.

    I only returned one phone call. I knew going in that dot-com would be dot-bomb eventually. If you were too blind to see that, I'm sorry. Some of us figured out that there's no money to be made in selling non-existant products. Of course, it took the venture capitalists a bit longer to figure this out, but eventually they did.

    Things aren't nearly as bad here as they are in CA. I'm in the NYC area, and believe me, there are still plenty of jobs. None of my friends & acquaintances got downsized -- maybe that's because all of us have some sort of work ethic and know the old saying:

    If it looks too good to be true, it probably is.

    I really can't feel too bad for those who got caught in the dot-bomb burst. I mean, really, did you need the porsche?

    I don't like seeing anyone on the street. But really -- you didn't know that collecting $100k from a company that DOESN'T (didn't) DO ANYTHING would eventually end?

    1. Re:I just can't feel bad by IronChef · · Score: 2

      I really can't feel too bad for those who got caught in the dot-bomb burst. I mean, really, did you need the porsche?

      Get a clue. Not all dotcommers were making Porsche money. Among all the overpaid idiot suits were a lot of talented, hard working people who weren't making the huge wages all you outsiders thought they were.

      There were also plenty of dotcoms that had decent business plans too... but when 95% of your industry is crap like den.com, even the good companies can get dragged down.

  132. Several things... by s390 · · Score: 3

    intersect in this topic. To name a few: the laid-off overpaid and underskilled former dot-commers who too quickly got used to living beyond their real means in the white-hot bubble economy of the Bay Area dysfunctional region; what it means to have lost a job (for whatever reason, due to no moral fault of one's own), and dealing with that, going through recovering and getting on with it - first surviving, and then finding the next viable situation - and succeeding; and, how to search for and find the right new job effectively. These are all interesting topics to discuss at some length here, because everyone reading this has or will someday deal with such issues in their own life (well, maybe not being overpaid and underskilled then abruptly fired).

    The days of employment-for-life are over in the post-industrial economy. It's simply a fact that everyone in the first-world countries will very likely pursue multiple careers within their lifetime (as an aside, this is why continuing to learn throughout one's life is healthy and good). There are some exceptions to this, of course - some academic, science, clergy, military, and bureaucratic careers come to mind - but even many of these aren't forever, or change a lot over time. But, for most of us, we'll change careers two to five times during the course of our lives, and we'll like the changes.

    I've had over a dozen jobs so far. Some of the earlier ones weren't paid, or paid rather little (how'd you like to make $1.25/hour for a 12-hour harvest shift on a ranch, then have them deduct 25 cents per hour for your room & board? I rode my motorcycle 300 miles each way to take that job for a couple of months when I was 17... it was the best summer job I could find at the time, and I even went back the next year - to drive a forklift. I learned some things there, saw a culture previously foreign to me, and had interesting times. Some friends found the Peace Corps of value for similar reasons).

    OK - here's my jobs list, in chronological order: paper boy (afternoon), paper boy (morning), HS projectionist (carbon arcs!), HS radio announcer and disc-jockey, summer field-hand, commercial announcer, materials handling office-manager / salesman / driver, coffee shop short-order cook, data-processing operator (tape-ape), DP night manager, H200 assembly and COBOL programmer, DEC TOPS-10 computer operator, DOS/VS computer operator, DP supervisor, COBOL Programmer trainee (twice, let's not get into that), network install manager, network support manager and programmer, OS/VS1 systems programmer, MVS systems programmer (three different companies), Big-8 IT senior consultant, Big-5 IT manager, IT consultant for a small private firm, and now an IT management consultant for a large multi-national firm). It's not just a single career, is the point (though I'll admit it's been IT focused for quite a while, and is likely to remain so - but not in the same position for longer than a couple years at a time).
    I was laid off once, and I've been fired a couple of times too. Some suck-ass managers can't handle honest communications, so what else can I say? (With few exceptions, don't trust an IT tech manager who's never been fired - (s)he's more politician than honest, won't work with you when you're right; (s)he will likely stab you in the back at the first opportunity that may present itself. Ah, here's another juicy topic - IT politics rears its ugly head.)
    Early in one's career it's easy to find the next job. That's all it is, then - a next position - and all you need are the technical skills on your resume and showing up (clean, rested, and well-dressed) to convince the hiring manager and her technical interviewer that you've got the chops and want to work for them. However, as your career evolves (and one hopes it will) other factors beyond mere technical skills start to become increasingly more and more important for finding that next right position: things like appropriate presentation and personal style, smooth people skills, fitting into a company culture and ecology, good communication and negotiation skills, management judgement, thinking on your feet, and coolness under fire. These factors all become more important in your job as you (and your pay scale) rise in IT management. No dot-com buzzword lamers need apply.

    Losing a job unexpectedly is emotionally devastating. Personally, I'm not sure I'd keep a position where my next task would be to tell people they were simply being laid-off. I guess it would depend upon how well it was going to be done and what accommodations the company would make available to them. (Working through the process of shedding an obviously bad employee is another matter though, as they will get ample warnings to shape up or ship out in that process.) Still, it's a hard thing to lose a job. I believe it's harder on most men than most women, because many guys tend to define themselves through their work, whereas most women are a little more balanced about working to live rather than living to work, in my experience.

    Losing a job is a high stress event in anyone's life. It ranks right up there with a death in one's own family, or a divorce. As such, it's not something one just deals with rationally at first - or even for some period of time. (This might go a way to understanding why a few former dot-com staffers are now staying in homeless shelters in the Bay Area.) The process of dealing with the loss of a job is a lot like the one that is inevitable for any other major loss - impending divorce, death of a spouse or child, even the imminent prospect of one's own death. It's the progression through denial, anger, depression, bargaining, and finally, acceptance. I've been through it, have you? If you have, it wasn't very much fun at the time, was it? Like those other major life changing events, it's a time to draw close one's supports, find a way to get through the darkness, and seek another path to peace with what is, and go on to what's next, whatever that may be. (I lost both parents to cancer in the late '70s - it took years, a failed marriage, and a good friend, for my grief.)
    However, when one gets laid off - you're supposed to pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and then get back in the race. Yeah, I know it's not much fun at the time, but that's the only way you're going to find your next position, so you might as well get with the program. There are more free or low-cost job finding resources out there now than ever in the entire history of this planet. Want to work in Saudi Arabia? You can find that job today! Like the idea of Las Vegas? There are all kinds of IT jobs seeking your skills there. South Florida, Manhattan, Chicago - same thing there. If you're presently unemployed and willing to relocate and make a new life, there are lots of jobs available. And we haven't scratched the surface of all the independent contracting yet. There's work out there, just waiting for your shining self and skills. If you need a job, go out and get one real soon, or quit your snivelin'.

  133. Happened to me...(well not the shelters..) by starvo · · Score: 1

    Happened to myself.. Lost my job as a security analyst at a Large communications company. It's been 6 weeks now, of me pounding on every recruiters door for contract or perm work, and no dice.

    I'm a young guy.. (26) but I do have about 6 solid years of Solaris Administration.. and It's still a massive pain in the ass to get in the door. I had a bit of savings saved up.. ($2000) and thankfully my rent is only $700 a month.. but do the math... Sooner or later, the money will run out. Thank god for Unemployment.

    There's just not enough of the skilled jobs out there right now.. There's a need for them, but little money to pay those high salaries.. I've had more than one recruiter tell me to just take a help desk position.. (and easy job to get, concerning my experience..) and then wait out the slump for the next 6-12 months.

    Thankfully I live in the far northern chicago burbs, rents cheaper here, my parents are close, and yea... If I was smart I'd move back in with my parents.. but then again, they don't have DSL... (Ok, thats not a valid reason.. I'm just being funny..)

    --
    http://thepoliticalgeek.com/blog/ Politics for Geeks.
  134. Re:It is really that bad by Snowfox · · Score: 2
    Being a programmer does *not* help get a job

    It sure as hell does. I know of about half a dozen places within walking distance of me that are looking for programmers. Submitting your resume to a recruiter means hundreds, literally, of offers.

    Move somewhere sane and stable and look for work there.

  135. Re:this is retarded by lostguy · · Score: 1
    Well, Starbucks ain't paying 9+ an hour, but yea, that's out there.


    Starting wage at Sbux in SFO is $8.25.

  136. Re:Poor Babies� check your facts by stge · · Score: 1

    Unemployement rate in France : 9% and decreasing. Never was 15%, but 13% at its worst, which is bad enough.

    A socialist economy in France ? Do you know what a socialist economy is ? Welfare programs do not make an economy socialist. An economy is socialist when means of production are nationalized. In France, production of goods and services primarily rely on private capital, much as in the US. France's "creaking, failing economy" has been running a large trade surplus for years, certainly a sign of failing competitiveness. Its growth rate, trade balance, etc, is better that that of most of its European partners.

    Next time, check your facts.

  137. The economy is crap. Do not believe the lies. by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2
    Many people do believe that the economy is bursting at the seams, looking for highly tallented - and even those only semi-tallented - to fill jobs that are just waiting for them, unfilled. The people that believe this are led on by relatives that want their kin to sucseed, by the businesses themselves that want the workforce to be flooded with tallent and cheap labor, and by their own disillusions of greatness.

    The employment in our country is truely in a tragic state. I can not quote any figures, but I have read in various locations, as well as heard on the news, that the standard of living in America is lower than it has been in some time. It simply costs more to survive. Housing costs, the price of food, and pretty much everything else, in combination with businesses greed and desire for money, push the 'working class' - everyone from McD's workers to the experienced System Administrator/Everything Including the Kitchen Sink Programmer - towards the lower end of the income spectrum. Meanwhile, corporation owners, investors, and the social elite manage to stay on top of the game by charging excessive, extortive rates for products which were produced using the cheapest labor possible, irregardless of the quality that such labor provides.

    My mom is a registered nurse and graduated from Duke University's School of Nursing magna cum laude. (In 1981, I think.)She is an incredibly intelligent person, able to converse philosophically or theoretically on nearly any topic immaginable. She is well versed in her trade. However, the economy where we live (South Dakota) is so depressed that she only makes hourly wage of $14/hour.

    My father also graduated from Duke University, but from the School of Engineering. (In '81, again, with a pretty decent GPA.) At the time of his graduation, the economy was doing quite well for progessonal engineers. However, like our current tech. situation, the market was saturated with engineering graduates who thought the money would be good. The economy obviously didn't have enough jobs for all the PE's, and wages dropped. Now, engineers don't make much money at all - 30k to 50k, generally, with Senior Engineers getting paid 60k if they're fortunate at the end of their career. As a result, engineers are generally considered (from my perspective) as poor workers, slackers, and do-nothings, simply putting in their hours for the pay. Engineers are generally not terribly tallented or valued anymore, as they once were, and it's simply seen as 'another technical job' and not something requiring too much skill or ability.

    Contrast this to what the economy was like 40 years ago. An individual could own a small store - say, a hardware and surplus store - and make a healthy living for them and their family. Not only that, but they might be able to pass their company on to their children while they were still relatively young (50 or so), and retire, living off of substantial savings (provided they were wise with their money.) Quite simply put, such companies don't exist anymore, at least not in quantity or quality. Large chain stores, or large corporations, are able to provide similarly appearing products and services to those of the Mom 'n' Pop variety at a fraction of the cost, riding the lows of the economy, killing their competition, and cheapening the cost of hired labor all at the same time.

    God bless America, because quite frankly, the American people have once again screwed things up, this time well beyond a miracle. Corporations with more power than the government now rule America. Everyone else has to grovel for money, including the government.

    If you don't believe me, contrast what a factory worker makes (16$/hour or so) to what your average 4-year graduate earns after several years of work (maybe 20$/hour or equivilant, if they're fortunate). Either the collegate educational system is a crock, or corporations are abusing the abundance of 'educated' indivuals, whether in the tech industry or not.

    Heck, at this point, I'd be happy for 15$/hour.

    -------
    Caimlas

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  138. Re:You, sir, are full of SHIT... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2
    I'm no more of a communist than Hitler was.
    I'm also no more socialist than Stalin was.

    You really should get your basic governmental systems in line. Saying I'm an out-and-out communist followed by saying I have a basic Green/Socialist party line is pretty hillarious and contradictory.

    What I'm saying is, quite simply, that commericialism has gotten out of hand. As a way of managing things, it is probably one of the best, but when allowed to get out of hand (this is what the government deems as 'monopoly' - such as AOL/TW, MS, and such large companies or corporations) things do not work as they should, and are corrupted.

    Fundamentally, Communism is really a much 'better' system than that of commericialism, were it to ever work. However, the failure of the system lies in lazyness, as opposed to greed being the falure of commericialism. It takes a lot longer for greed to get a dickhold on commericialism and choke out competition than it takes communism to die due to lazyness and corruption.

    -------
    Caimlas

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    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  139. Re:You, sir, are full of SHIT... by CAIMLAS · · Score: 2
    I disagree. We could still see 'technological breakthrough at a large scale' if certain corporations were not price gouging the American society. (I'm paticularly talking about the lower class here, but the middle class is also heavily taxed, bringing them closer towards 'lower' class. That, and there really aren't many social distinction between middle class and lower class nowadays. It simply seems to be doctors/lawyers/politicians/top businessmen on one side, with everyone else on the other.

    -------
    Caimlas

    --
    ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
  140. Re:It is really that bad by brianvan · · Score: 2

    As a recent college grad who has been looking for a job for 6 months now, in vain, I can definitely back this up. Wanna see what came in my inbox today from Dice.com??? ...

    "Software Opportunity for BSCS and EE Honors Graduates or candidates just graduating from a Masters programming CS or EE. Candidates mush have a GPA of 3.9+ from a top tier school. Also considering candidates with 1 year of experience but the same academic requirements apply (GPA 3.9+)."

    Even the job title was "Junior Software Engineer (GPA 3.9+), BSEE or BSCS". This isn't typical, though; the typical listing is one of two things, either "This is NOT an entry level position, no entry level candidates please, entry level candidates suck" (about 85% of the listings online) or it's something like this: "Looking for bright young motivated enthusiastic individual fresh out of college, great entry level position... Requirements: 2+ years employment non-educational experience in Java, C++, Web Design, WebSphere, Flash, Perl, Cold Fusion, ASP, AS/400, DB2, COBOL, NT, SMS, SMS Installer, Oracle, TCP/IP, IOS, and anything else the HR department found in a computer dictionary today".

    And there's the days when my Dice.com jobhunter subscription returns a blank page. That's like opening the classifieds and seeing that the help wanted section was replaced with the TV listings.

    Luckily, my rent and living expenses are not that high, I can fall back on my parents for some things, and a seasonal job is holding me over for at least a few months, if not more. But the best of luck to all you Valley people... what can I say, move to Mexico and work for an American car company down there...

  141. Re:this is retarded by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Well, Starbucks ain't paying 9+ an hour, but yea, that's out there.

    FYI I'm doing what you went through, although I have to admit I'm living in NJ for the same rent and living somewhat ideally at the moment. Not that I can do much going out and spending, but I have what I have from college and I'm happy with it. I also have a seasonal job to hold me over, but it's not the cure to my problems.

    I did want to dispute you on the availability of part-time, menial, and/or temporary work. Tech people have three big problems with that right now:

    1. They aren't the most qualified people for the job. Believe it or not, teenagers in high school are more qualified to work at the supermarket than we are. Why? Cause they fit the needs of the employer better, in the eyes of the employer. We're just gonna run off when we get a real job. They might stay longer. I know, cause I went through this already with a store manager...

    2. They are overqualified. Being overqualified scares people. Especially that big bad tech resume... there's what I call the "technical resume conundrum". Basically, if you're applying to a technical field, anything that's not specific to the field is irrelevant and should be left off (that camp counseling job with the Special Olympics for example), as it only pushes out of the way more things that you can tell white lies about in the technical field. But, apply for a job anywhere else with a technical resume, and you won't get the job - all that mumbo jumbo scares off the prospective employers, and your resume doesn't seem to contain any down-to-earth business experience anyway.

    3. Finally, and this is the killer: The market is flooded with service and temporary job seekers at the moment... especially because it's the summer and all the kids are home, but more so because of the layoffs in every sector. If you live in a substantially large urban area (like NY), the chance of landing a really cushy job over $6 an hour is almost nil, cause there's thousands of poor people that would take that pay in a second, and thousands of temps who are in line already at the local staffing agency. But working for $6 an hour doesn't pay $600 a month rent unless you work 160 hours a month part time... which is possible, certainly, but then you have utilities, car insurance, medical coverage, food, gas for the car, etc... so basically look at working 60 hours part time a week, most likely at 2 or 3 different jobs. And when does that leave you time each day to look for another job? It's not like you're working in the office and have a computer to use to hit Monster.com every 1/2 hour... (granted, that scenario is bleak... working 40 hours a week at $12 an hour is definitely enough to cover expenses, I agree on that... but still, it's been 3 weeks that I've been home, and nothing has appeared yet. I'm patient, though)

    Remember those things, be more aggressive, and use every little last bit of networking power you have... and you might find something. I hope I do... I'm a BS in CIS with an MIS minor and two internships completed at big companies, plus I know what I'm doing, but it hasn't been enough - yet.

  142. Re:Intern Market, (stop whining) by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Escorted from the building? Hah hah. It's your snobbish achievement-oriented attitude that's responsible for the fucked-up situation in the tech sector in the first place. Aggressive, stupid, and arrogant, that's what it is.

    Yes, the best jobs, promotions, titles, money, etc. should go to those who work for it. Well I fucking worked for it at a four-year institution, and I had to sit home for the summer after I busted my ass for 6 months trying to find an internship. But YOU assume that, because I didn't spend ALL my time doing it, that I don't deserve anything. Well, REALLY? Maybe I should just walk away from the industry altogether, because I don't obviously have the obssessive/compulsive brainwashed dedication it takes to slave away for snotty brainless dot-com managers who can't even run a simple business right.

    I'm not saying natural born white people have a disadvantage for working hard... they actually have the advantage of racial bias and fluent English on their side, sadly. But if you've been paying attention in the last 10 years in this country, top notch colleges put diversity ahead of achievement, and therefore you wind up with the best schools accepting all the rich white kids and a lot of normal, but super-achieving, foreign and rural-based students. I know, cause I had the same exact problem getting into HIGH SCHOOL, as it was that competitve!!! Talk about a fucking rat race.

    Anyway, the foreign kids have nothing better to do than to work their asses off... after all, if they want to keep their sponsorship, they better be the best! I certainly admire that kind of tenacity and dedication to work, but I've said before, I don't need to lay those extreme expectations on myself... they would occlude my other goals in life, such as eliminating stress, keeping my friends and family important, and maintaining my interests outside of the field of computers.

    Unfortunately, the shortsighted market decides to hire skills over brains, and the rat race continues. Granted, it's definitely a reward for a lot of hard work, but I achieved a lot in college myself... I have an honors minor, two internships, and I'm provably very intelligent. And yet, I don't even think that entitles me to anything... I have to work hard to get it. But right now there's no opportunites on the market, and even these CMU kids getting internships are gonna get royally shafted when they graduate and their former employers decide not to retain their previously loyal interns for a career. So then they start from square one, where I am right now. I can't be bitter, really... they wasted more time doing useless hard work and they can't do better than me, so they should be bitter toward me!

    Not only did I not ask for freebies, I also love how you assume I'm some party animal! How many times do you drink per week? You're probably hung over right now! And CMU students earn internships, except it's CMU, and I guarantee they get more opportunities there than other students in CS programs do. Hey, I got into CMU in the first place but decided not to go, why can't I get a internship at Microsoft? (I applied but didn't get one last summer) Because I went to another school? Do we really not work as hard at my school, one of the top 25 public schools in the nation and certainly in the upper tier of prestige? My school has a very good reputation. But the simple matter is, CMU students do get more opportunites than we did. It wouldn't be so bad if the hiring market wasn't totally fucked up and if all you Gen X people didn't crash the industry with all these high-flying ideas that sunk to the bottom.

    I don't pity myself, though... I just curse out those of you who are ridiculous enough to continue on this track. I say, "Don't want to hire me? Your loss." One of my interview companies, a fast growing telecommunications company in the area, about two months ago told me that I was overqualified and that I'd probably get bored. I'm confident, I'm smart, and I didn't waste my time learning all kinds of skills that will be obsolete in a year - I went after general knowledge, and now I can learn anything easily and adapt to any situation. Additionally, I'm a normal person and I'm easy to work with. Tell me that this makes me a far worse job candidate than someone who can only say that they have "1 year + Java".

    That last line is the clincher though. Do you have prospective candidates escorted out of the building on a regular basis? People like you deserve to lick the crap out of public toilets. Then we'll see what happens, we'll see if you can maintain your hubris when the shit hits the fan for you.

  143. Re:So how did life turn out? by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Yea I had fun. And now I have a life. In the grand scheme of things, though, not going to CMU isn't a stupid decision... it's a good or bad decision depending on priorities. For example, I wanted to do Comp Sci, but I also wanted to spend at least half of my time doing things outside of my major. Since I wouldn't have been able to do that at CMU probably, I made a good decision.

    To you, it's a bad decision. To you, now I don't deserve a job. Well guess what... I've got a BS in Comp Sci, and a good head on my shoulders. And I'm not going into the IT industry because of pricks like you... I'm holding out for a job in media or publishing, cause I like doing that more, and I like the people more. Now go play with your expensive silicon toys and obscure programming languages, ass.

  144. Re:job posters and entry level by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Yea, exactly... I can't search "entry level" cause all I get is "no entry level"...

    I guess that since it's an employer's market now, they have the luxury of requesting specific skills and not having to do training. Screw 'em, cause when I start my own company and I buy one of these places full of skilled 'tards, the axe will fall swiftly and harshly. *giggle*

    We're paying for the mistakes of all the people who've been around for a few years, honestly. They don't care about the pipeline, and they're just killing the industry more. Furthermore, half the world is in denial about it, saying "Oh there's plenty of jobs out there! You can make lots of money." Basically, it's like we're all a big bowl full of brown M&M's, and the companies want individual flavors of Skittles.

    Companies are like that though. And if we were stupid enough to work for such a company, you know that they'd lay us off in a second if they didn't need those specific skills anymore... if they go from Unix to NT, they just fire all the Unix people and hire college grads who spent 7 years at college while working full time at an NT house. Then they go back to Unix. Wash, Rinse, Repeat.

    Start your own company. Do whatever with it. Just don't fall for the crap of the business world. I know that's what I'm doing after my first 2 years, surely...

  145. Re:this is retarded by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Yea, but that doesn't qualify as "cushy". They pay minimum wage. Most adults today cannot live on minimum wage alone unless they REALLY scrimp, and I don't expect most college-educated adults more than 2 years out of college to go back to living in a dormitory-like apartment and to give up all expenses. It just can't happen... medical, car, and rental insurance are enough with food and rent to make $6/hr unlivable. Bump it up to $10 an hour and then you can do it... but the economy can't afford to have so many $10/hr positions to compensate for layoffs. For jobs $13/hr, you still need training and skills, AND friends in the business... those jobs are just as hard to get as those CEO of dot-com company jobs.

    In all fairness to laid off employees, McDonalds is pretty much rock bottom. But still, pride aside, the math doesn't work out... even working at McDonalds full-time hours (something they don't always let you do, so you have to moonlight at Wendys) will not pay living expenses in the cities without some serious cost-sharing and cost-cutting measures. Although I'd surely like to hear of someone that has done it.

  146. Re:So how did life turn out? by brianvan · · Score: 2

    Yea. I'll find a job when I mature and start lying about having 2 years experience in Java, not a minute before then.

    I don't have a problem with the long hours. Really. At my one internship, I worked in the city from 9am to 9pm sometimes, and it didn't bother me. Right now I have a seasonal job where I work difficult 11 - 12 hour shifts. At school, I used to work from 5pm until 3am, and then I had to wash dishes and mop the floor until 4am.

    I'm not saying I WANT to work 60 hours a week for someone else, but that I can if I have to. It's just that I can't see myself doing it unless I have some faith in the company, and knowing what the industry is like, I have little faith for anything anymore.

    I resent the fact... not just for me, but for everyone else as well... that people are now expected to work way more than 40 hours a week at tech jobs, especially when the US already has the longest workweek in the modern world. I'm not saying I won't pay my dues NOW, but I'm afraid down the line that I won't be able to watch my kids' little league games or take my wife out to dinner without getting a dirty look from my boss. The solution to that ISN'T to drink more coffee.

    Of course, hackers are notorious for being selfish, arrogant people, so being a hacker for 80 hours a week comes way ahead of family and friends, I know.

    By the way, I chose the profession in high school... four years ago when things were a lot different. Sorry that I can't predict the future and know ahead of time when I'm 17 that everythings gonna go belly up... well, I kinda figured that out when I was 18, but I stuck with my major so I'd graduate within four years. And before you ridicule me for that, I'll just let you know that a fifth year meant $20,000 more in loans, and I graduated technically EARLY to avoid that scenario. And I'll take whatever I want to take in college, and it's nobody else's business. Leave deciding the merits of a BSCS that I may not use to my own thoughts.

    I'm a moron for leaving the industry if I wind up doing that? Well, you're a moron for staying in it. Most of you "hackers" are gonna get pushed around by businessmen for the rest of your lives, cause you don't know any better, and just because they can. 60 hour workweeks have nothing to do with being hackers... there's plenty of people who work that hard not knowing that someone at the top takes it for granted.

    Finally, it's exactly that attitude - that my computer science education is worthless, but someone who knows Java and nothing else is golden - that's gonna sink the industry again when everyone realizes they've got idiot employees who know nothing beyond an introductory CS course. And, of course, that's one of the reasons why I don't want to be in the industry... cause I don't want to get caught on the sinking ship like all these stupid fuckin people that just got laid off with their jaws on the floor. Their lives are a joke, they can't afford the Mercedes payments anymore, and now they live in homeless shelters. I deserve better for myself.

  147. Re:You expected way too much for what little effor by brianvan · · Score: 2

    First, I never said I didn't want to work long hours at all. I just think that working long hours for a long time is not something to be for granted, yet the industry has a bad habit of doing that. It's not a matter of "I won't", rather it's a matter of "I'm not willing to do it until I retire".

    Second, CS grads are not a dime a dozen. Enrollments are down, actually. It's tech workers in general that are a dime a dozen... a small percent of those (not as big as you would think it would be) have a four year BS degree in CS. (that's right, four years I made it in... most college kids in any major stretch it out to five years, but I worked hard through illness and bad semesters to get out on time... but that's irrelevant) Unfortunately, colleges aren't in the game of technical training, and the job market is focused on technically trained individuals at the moment. If you're a fresh college grad, there's no basic entry-level jobs being offered at the moment, not with the industry where it is (in carnage)...

    Third... although I may have had some bad foresight as a high school student as to where the industry would be the moment I graduated (things were VERY different last April, for example), are you really saying that all IT workers must commit to at least 80 hours a week working or forget even trying to get your foot in the door? That's ridiculous. If you love something and it's your own thing, then I understand working 80 hours + a week for it. If you own your own business, for example, then I can see that kind of commitment. However, if you're working under 50 layers of management, and you have no chance of being promoted without an MBA AND a CS degree, then why work yourself to death for someone else? It's the rat race... many industries have went through this slaughter/burnout cycle before, and it's a shame that no one learns from history. Rent "Wall Street" from Blockbuster and see what I'm talking about. Surely there's room for workaholics in this world, and I can choose to be bitter about it or I can do something about it... but I shouldn't be forced into being a workaholic just to get a job in the profession. Because in that case, I'd rather start my own software company, and maybe I'll be working 110 hours a week but at least at the end of the day, it's for me, not for someone else who doesn't give a fuck about me...

  148. Waaaaaaaaaa! by Alanzilla · · Score: 1

    Move somewhere else!

  149. Re:this is retarded by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Some clueless wonder raves, "Get a roommate" to help cover that $1800/month apartment.

    What you didn't realise is that in the Bay area, that means a two-room, maybe all of 400 square foot bachelor apartment, without a proper kitchen and probably without a private bedroom (it's shared space with the living room). You gonna tell me any working adult can live sanely in what amounts to college dorm room conditions??

    I have personally seen this offered as Bay area real estate: converted garage (now a one-room apartment) on a 400 square foot lot -- for $80,000 STARTING BID (and Bay area real estate bidding usually drives the final price up by around 30%). It was gone within a few days.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  150. Bringing Technology to the Poor by jazman_777 · · Score: 5

    It's a blessing in disguise. Now's their chance to really help society, and get the homeless up to speed on technology. They'll learn Java! They'll set Google as their default search engine! They'll learn to turn off JavaScript in their browser! They'll change the world! They'll be no more "digital divide".
    --

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    1. Re:Bringing Technology to the Poor by Dlugar · · Score: 1

      Flamebait? What are the moderators smoking today?

      It was a joke, people. And !funny != flamebait. Just in case you were wondering.


      Dlugar
      --
      Computer Go: Writing Software to Play the Ancient Game of Go
  151. Pardon me by _Quinn · · Score: 1

    while I laugh enough to short out my keyboard with spittle at everyone who laughed at me for sticking it out in college.

    -_Quinn

    --
    Reality Maintenance Group, Silver City Construction Co., Ltd.
  152. Here in Japan by hbackert · · Score: 1

    Maybe it might be interresting for some of you of the situation here in Japan. Even here there are dot bombs, some of them customers of the company I work for. (We do IT service in general, from cable installing, any kind of consulting, to installing network equipment, servers etc., just what most small companies need, when they cannot afford their own IT staff.)

    Since everyone says there's a recession in Japan, when I heard one of our larger clients (about 50 employees some monthes ago) will close due to high expenses and low income, I thought "Oh my, I wonder if they will find a job.". They were doing kind of advertising and consulting for advertising on the web, make nice web pages, including Java stuff, DB connections etc. They were doing well until they got too greedy, expanding too fast...you know. Typical dot bomb.

    Anyway, when I asked some what about gettig new jobs, the programmers, DB people, and generally all those, who were able to do something useful, got a new job. Either here in Japan or in US, since most were coming from US anyway. I don't know about the non-technical staff though.

    Some of the more bright people are currently setting up a new company.

    So, all in all even here in a country where everyone will tell you there is a recession, and beside all the unemployment and the many dot coms who failed, no one has to keep out of work for a long time. As long as you want to work and as long as you have experience in your job.

    Of course being a CEO who drove a company into the ground, is a different matter. But that's their fault having not learned something useful...

  153. Re:Is this the right path to financial freedom? by Assistant+Madman · · Score: 1

    This isn't the first downturn in the tech sector, nor will it be the last.

    I always wondered why older programmers smiled and laughed a little whenever talk turned to the 'red-hot job market' for programmers. Now I know....

    --
    older, wiser, and a lot more cynical

  154. Get in Line by detritus. · · Score: 1

    I know this is mean, but hey -- you shouldn't have a problem with getting in line early for Star Wars Episode II...

  155. Donations by DanThe1Man · · Score: 1

    So I guess a good thing to donate to your local homeless shelter would be NERF guns.

  156. Charity by DanThe1Man · · Score: 2

    So does this mean my donation to the Salvation Army will be used to set up a LAN at my local homeless shelter?

  157. Re:It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by BluSkreen · · Score: 2

    Being on the hiring end, it sounds like you have an attitude problem.

    Dave

  158. Re:I'm happy.. by flockofseagulls · · Score: 1

    I hope you pursue learning to spell while you're studying the Java books. I won't read a resume past the second misspelling or grammatical error, and a lot of recruiters and hiring managers feel the same way. Communicating with other people is the most important skill. Communicating with computers is secondary.

    Learning computer languages is easy. Learning to program well is hard. Expect to be humbled for a few years. Identify the talented programmers you work with and learn from them.

  159. The Real Meaning by dr+bacardi · · Score: 1

    "We're all equal here," Sacrosante said. "When you're used to making six figures and working in a dynamic and exciting environment..."

    Well, you aren't making six figures now, but I bet it sure is "dynamic" and "exciting."

  160. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by xtal · · Score: 2

    New Brunswick.. Saint John actually.. yeah, it is pretty nice an area. I'm originally from Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, but had to MOVE, because there aren't any jobs there (Fancy that :). SJ is pretty industrial, but it's nice out of the city. I don't know why anyone in their right mind would move to Cali - traffic pisses me off. :)

    --
    ..don't panic
  161. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by xtal · · Score: 2

    Maybe in the USA. I have an engineering degree and can't call myself an engineer for another 3 years (Although I can call myself a EIT, Engineer in Training). In Canada the engineering profession agressively defends it's trademark on the engineer title (yes, by law, they have domain). The reason they do that is exactly what you described above: There is a difference in skillset and responsibility between a technician, e.g. "Techie", with practical technical knowledge and an engineer with theoretical and design experience.

    --
    ..don't panic
  162. The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by xtal · · Score: 4

    Heh, if you're living in a homeless shelter, then that should be a big, red, blinking sign that your life is not on track and you're not following a sustainable path for employment in the future. Learn how to do something else. Go back to school. Assess what you're trying to do with your life. I think anyone paying $3 grand US a month for rent in Cali is insane. Move somewhere else. Reality-check time.

    Nobody - but nobody - that I know who legitimately understands technology, has good qualifications, and most importantly, can do something besides useless "process meetings" and powerpoint slides - is worried about getting a job, or keeping a job. I still get cold calls, and a quick scan of monster.ca lists loads of jobs in technology. This is in CANADA! Our unemployement rate is more like ~8-10%, and in my area (Atlantic Canada) it's more like ~20%. Most americans need to contend with a rate below 5%!

    Mind you, I did my time in the trenches, I produce product to deadlines, and I understand what I do. I have a Engineering degree, not a CS degree. I might have done CS, but there were way to many of those cookbook .com'ers in CS when I looked at it - people wanting to program for the money, not because it was what they were good at. That devalues the degree in the workplace. I suspect it's these people that are screwed.

    Those who can do things will never have a problem finding work. If you can't do anything, then you're in big trouble - and you should be.

    Another few words of wisdom are to make sure you have at least a few month's bills worth of cash in the bank. If you don't, then you're spending too much money. Having debt is one thing (ah, I love my student loans..), as long as you're able to service that debt through a dry spell.

    --
    ..don't panic
    1. Re:The clueless are unemployed.. not the skilled by jstott · · Score: 1
      By the way, the unemployment rate here in the US is figured on the basis of how many people are eligible for and seek government assistance, not how many people would take a job if there was one. This was done by the Clinton administration to prop up labor unions and help them bargain for higher pay.

      Umm... no.

      The U.S. has been doing it this way for decades - it's been controversial since at least the Reagan administration, and probably well before that.

      -JS

      P.S. If you're in the U.S. Military, you've also been marked as "fully employed" since the mid-80's specifically to drive down the official unemployment rate (as if you could change jobs anytime a better offer came along; the old way was to mark you as outside the labor pool as long as you were in the service).

      --
      Vanity of vanities, all is vanity...
  163. Re:always have a backup. by QuantumG · · Score: 2

    You have obviously never worked for a corporation. Corporate culture is 100% about job satisfaction or in managerial speak "alienation". The idea is to alienate you from life so you wont be alienated from work. Example, John likes to hit the clubs on the weekends, go to youth clubs during the week and hang out with his friends at a local coffee house. John does not associate himself with his work. "It's just a job" says John. Occasionally someone at work will say something that John doesnt agree with and John is the kind of person who will set them straight rather than giving in to "group think". If John's skills are required and no-one else can be found to replace him then John's good performance reviews better result in a predictable raise each year or John wont feel secure. If John's basic needs arn't met he will get a job somewhere else. Steve on the other hand cannot initiate a conversation with anything other than "so what do you do?" Steve is a good employee, but he is more than that, he is a member of the corporate "family". He is a "team player" and puts in long hours because he believes in the company vision. Steve hasn't spoken to his friends from college in a few years now. Occasionally a friend will call up and ask him to go out but Steve has a deadline he has to meet. If there is a downturn Steve will be the last to go and will happily take a pay cut although he knows the company would never do that to him. Steve arranges "relaxation events" and company outings and gets upset when someone doesn't show up to the company picnic. If you ask Steve he will tell you what he does is important. Without him the company would crumble.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  164. Re:An anecdote does not a proof make. by dubl-u · · Score: 2
    Did you try, say, reading the story that started this? It seems to have exactly the stats you wanted.
    Dot-com failures sent San Francisco's unemployment rate up to 4.2 percent in May from a rock-bottom 2.6 percent a year ago -- with 18,000 people added, according to a state report. In Santa Clara County, the heart of Silicon Valley, layoffs in electronic equipment manufacturing and business services rose for the fifth straight month, contributing to a 3.2 percent unemployment rate in May.
    These rates would certainly be the envy of other areas, but to have them jump like this is still a substantial shock. Compounding the problem is that prices are still high; last I looked rents were still at or near peak prices, although there is more availability now.

    Although I have no stats for this, it's my impression that almost all of the recent layoffs have been in the tech industry. If unemployment jumps 1.5 percentage points and tech is, say, 10% of all San Francisco jobs, then from the point of view of a geek, the market has been literally decimated.

  165. Just stay the hell out of Kansas by dirtydog · · Score: 2

    Just stay the hell out of Kansas City and I'll be happy. We don't want you here! There is a lot of demand here for 2 reasons:

    1. There are still A LOT more tech positions available than there are techies to fill them.

    2. All you jackasses east of the Mississippi and west of the Rockies think of Kansas as the land of Toto, Bob Dole, and Clark Grizwald's brother. You probably can't put K.C. on a map - so don't bother coming here. Here's some advice for anyone wishing to invade:

    This list will be handed to each person as they enter the state.

    1. That slope-shouldered farm boy did more work before breakfast than you'll do all week at the gym. How'd you like to go home and tell your momma you got your butt kicked by a big guy in bib overalls?

    2. It's called a 'gravel road.' No matter how slow you drive, you're going to get dust on your BMW. I have a four wheel drive because I need it. Drive
    it or get it out of the way.

    3. We all started hunting and fishing when we were nine years old. Yeah, we saw Bambi. We got over it.

    4. Any references to "corn fed" when talking about our women will get your butt kicked...by our women.

    5. Go ahead and bring your $600 Orvis Fly Rod. Don't cry to us if a flathead breaks it off at the handle. We have a name for those little 13-inch
    trout you fish for...bait.

    6. Pull your pants up. You look like an idiot.

    7. If that cell phone rings while a bunch of mallards are making their final approach, we will shoot it. You might hope you don't have it up to your ear at the time.

    8. That's right. Whiskey is only two bucks. We can buy a fifth for what you paid in the airport.

    9. The Jayhawks and the Wildcats are as important here as the Lakers and the Knicks...and a dang sight more fun to watch.

    10. No, there's no "Vegetarian Special" on the menu. Order steak. Order it rare. Or, you can order the Chef's Salad and pick off the two pounds of ham and turkey. Yeah, we have sweet tea. It comes in a glass with two packets of sugar and a long spoon.

    11. You bring Coke into my house, it better be brown, wet, and served over ice.

    12. So you have a sixty-thousand dollar car. We're real impressed. We have quarter of a million dollar combines that we use two weeks a year.

    13. Let's get this straight. We have one stoplight in town. We stop when it's red. We may even stop when it's yellow.

    14. Our women hunt, fish, and drive trucks-because they want to. So, you're a feminist. Isn't that cute.

    15. Yeah, we eat catfish, carp too-and turtle. You really want sushi and caviar? It's available at the bait shop.

    16. They are pigs. That's what they smell like. Get over it. Don't like it? Interstate 70 goes two ways-35 goes the other two. Pick one.

    17. The "Opener" refers to the first day of pheasant season. It's a religious holiday held the closest Saturday to the first of November. You can get breakfast at the church.

    18. So every person in every pickup waves. It's called being friendly. Understand the concept?

    19. Yeah, we have golf courses. Don't hit in the water hazards. It spooks the fish.

    20. No, we can't shoot the doves. They're song birds. Okay, even we feel a little stupid about that one.

    Now, enjoy your visit and then go home.

  166. Ahhh by I_redwolf · · Score: 1

    Justunixjobs.com?

  167. Re:What about porn? by eric17 · · Score: 1

    Provided you're not overcome with guilt about the moral issues, there are probably plenty of jobs out there.

    Unfortunately, most geeks are male and more importantly, not *ahem* well suited for _that_ kind of work.

  168. Re:Look to other similar fields..... by ErikZ · · Score: 1

    Wow! I just graduated too! Please send me this list of "Tons" of IT admin jobs cause I can't find any in my area.

    Wow! Tons! I must of been looking in the wrong place.

    --
    Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  169. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by brevard · · Score: 1

    I'm a generalist too and having trouble getting anyone to even talk to me.

    In my case it's because I've been around long enough (30+ years) to have a lot of different things in my background. This means I'm over qualified to say run a system admin operation but underqualified for some of the rifle-shot very narrow and extremely deep specialized jobs that are available now (e.g. design verification specialist at a semiconductor company).

    I quit a geeky boring job at Motorola doing design automation software support to become the VP of Info Systems for a friend's dot com. I got a 30% pay increase but the job only lasted 18 months - the last 6 of which my pay was cut back my old rate.

    Even though my old boss at Motorola would love to have me back they have a strict hiring freeze.

    Meanwhile my 18 months in dot com land toasted my credibility to do engineering software. BUT... the fact that we didn't actually do any multi-tier enterprise setups and never used Java means I cannot get in the door with the remaining e-commerce operations here!

    FWIW... We made our sites work with Perl, Cold Fusion, ASP, and whatever else it took without spending millions on enterprise software - but that means we (and I) were not appropriately buzzword compliant to get past the HR people guarding the gates everywhere now. Strangely if I *had* wasted millions of dollars on Commerce One, Arriba, Vignette or whatever, I would actually be more employable now!

    So... now I am living on savings and I'll probably end up starting a new company since at 53 I seem to be too old to get hired by anyone!

    --
    Laurence Brevard http://BrevardAndBrevard.com
  170. Re:What about porn? by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2

    Either the above post is missing the "online" point, or it deserves to be marked up as "funny".

  171. Re:Sad.. Really Truly by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2

    Okay, even if it were 50k or 60k after taxes, the numbers are still obscene.Didn't that drop from $80K to $50K result in your savings calculation dropping to something less than being able to keep $5k/yr?

  172. Interesting that salon.com got it first... by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2
    Instead of the local papers. The only logical conclusion (if it really has gotten to the point the salon.com article indicates) is that it is being suppressed or ignored because it wouldn't give the proper "Wonderful California!" image.

    It wouldn't be the first time, of course. California has always been so intent on image rather than reality that it has resorted to applying legal pressure to suppress news about the number of fatalities in the great SF earthquake, the fact of bubonic plague's introduction and spread there, and probably other disasters that no one has heard of because they were more successfully hidden.

    1. Re:Interesting that salon.com got it first... by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2
      Actually, I read it in the paper last night, and my paper sucks. It was probably in there, because they don't have any articles of their own to take up space.

      I don't know what paper that was. of course. It was conspicuously not being picked up by the San Jose Mercury News however.

      Probably because it would have looked odd against their local feature story and this attached story presenting tech workers as privileged and doing well - in contrast to more standard poor downtrodden nontechies which better fit as traditional liberal sympathy generators.

      Not that I mean to imply tech workers somehow deserve to be handed jobs more, or paid more that the market traffic would bear (but not less based on increasing desperation of imported tech workers either) - in both the cases described in the SJMN and this article, it boils down to normal supply/demand.

  173. In 2002... by Velox_SwiftFox · · Score: 2

    Person who left Silicon Valley the year before returns, meets someone he knew there before.

    "How are you doing? How's the dog?"

    The other person, cluing him into reality with a gentle voice:

    "There are no dogs in Silicon Valley anymore."

    (Apologies to Thornton Wilder)

  174. Re:It is really that bad (OFFTOPIC) by LS · · Score: 1

    How do you free yourself from eternal vigilance?

    --
    There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
  175. Humanitarian by pipeb0mb · · Score: 2
    Someone told him he could get a meal at the Montgomery Street Inn, where he now stays. He volunteers in the shelter's computer lab, teaching residents how to use computers."

    There ya go! Teach them a skill that ...will..get... them... a... good...er.
    Hey! Let's build a snowman!
  176. irony by joq · · Score: 2


    They're there because they want to be their. Sure the job market has been down, but for one to think there are no jobs is ludicrous. What I think is happening is, those who are staying in these shelters are likely to think that someone owes them something. When the dot com industry was at its peak, many became spoiled with huge salaries, perks, etc., and now that it's gone, it could be these people aren't settling for realistic jobs which are available at lower costs.

    Look the dot com industry is not as bad as everyone thinks it is, sure many companies have went down, many merged, and many left because of mergers, etc., but there are still plenty of jobs lurking on Monster.com, Hotjobs.com, etc., and for anyone who is too lazy to get off their ass, I personally have no pity for them.

    I've worked in companies that have went under, and always have managed to get something within two weeks to four weeks never anything higher than that. All this and I never took the time to finish school, nor get any specific training, and I still manage to make as much as a double income family.

    Anyone who complains there are no jobs isn't either looking, not looking hard enough or being too picky about things. I feel no pity for them sorry.

    1. Re:irony by F_Prefect · · Score: 1

      I've been looking for an IT support job in New York for five months, and I've had all of three interviews.

      So why are you living in NY still. When I got out of the Navy I was moving every month unitl I wound up in Oregon with a job offer. Just because you like the place doesn't mean that you can't find another place to like with a job!

      --
      You can be replaced by a very small shell script.
  177. Sympathy for no one by joq · · Score: 2


    You know when I made this post I didn't think people would take it the way the have so here's my obvious rebuttal.

    you cant see shit cause things must be real nice on your chair at the table.

    Give me a break I take nothing for granted after working for three companies that went belly up. It just so happens as I stated maybe people aren't looking too good for work, or maybe if they knew how to budget they wouldn't be in a crunch. Immediately after some of the companies went under I was on the ball looking for work including walking countless city streets on interviews, so for those who think I don't know what it's like, I've been there done that.

    One of the things that puzzle me is how many people complain but never take actions to do something for themselves. Again Hotjobs is listing 697 jobs for the New York City area alone, Cali has 423 listed this past week so who's fooling who?

    if you actually experienced the reality of what it is like to start at a company with high hopes in their future and then watch as people suddennly start leaving the office for good on one afternoon after a quick hoorah company meeting.

    Spare me, as stated I've been there three times, and don't expect anything to last which is why I'm happy with my current job, and save money as much as possible. 1) I don't pay Cali style rent 2) I don't need every single Palm that comes out every week 3) I maintain good status with recruiters, and others in the industry and assist them when I can since one hand washes the other in my eyes.

    So for those who's feelings I've hurt wish I could truly say sorry but I can't. As stated I'm nothing special and no better than anyone, but one thing I do know no matter who claims what is, there are jobs out there and if you don't get one your either a complete moron, not looking hard enough or underqualified. Take your pick and act on it.

  178. An anecdote does not a proof make. by Convergence · · Score: 2

    Someone whould put this line on bumper stickers, because its so true.... And its so easy to distort peoples understanding with anecdotes.

    Do we remember all the anecdotes about ``how no company could find qualified technical employees''? has anyone forgotten that the reason these guys couldn't find qualifed technical employees was because they were offering 70% the salary that these skills were going for in the area!

    And these cheap nuts testified before congress.

    Things may have changed; two-bit hacks are being weeded out.

    But, repeat after me: An anecdote is not proof.

    Got any Department of Labor statistics for your area? Have you called the chamber of commerce organizations for nearby areas, or in other states? How have the unemployment numbers for your area changed in the last 4 months?

    Maybe it is a problem, maybe it is something that I should worry about. But I'm not going to let a few anecdotes try to fool me into worrying needlessly. One can listen to heartfelt plees all day long about not having a job.... Even in the recent tech boom, one in fifty people could give an anecdote of how they lost their last job. (Unemployment of even 2% is incredibly low.)

    So, will you come back and convince me?

    1. Re:An anecdote does not a proof make. by raju1kabir · · Score: 1
      Compounding the problem is that prices are still high; last I looked rents were still at or near peak prices, although there is more availability now.

      If you want rent control, just come out and say it.

      --
      "Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
  179. The Problem Here is Redundancy by SAFH · · Score: 1
    Over the years I have seen many a people brought down by the lack of a job, the stress of downsizing, or deciding that they hated their job and had a great offer but the offer fell through and they already told their boss to go fuck himself (see the first problem, lack of a job.)

    In all of these situations, there have been several major problems: Lack of Forsight, and Lack of Redundancy. People spend hours upon hours hardening routing tables and installing IDS sensors into a network, or putting on tripwire and patching the latest overflows, but no one takes the time to harden their own mind. People seem to think that their job will always be there, that maybe - they can go to their boss or a co-worker and explain a problem.

    Unfortunately in todays Tech society and in many parts of our society, comming by a company that has as much dedication to its employees as most Geek employees have to their job is something that is few and far inbetween.

    As many of you, I decided to try and get a new job at the wrong time. However now I love my job beyond all belief, but it doesn't pay what I want. So instead of cashing in my chips and getting a new one, I decided to start several small side businesses hoping one or two of them would prosper. All of them require only a little bit of effort and have the potential to develop residual income. If anyone is in need of another opportunity, feel free to contact me at auto222418@hushmail.com, I will respond from a named account just tired of web spiders grabbing my real addresses. In the mean time, you can check out a similar project, http://www.excelir.com/chno and a side project of Mind Hardening at http://www.octanoid.org/hardening/.


    Best of luck! People have made it through worse, I know I have and will give advice at any time.

    --

    I cannot confirm nor deny the allegation or allegations you may or may not have just made

  180. Re:It is really that bad by DONGYRN · · Score: 1

    I hear ya. Been laid off from VeriSign, on the East coast, for a week now. Two phone calls, and I've plastered my resume across all the job sites can find.

    One phone call was questioning my SysAdmin experience, did I work on a Sun E10000? Trying to contain my drool, I said no but I'd love to. Sorry, need someone who has worked on an E10000 before. But I've worked on E250's and E450's, gimme a break! So sorry. Frill.

    --
    Brain: Promise me something, Pinky. Never breed.
  181. do what the cops in Santa Barbara do by oggodog · · Score: 1

    with the real homeless .. give the dotters a one way bus ticket out of town.

  182. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by scoove · · Score: 2

    C'mon their rates for Network operations staff is less than most people make flipping burgers

    True; I still laugh at the response I get to that point:

    "Well, that's what training is for!"

    Sounds like it's a good time to get that HR certification...

    *scoove*

  183. Re:Excellent advice. by scoove · · Score: 2

    ROTFL - yea, the welcome image is a...er... trip. Wow. Took another look... that image better not pop up at inopportune times!

    Another poster mentioned the proof of the guarantee. To be fair, the only proof I've seen is people truly internalizing it and the personal success they've seen. That's about as unscientific of a causal relationship as they come.

    Still, for Keirsey 'rational' temperament (which the technical world probably sees a greater representation of), objectivism is about the most effective operating system to run.

    I'm still trying to see the theory applied to non-intellectuals to determine the extent of its application.

    Regardless of theory, however, the greatest lesson many can come away from in this downturn is that the only job insurance is your own competence. Now if we could just ensure this rule got applied to the PHBs...

    *scoove*

  184. Tech vs. the Establishment by scoove · · Score: 5

    And if they have excess skills, they are "too expensive".

    This seems to be the tip of the iceberg in a major anti-tech backlash - probably consistent with the "irrational exhuberance" against solid techs in the stock market.

    I've been dealing with private company funding (yea, nice timing, eh?) and have had to deal with a consistent thread: technical people are making too much money.

    Mind you, I'm paying a CCIE and RF expert $75K, a CTO $85K and the CEO is still under $100K - for a growing startup with good performance and a team with exceptional industry experience (these people are starters as well - commandos who build, operate and manage with solid backgrounds doing this before). These wages, which would be considered poverty levels in the tech industry a year ago, are only marginally balanced to the recepients by their equity.

    Yet I'm hearing frequent whines from prospective individual investors about "how horribly overpaid the technical people are" by an alleged factor of double (this coming in many cases from old money, and Wharten MBA grads, mind you!). There's also the frequent reference to how technical people really shouldn't have equity stakes, since they "don't understand the business the way an MBA would."

    Suggested retail price for techies?

    CCIE: $45K
    Wireless Engineer: $30K
    Network Operations Staff: $6/hr

    In other words, the establishment is having its counter-revolution and working with great vigor to counteract the impact technology has had in creating new wealth (and disrupting the social order).

    *scoove*

    1. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by JWW · · Score: 2

      Their desire for lower wages is understandable, but when the tech. economy turns around these bosses will still have to pay the rates they are currently paying or they won't have the talent.

      C'mon their rates for Network operations staff is less than most people make flipping burgers, what you get when you do that are talentless hacks who should be flipping burgers. Oh and when you pay the higher technical people low wages, you get unmotivated employees who don't know enough to do their job.

      Sure they may be able to find people at these rates, but those people WILL NOT be able to do the job, and the business will suffer losses that will make the excess salaries look tiny.

    2. Re:Tech vs. the Establishment by Angry+Toad · · Score: 1

      That this idea can be stated and accepted by the MBAs indicates just one thing: a plateau in tech (specifically computer jobs which can be done by someone with a couple of years worth of training) has been reached.

      I mean, come on, how many tech support/system setup/windows installation/incompetent network admin/elementary programming people do you know? Quite a few, I'm guessing. So does everyone else. Just knowing the difference between NT and 98 is no longer enough. The market is finally flooded and the Big Money people imagine they're going to make isn't there anymore.

      Supply has met demand. The dream of infinite growth in an imaginary new economy is over.

      With a few exceptions, the easy money is gone.

  185. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by Baki · · Score: 2

    But please don't leave for Europe. Don't spoil the excellent market here :)

  186. Emergency H1B Visa Legislation by Baldrson · · Score: 2
    There is this theory going around that emergency legislation to increase H1B Visa workers is the only way to sustain economic growth in the United States.

    Here's a little reminder for those who would, for reasons that are now all-too-obvious, rather forget what they were advocating not even a year ago:

    106th CONGRESS 2d Session

    S. 2045

    AN ACT To amend the Immigration and Nationality Act with respect to H-1B nonimmigrant aliens.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

    TITLE I--AMERICAN COMPETITIVENESS IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY SEC. 101.

    SHORT TITLE. This title may be cited as the `American Competitiveness in the Twenty-first Century Act of 2000'.

    SEC. 102. TEMPORARY INCREASE IN VISA ALLOTMENTS.

    (a) FISCAL YEARS 2001-2003- Section 214(g)(1)(A) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1184(g)(1)(A)) is amended-- (1) by redesignating clause (v) as clause (vii); and (2) by striking clause (iv) and inserting the following: `(iv) 195,000 in fiscal year 2001; `(v) 195,000 in fiscal year 2002; `(vi) 195,000 in fiscal year 2003; and'.

    etc. ad nauseum

    1. Re:Emergency H1B Visa Legislation by Baldrson · · Score: 2
      here goes another round of Immigrant/alien bashing

      Interesting that merely posting language of a law that is currently on the books can elicit such a comment. If you really want to be considered part of the problem, trust me, when the "immigrant/alien bashing" starts, you'll have your wishes fulfilled.

    2. Re:Emergency H1B Visa Legislation by wandazulu · · Score: 1

      And if you actually READ the legislation, you'd know that the numbers go back down to 65,000 after three years. Also that employers must pay the prevailing wage for the job in the geographic area in which the job is located. (as determined by either US DOL statistics (which believe it or not are often higher than what employers actually pay in the region) or a private wage survey that must conform to certain guidelines. *ALSO* the H-1B dependent regulations have now gone into effect, basically saying that if your company is H-1B dependent, you must show the INS/DOL that you looked for qualified American workers and found none.

  187. Deja Vu by geomon · · Score: 2
    The dot com bust reminds me of the other employment busts of the last 20 years.

    When I entered college (1979), the hot jobs were in the energy sector. I took the bait and changed my major to geology from computer science. By the time I graduated from college, oil prices dropped from $50/barrel to ~$20/barrel. The consolidation of the oil industry started at nearly the same time I received my diploma. Jobs for anyone with a BS or BA vanished in less than a year and those with MS degrees either had to fight for the few jobs that remained in exploration, or they moved over to environmental positions in production. Those folks with doctorates who had contacts and could get academic positions considered themselves lucky.

    The next group were the MBA crowd of the mid- to late-1980's. Every graduate school of any size was milling out MBAs by the thousands. Eventually the stock crash and recession removed that degree from the "hot" list and computer science moved to the top slot.

    For those of you who have lost your jobs but love the industry should take my advice: Don't jump ship because the waters have gotten rough. Consider this current downturn as an opportunity to flush the deadwood and uncommitted from the field. If you can hang in there long enough, keep your skill level up, and are willing to make job changes (and location changes) to keep yourself fed, you can bet that you will be well positioned when demand increases again. Just don't expect that demand to be what it was during the dot com craze.

    Had I not stayed with geology, I wouldn't have accumulated the experience that allows me to earn the wage level I've attained. Had I quit and become a dot com worker in the early '90s, I would have gone from one frying pan to another. I would have made some great cash for a short period of time, but I would have jettisoned all the experience I was building as a geologist.

    I haven't forgotten the lesson of the downturn, however, and have cross trained extensively since my first brush with that state of "unemployable" you are now experiencing. I'm not just a geologist/hydrologist/geophysicist, but I also have experience in industrial hygiene, computer programming, computer network administration, heavy equipment operation, asbestos removal, building demolition...

    I hope I'm making my point.

    --
    "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
  188. Ditto. Not funny! by antdude · · Score: 2

    I have been unemployed since March 2001. It is almost three months. All the phone calls and e-mails I got were recruiters from job agencies. No interviews yet. I have gone to job fairs, daily job searches, etc. I have three months of unemployment payments left. :(

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  189. I know one of them... by dybdahl · · Score: 1

    There were many graphical designers etc., with no education, that earned good money. Since their knowledge was really small when it comes to computers, their worth on the job market is virtually zero. Their problem is, that they had status, money, and an interesting job. They won't accept to go as low as a job at McDonald's.

    I use one of these guys, who litterally works for bandwidth!!! Just to stay in the business and have something to show, if a potential employer asks him about what he has done.

  190. Re:Here's a clue ... by VB · · Score: 1

    Dude, Phoenix is great! Actually, Tempe's better. The babes dry up in the Summer on Mill Avenue, but, it's tough to beat $600/mo rent for a two bedroom apartment.

    Of course, I did save most of my income on my last contract so that I won't have to advertise for a roommate to cut the rent to $300 any time soon. But, if I do, it's not tough to find them near ASU in August.

    Now, if I could just get this stupid VB/SQL7 contract I'm working on finished and move on to some full-time C programming, life would be perfect.

    And, you're right; there's work out there for people with skills. You just have to prove you have them, these days. Perhaps that's not a bad thing.

    Linux rocks!!! www.dedserius.com

    --
    www.dedserius.com
    VB != VisualBasic
  191. Remember the H1b visa vote? by jjn1056 · · Score: 1

    Write your congressional representative and tell them to change it back to pre dot.com levels.

    Here's what I wrote, if you're looking for ideas:

    I'm writing to express my concerns on the current economic situtation, and how some of my peers have been affected by it.

    I am a technology worker with a good job and benefits. However, I have many friends who are skilled programmers and system administrators, who have been laid off, and are having trouble finding a new job in the field they love. These people are ethical, hard working individuals who are not interested in handouts. Instead, there are concerned that the playing field for jobs in this industry has been skewed in the direction of the employers, due to recent large increases in the number of H1b visa the previous congress enacted.

    At the time of the legislation, there was concern that the US economy would be harmed if there was not enough skilled technical worker available. Unfortunately, the previous congress choose a stopgag solution, instead of trying to address the real long term issues through education funding increases and job training programs.

    Clearly, there is no shortage of technical workers in the US any longer. The recent loss of so many dot.com companies has flooded the market with skilled technical workers. Even well established companies are laying off workers in this field. Keeping the H1b visas at their current level is merely a tactic by large companies to drive down the salaries of american workers and to create a new class of indentured servants in the US.

    I am not personally against immigration. I am against the unfair misuse of immigration laws by employers, who are only concerned with maximizing their profit at the expense of people.

    ---------

    Yes, I know a lot of us have little pity for semiskilled dot.commers, but next year it will be people with 10 years of experience being layed off. Or not laid off, just no reasonable salary increase for the rest of your life.

    --
    Peace, or Not?
    1. Re:Remember the H1b visa vote? by wandazulu · · Score: 1

      H-1B visas are not just for the tech industry. the new legislation did increase the number of visas for three years, but also increased the cost to businesses for hiring H-1B workers The extra cost goes to train Americans in new jobs. (that was the way the legislation was written anyway). Companies must pay the greater of the prevailing wage or "actual" wage for the job. The prevailing wage is essentially what every other employer pays a similiarly qualified worker for that job. The "actual" wage is what *that specific employer sponsoring the H-1B worker* pays other employees for that job. If employers are abusing the system there is a remedy, you can report them to the Department of Labor and/or the INS.

  192. Unemployment insurance is NOT taxpayer funded! by phliar · · Score: 1
    you can't KEEP the nice house/appartment you once had. You have to make sacrafices. You can't keep the BMW, the nice computers, and all the LUXERIES you had before. I'd rather be working my ass off and living in some shithole than ever recieve government aid
    "Government aid"? What are you talking about - AFDC, unemployment insurance, or homeless shelters (soup kitchens)?

    If you actually went on AFDC/welfare, you would not be paying for a "nice house/appartment" or any "LUXERIES" like BMWs.

    Unemployment is not taxpayer funded. When you have a full-time job, your employer puts money into the fund. In other words, my taxes paid for my unemployment cheque.

    Homeless shelters are charities.

    I'd rather be working my ass off and living in some shithole than ever recieve government aid
    Easy claim to make sitting in your nice comfy chair in front of the computer.
    I've got dozens [of fast-food places] within 5 miles of my place, and all advertise for starting at $7 an hour.
    If I worked 50 hrs. a week at $7, that adds up to $350 a week. How do I pay the rent, food, health insurance, transportation, utilities and taxes on that? If I work 50 hrs a week, how can I look for the tech job I'm somewhat qualified for? How do I feed my kids?

    Why do you feel such outrage towards people? It sounds to me like you have some serious personal problems to sort out. These ideas of yours are nothing more than warmed over reactionary ravings like those of Rush Limbaugh.

    Or you're in high-school, still living with your parents, and just read something by Ayn Rand.

    --
    Unlimited growth == Cancer.
  193. Re:The market has changed in Boston by BlueRain · · Score: 1

    I'm a developer in NYC, and it's been my impression that the three markets hardest hit are Boston, San Francisco and Seattle. All of these places have tech as one of pillars of the economy. NYC, while it has been hit, hasn't been hit as hard as these areas. The diversified economy has enabled me to find a job with a imaging company which is going on a hiring spree finding cheap dot-com employees. They don't pay well, but they're getting high quality technical people who wouldn't have given them a second look five years ago.

  194. Re:Guess What Guys... by BlueRain · · Score: 1

    Very Well Said, Igor.

    I actually stacked books at BN and studied nights to learn the technical knowledge I have.

    So, I know bad times. They come and go. The best thing to do is to figure out what people are willing to pay for. Swallowing a little pride is part of the game.

    And, incidentally, when someone comes to you looking for a job in the future, you can remember what it was like to swallow that pride and treat them with respect and dignity.

  195. Re:Worker rights issues by BlueRain · · Score: 1

    A good resource is:
    Washtech (in Seattle): http://www.washtech.org/

  196. Re:Is this the right path to financial freedom? by BlueRain · · Score: 1
    I could not agree more. Economics is indeed cyclical. Some life lessons:

    • When you make money, save whatever you can. Not only in your 401k, but have 6 months of expenses lying around, if possible.
    • Don't buy a new Mercedes unless you're Pierre Omidayar or Bill Gates. Note: Bill owns a Lexus, which is considerably cheaper than a Mercedes, Land Rover.
    • Haggle. If you've got money, you've got leverage.
    • When buying anything, consider it's ancillary costs: That New Mercedes will deliver a whopping insurance bill.

    There's something that was popular in the economic crunch called 'The Tightwad Gazette' which was a magazine devoted to finding ways to save money. They would go as far as reusing aluminum foil that you got at the deli! But it can be done.

    One important thing: each person is a treasure, worth infinitely more than any earthly possessions that they will acquire. We're all on scholarship here. It's important that you spend your time as wisely as you can.

    Thanks for submitting to my rant. ;)
  197. Re:price of rent???? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1
    Even at my wages, I don't have much hope of making a 20% downpayment on a $500,000 house, which is about the right price right now for a 2 bedroom house (one bedrooms aren't that much cheeper).

    Yup. I haven't a clue how my wife and I are going to save enough to buy a house before we're 50. Student loan repayments are absurdly high, and I'm selling my 'dream vehicle' and looking for something cheaper just to save a bit on those payments. I'm sure we could make payments on something decent, given what we currently pay in rent. But if we had to borrow the down payment too, that changes the picture.


    I have zero tolerance for zero-tolerance policies.

  198. Re:price of rent???? by ChristTrekker · · Score: 1

    I think every legislature in the country has uncontrolled spending habits since the "ratification" of the 16th Amendment. Some use an income tax, some a sales tax. Income tax is theft. At least with a sales tax, I determine for myself how much of a consumer I will be and how much I will save/invest.


    I have zero tolerance for zero-tolerance policies.

  199. Harder on Linux jobs? by magi · · Score: 2
    I've been wondering if the situation is harder for Linux/Unix people, since they are the most common OSses in .com companies.

    I've been having hard time looking for a new job for many months now. Many companies seem to be interested, and I've been to several interviews, but they haven't contacted me after that. There are surprisingly many Linux/Unix jobs, but there are also many people with a lot of experience in them.

    The US unemployment system probably sucks, I'm glad I don't live there. But then, my last job ended 1½ months ago, and I'm now living on 0 income. We do have decent unemployment system in Finland, but unfortunately I happen to be registered at university as a student. Even if I deregister, I wouldn't get any unemployment support for 3 months, and I keep hoping that I get a job sooner than that.

    Then, of course, companies want people with certain "attitude". Meaning that you must love submitting yourself as a slave with no rights. You may not object to HR manager-psychologists doing personality tests and probing your personal matters, but you must confess your sins to them. You should not have opinions about business policies or ethics, or expect ethical behaviour from the company. That's risky for the company - you might even sue them if they treat you bad.

    It's rather irrelevant that you're an enthusiastic person who loves making advanced software. Ordinary bosses and even most software workers (the career-pipe types) have no understanding of "hacker work ethics"; they really live in a totally different world and expect you to live there too.

    It's also difficult for a person who has opinions. The last company I visited is preparing a set of software patents. I'm really not very enthusiastic about that. But what should I do - stay unemployed with no income just because of that?

  200. It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by mjprobst · · Score: 3
    I've been uneployed since Jan 1, and looking for work since then. The biggest problem is not lack of _any_ work, since I could certainly find a different line of work, sell my (not excessively priced) house and move into an apartment with a friend, and survive. The biggest problem is in _finding_ open positions, and in actually _communicating with intelligent life_ on the hiring end.

    I have applied for many jobs for which I'm incredibly well qualified, and been turned down for various reasons. Many times they won't hire someone with my qualifications even at entry-level salaries because they believe I'll hop to the next available job when the market picks up.

    Other times I can't get someone on their end that can even understand my thrice-simplified, dubmed-down resume, since during the beginning of the .com squeeze last year most companies replaced techies in the hiring chain with marketroids and suits, because they thought MBAs would be more concerned with the flow of money into their coffers and less concerned with the needs of the other technies.

    And don't even try recruiters right now. Get a clueless recruiter talking to the clueless people on the hiring end, and you're better off walking door-to-door in the more developed areas of town. Even the best recruiters I can find have a hard time understanding my resume, which most techies and even non-technies from other fields have told me is very easy to understand. Filter job-search language through three levels of uneducated indirection and the childhood game of Telephone takes on an entirely new meaning.

    But I've seen things pick up significantly in the last month or so, only if you have _real_ skills to offer. I think many companies over-compensated and realized that technical position != .COM position, and many companies have struggled to fill the _truly_ skilled positions since December or January. If you see the same company posting the same job again and again, they could just be trolling to build their resume files, or they could really be desperate! Go seek them out at their headquarters and demand to see someone on the hiring side, and ask if their position is for real, and ask for something reasonably but substantially more than they initially want to pay, and you might get a reasonably mellow job with a good salary even now.

    1. Re:It's bad but not because of lack of work . . . by eviljason · · Score: 1
      Being on the hiring end, it sounds like you have an attitude problem.

      Maybe not. I never see good candidates from HR. Of the 20 or so interviews I've been involved with in the last 2 years I've been excited about hiring 1 person.

      I could rant for hours about the wild claims people make on their resumes. Some in honest ignorance, they think they know more than they do, but most because they know that they have a chance of getting hired through a breakdown in the screening process. Happens often enough to pay off.

      I'll take a cocky bastard with ability over a nice person with "potential" any day.

      --

      --

      --
      You nah, me nah. Screw you guys, I'm going home.

  201. Re:It is really that bad (OFFTOPIC) by Mr.+Hankey · · Score: 1

    Give up :-)

    "Though I may never see you again, I wish you the warmest clam chowder, the finest of embalmings, and the best in stainless steel cadaver pans that money can buy."

    The Surrealist Complement Generator, helping to avoid the lameness filter... (Foiled again!)

    --
    GPL: Free as in will
  202. Re:I'm happy.. by VAXman · · Score: 2

    It is said that less than 2% of teenagers want to persue a high-tech career since all the layoffs. What does this mean? This means that teens like me who still want to do it will be in high demand in a few years.

    Please do not think this way.

    Although it is easy to feel threatened by entering a competitive industry, competing with your industry-mates will make you, and the industry, better in the long-run. As the industry grows, and as your career grows, you be that much further away from the lowest jobs in the industry; you will get to do the work you want to do. As long as there is an IT worker shortage, you will be forced to do less interesting work, because real work can't get done before the dirty work is completed.

    Think about it: skills such as web design and system administration (the two big "janitorial" IT jobs) are very commonplace. But they have to be because they are in demand. If system administration was an elite skill, then companies would have a hard time hiring system administrators, so they would be less hardware, less software, offer fewer services, and generally get less work done.

    The more people who are more skilled means the industry will be that much stronger and more exciting. If you hope that people don't enter IT, you're hoping that less technology gets developed. More players in the industry means more competition, and better products, shorter development cycles, and lower prices. If there were more competent software developers in the world, Microsoft would have a lot more competition, and that would benefit everybody.

    If you are competent and committed, then you will rise to the top in the industry. If the industry is big, you are that much more important. Do you want to be a big fish in a small sea, or a big fish in a big sea? But you do have to realize that in the IT industry, although your education is pretty easy (compared to law or medicine), you have to work very hard during you career and stay on top of everything.

    Another facet of this is immigration: for the same reason, don't fear immigrants taking your job. As long as you have real skills (i.e. more than just coding, web design, system administration, etc.) then you will rise to the top, and the rest in the industry will be there to do your dirty work.

  203. Re:IT worker shortage! by VAXman · · Score: 2

    I don't believe it was. Perhaps they evetually came to realize that the supposed IT worker shortage was a big fraud manufacturered to force techies to accept lower pay.

    The IT worker shortage was definitely not a fraud. We were hiring up until a couple of months ago, and it was still extremely difficult to find people who actually have real skills (even though the job market was quite weak at that time).

    If we do not have more H1B's, the most skilled workers from countries such as India, China, and Pakistan will form their own companies and compete with US companies, which means that US companies will be hurt. This is bad for the workers of these companies also, because their jobs will be in jeopardy if the company goes down. With nice H1B allotments, the US has a virtual monopoly on the best worldwide IT workers which is VERY good for the country.

    Do you want the US computer industry to end up like the US auto industry in the 80's, where it was unable to compete with Japanese companies? That's what is going to happen if we don't aggressively hire the best foreign workers.

  204. Re:IT worker shortage! by VAXman · · Score: 2

    But given the fact that there were quite many very experienced technical people looking for working during even the peak, tells me that the difficulty in finding good people was not as a result of there being a lack of numbers.

    Although that's true, anybody who has trouble finding a job right now would have a much tougher time if the industry were not centered in the US, or even if non-American companies built signficant share. Now we just have to worry about competing amongst ourselves (including immigrants) for jobs, but if foreign tech powerhouses emerge, we also have to worry if our nation's industry is the strongest.

    To the extent to which immigrants do compete with American-born workers for jobs, it does make the whole American workforce that much more skilled and productive, and better prepared to withstand foreign competition. On that account alone, I believe we should continue to expand immigration even during an economic downturn. I believe there is a very strong chance that relatively unskilled IT jobs such as web design and system adminstration will be outsourced to countries such as India in the next few decades. This is good for the US economy, because it frees up native talent to do jobs which require more skills.

    Right now you'd be absolutely insane to start a CPU design company, or a software company (e.g. OS or application development), anywhere but the US. Let's keep the skilled workers here, and bring the best foreign workers, so the jobs stay in the US!

  205. Re:Is this the right path to financial freedom? by VAXman · · Score: 3

    First of all, educating yourself is the best investment you can make during a recession. The opportunity cost is much lower now, than it was two years, because you aren't foregoing a $100k/year job that you could have had (most likely, you couldn't find a very good job right now).

    Second, chances are that the American economy will not collapse, and that the computer industry will not collapse either. The fundamentals are still there, and I think that the industry will continue to be strong, and that the US will be the leader, for the foreseeable future. Even if technology does collapse, your degree will you man you're more qualified for that grocery store clerk job than the average joe on the street. :-)

  206. Re:Why would "experienced" risk working @ VC start by catch23 · · Score: 1

    AGREED.

    When I hear Nortel Networks, it doesn't remind me of a small VC startup... And they've layed off almost 30,000 this year. What small startup has that many employees?

  207. Re:Stop panicking, mate by crucini · · Score: 2

    I know two techies who are socially inept. Both became unemployed in the crash. One of them is still unemployed. He has gotten two jobs, and in both cases left within a month due to personality conflicts. He is used to being treated as an elite coder code and doesn't like sitting in meetings with idiots. He is also quite frightening to non-techies - streaks of the BOFH. The other guy has a job largely because I hooked him up. I'm not sure how long he'll keep it, although he's doing a very good job. The thing is, he doesn't know how to schmooze his manager at all. I'm not talking about utter corporate ass-kissing - I'm talking about the ability to give your manager more than a blank stare or a dissertation on the latest Linux kernel.
    Anyhow, it's true that the end of the bubble spells disaster for some talented but unsocial techies.

  208. Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? etc. by Nova+Express · · Score: 4
    This struck me as particularly telling:

    "Top consultants and contractors once named their salaries in the valley. Now, even those who qualify for unemployment benefits soon discover the $40 to $230 weekly check will not cover an apartment here, where rent averages around $1,800 a month."

    Which brings up the question:

    1. Why didn't they put any money away for a rainy day? If they bought their own hype, expected to live off stock options, and didn't put any savings away, then they deserve to suffer for their own lack of foresight.

    2. If it costs so much to live in the valley, why don't they move somewhere else? The saleries may be lower elsewhere, but the cost of living is generally MUCH cheaper. Here in Austin, decent aprtments can be had for $600 or less. And Texas, unlike California, has no state income tax. Nor does it have an artificially induced power-shortage brought about by short-sighted politicians who didn't understand economics and evidently didn't realize that prices can go up as well as down. (Or, like the poor yuppie victims mentioned in the article, that stocprices could go down as well as up.

    3. Why aren't they staying with friends or family who are still employed? If they don't have any in the valley, why don't they move away? And this isn't some "if you only walked a mile in their shoes" BS. I spent four years living in someone's living room while I worked temp jobs and paid off credit card debt from my immediate post-college years, when I was making a hell of a lot less than $100,000 a year (try around $20,000 in 1991). Easy? Hell no. But I did it, and I'm currently debt-free. Unless your relations are really strained with friends and family (and there's another sign that something might be wrong with your outlook on life), they can support you during lean times, and expect you to do the same.

    4. I've been to the valley twice this year, and I seem to remember a lot of "Help Wanted" signs in McDonalds, Burger Kings, etc. Why aren't they working there? There's nothing wrong with working a lower paying job until something better comes along, and to my mind it's far less injurous to your dignity than mooching off government handouts or the kindness of random strangers.

    This story reminds me of that National Pravda Radio story on the woman who got a job with Dell, and then was let go before she ever started working. I felt empathy for her right up to the point where they mentioned she had spent $3000 on a purebreed dog to play in the yard of her custom-built house. Not only did she count her chickens before they were hatched, she spent the money she was going to get from the chickens in advance. If you're going to spend money like an idiot, don't expect any sympathy from those of us who put our money in the bank instead of spending $3000 on a dog. (Here's a tip: You can get a dog that's just as cute and friendly at the SPCA for under $100.)

    Look folks, no one is guaranteed a ticket to easy street. No one should be saved from the consequences of their own poor decisions. Yeah, getting laid off sucks, but how you prepare for and respond to those situations is up to YOU. You shouldn't ask society and/or government to bail you out from your own shortsightedness. Thankfully, in a capitalist econonomy, you can generally get as many second or thirtd chances as you're willing to earn. In nature, making mistakes gets you killed.

    "3.2 percent unemployment rate"? Poor frigging babies! Go over to France, where they have all sorts of welfare and unemployment benefits. And, directly related to same, unemployment around 15%. That's why high French officials warn other EC countries darkly not to engage in "tax competetion," because they know their creaking, failing socialist economy would inevitably lose jobs and industries to dynamic, nimble economies, like those of the United States. Yes, you're more likely to get laid off here than in Europe, but you're also much more likely to find a higher paying job afterword. The creative distruction and economic dynamism of capitalism offers far more opportunities to rise to the top than tired old socialist economies. That's why people write books with titles like "Thriving on Chaos." Yes, you're more likely to get laid off, but in the long run that's the only way that your children will be able to enjoy better lives than the ones you lead. That's a price worth a few layoffs.

    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

  209. dice seems to agree by jon_c · · Score: 1

    C++: 17673
    Java: 9835
    perl: 4060
    Assembly: 3241
    VB: 2473
    asp: 2465
    JavaScript: 2186
    VBScript: 496
    php: 140

    if you know something that's easy you're fuck out of luck. learn C++ if you want a job, they don't need anymore php/javascript/asp hacks anymore.

    What i find interesting is the number of "enbedded systems" developers they need w/ assembly exp. last time i went looking for a job it was all about the server side scripting stuff. I have to say i'm glade those jobs are drying up. (i know i'm singing to the choir). But the amount of people i saw reading "ASP in 24 hours" to get a high payed job astounded me.

    We have a guy at my current job who's doing VB stuff, before this job he did a lot of ASP/VBScript stuff and a little VB. he's a jock, he doesn't really care about tech, and writes HORRIBLE code. things like copying and pasting the same freaking 6 lines 30 times. using Variant's, no hungarian, global varaibles, not using Option Explicit. not suprisingly he's section of the our app has been called "a quivering peice of dog shit" in confidence by another senior dev, and not suprisingly he gets the lions share of the bug's reported to him.

    Naturally my compains pretty clueless to this. then again the majority of our "dev's" only know VB... sigh.

    -Jon

    --
    this is my sig.
  210. Re:So how did life turn out? by Serveert · · Score: 1

    umm i went to cmu, it wasn't like a 24/7 party at, say, UCSB or univ florida.. but at the same time I had tons of fun and worked my ass off. Now I have a nice job, paying more than enough, doing what I want, I own the brand new Porsche _and_ I partied a lot/travelled in college. I realized that CMU's education was so much better than most other schools, I try my best to hire CMU grads, but it's too damn hard. You made the wrong decision. Live with it.

    --
    2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
  211. It could be... by SpazAttak · · Score: 1

    I'm a college student due to graduate soon (Fall 2001) and I have had an extremely difficult time even getting any responses. I have heard similar stories from people I talk to in class. I've been to several career fairs, all packed, several company job fairs, more people showed up than they could handle. Alot of the people who worked on contract work are now looking for fulltime work because the contracts have dried up and they want something stable, add to that the increasing number of graduation computer science, engineering and CIS students and you have yourselves a glut in the market which is sure to push wages down and unemployment up. I have satisfied myself with two partime jobs, one being in the service idustry.

  212. Re:Folks..let's not forget it's a job 'market'.. a by chizor · · Score: 1

    sure, but this is a catch-22. how can i get the experience you're touting if no-one will hire me?

    --
    ... !
  213. Re:price of rent???? by chizor · · Score: 1

    although rents have been declining a bit here, in san francisco the average price for a 2 bedroom place is around $2400 a month. we pay $1800 and have two bathrooms, so it's a sweet deal.

    --
    ... !
  214. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by chizor · · Score: 1

    Funny as it may sound, this is where I'm from. I'm not interested in chasing jobs around the country; I am very happy in in my home zone, with my family nearby and so on. There have to be resources for people who actually intend to be present in the community and stay here.

    --
    ... !
  215. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by chizor · · Score: 3
    You've hit it. I am a highly skilled and technical generalist who has good professional and personal experience (evidence). I also speak Spanish. However, since I'm only a year out of the university, none of my skills are profound enough to apply for the myriad "Senior" or "Lead" job postings, which constitute most of what I'm seeing. I do respond to all job listings I think I could do (and be considered for), but writing 10 or 20 emails a day, in general I get no replies. The only recruiters who have contacted me found my resume on their own. So in the last three months I've been unemployed, I have only interviewed at two companies, and believe me, I would have taken the jobs had they been offered.

    I don't live gratuitously in Silicon Valley. I live in the city of San Francisco, which is in my native region, and wonderful, culturally. I live in an inexpensive 2 bedroom apartment with a friend, and my share of the rent is $1250. So although I had saved up $5000 over the less than half a year of employment I've had since I graduated from college, it is all long gone.

    I get the impression that were I a couple of years older (I am 22), I would not be having this trouble finding work. Although _I_ can think of plenty of types of technical jobs I could and would love to do as a generalist (dept. liason, field engineer, alpha geek, internationalization engineer, etc.), apparently employers do not agree.

    --
    ... !
  216. Re:Stop panicking, mate by blue+trane · · Score: 1
    It's probably your own attitude holding you back, not external factors.

    wtf is that supposed to mean? that employers once again are making hiring decisions based on subjective criteria like "smiles a lot", "makes good smalltalk", "fits in", "looks good" instead of "gets the job done"?

    damn, I suffered for years because I'm socially inept, then I finally get a job where it didn't matter what my attitude is like so long as I get the job done. But now it's all turning back again, and the competent but socially-inept like me will once again suffer. damn you'd have thought my kind would have been weeded out of the gene pool before now.

  217. Re:$100k for 40h/week? by blue+trane · · Score: 1
    dude, the point is: we would all benefit if people didn't have to do shit work. automate the shit stuff, so no one will have to demean themselves.

    the point is NOT: haha, you lost your high-paying interesting job, now come join the rest of us at our shitty jobs, things are never going to change.

  218. Re:Where did all these IT workers come from anyway by blue+trane · · Score: 1
    How about that store down the street that needs someone to stock the shelves?

    I used to have jobs like this; the problem is, they suck. Especially for someone like me who sucks at schmoozing and smalltalk. I thought maybe I'd found my niche in the programming world where I feel so much more comfortable.

    Instead of stocking shelves, I would want to figure out how to automate the process. Supermarket shopping could be so much better than it is. But I guess it's all the rage these days to go back to the old tried and true ways and stagnate for a while.

  219. Re:Stop panicking, mate by blue+trane · · Score: 1
    Anyhow, it's true that the end of the bubble spells disaster for some talented but unsocial techies.

    Is this a good thing, that people capable of contributing are ignored because they are not good at playing the "social" game?

    If it's not a good thing, then don't play along. When someone says something like "he does a good job, but he doesn't fit in", voice your disagreement.

    Otherwise, the socially adept "cool" kids from high school will be in power again, and you'll be left sucking up to them, pretending to be like them even though you really sympathize with the socially maladroit geek who's being treated unfairly.

    *sigh* when we finally get to a virtual office environment, maybe then the geeks won't be so targeted; if you can't see them (or only see avatars of them), the cool kids won't be able to use their non-verbal games to smack down the geeks as much. one can hope at least.

  220. Re:Have to get over High School, Junior High Schoo by blue+trane · · Score: 1
    You probably aren't socially inept, you just haven't met the right people.

    That's why I like working with programmers, because they seem to accept me for what I am, and they either don't have girlfriends or don't rub it in (well, not much anyways :).

    well maybe it's time for programmers to throw off the shackles of the oppressors and start writing good open source code that doesn't need the overhead of an advertising and sales machine run by weasels to sell it to the public.

    just think, if you're out of work, maybe you can write excellent programs, and put all the ms-centric programmers out of work too.

    it is sort of funny though to see how geeks sort of expect the worst to happen in this economic downturn. We're never far away from what we were like in school.

  221. Re:The Jobs Are There��� by Feign+Ram · · Score: 1

    The situation is too complicated to say things like Java is in demand©In fact, That's plain irresponsible© Large sections of the Java market have been completely wiped out in this dot-com collapse and a large number of Java programmers are without jobs© I have no experience with Java server side - I am told it's doing better there© But JFC/Swing is an unmitigated disaster - ask any real programmer; they will tell you about the sucking noise that Swing makes, unless of course you work for one of those places where they have more than sense© Simson Garfinkel wrote a very perceptive article on Java in Salon - search the archives©

  222. Re:Diversification by Feign+Ram · · Score: 1

    Nice post. Thanks for the tips. BTW, Please check the links on your page - may be it's just a problem with ASP that my browser has.

  223. Much More Alarming Are The Prostidots... by afflatus_com · · Score: 1
    http://www.satirewire.com/features/prostidots.shtm l

    Just a few of their findings:

    ...The scene outside the offices of Kleiner, Perkins, Caufield & Byers, home to the legendary VC John Doerr..Day and night, groups of eager dot-com executives, male and female, loiter near the entrance. They are waiting for a prospective backer, what they've come to call a "John Doerr." Whenever one of the venture partners walks by, the soliciting begins:

    "Hey, money boy, you want No. 1 clicky-clicky?"

    "Say baby, you've got the seed I need!"

    The partners usually ignore these crass come-ons, and for most hopefuls, the day ends at around 11 p.m. Then they are picked up in a van driven by their "management consultant," usually the head of a Net incubator that has several companies it's trying to get funded...

    ---
    "And the beast shall be made legion. Its numbers shall be increased a thousand thousand fold."

    --

    -----
    Cast a Cold Eye
    On Life, on Death
    Horseman, pass by
    --W.B. Yeats' gravestone
  224. Re:Get out of California by jaydub2001 · · Score: 1

    Point in fact, California recently surpassed France in annual GDP, making it the fifth largest economy in the world.

    I have lived in california now for twelve years and I can safely say two things:

    1) Most cultural comments about california ring true with the exception of parts of northern california where you have a real multicultural, open-minded culture where the concept of 'normal' people does not have to mean a narrow, middle america whitebread idea of normal.

    2) Only in the last couple of years has there been a massive influx of people from all over the rest of the country chasing dreams of easy money. This is what has led to out of control rents and impossible dreams to own a home. Locals have been just as guilty at times of greed, but i know many people who were okay before the boom and are doing just fine thank you after the boom. What they didn't do was think that the whole world had changed economically and rush out and buy up everything in sight.

    That being said, I think considering moving to other parts of the country to seek better opportunities is fine, but you will find less people who were in california already that will be willing to do that because we remember how it was and how it can be.....

  225. Re:Why would "experienced" risk working @ VC start by delong · · Score: 1

    Yeah, thank GOD for my severence. Im still riding on it, because my current job doesn't cover the bills. It was an absolute bloodbath. Right before I was laid off, I was saying how I was glad I was in the profitable part of the company, instead of the poor MCI guys who got axed. Ouch.

    Derek

  226. Re:Not so bad... by delong · · Score: 1

    Good advice. But for God's sake, stay away from tech sup and help desk!

    HR people see tech sup or help desk and their eyes glaze over. It doesn't matter what other experience or knowledge you have, it seems tech sup kills resumes.

    Derek

  227. NEC layed me off. by DRAGONWEEZEL · · Score: 1

    After an assembly plant in fife closed, my most wonderfull highschool-grad dream job was swept away without warning.
    There I was after finally aquiring the things I had wanted, and learning what TECH was all about.
    Just to be woken up as from a dream.

    Dot coms? Dot Cons more like it.

    BBS's as/and local ISP's were lost to the likes of AOHELL, and MSN offering competitive rates.

    Still people try failed business techniques i.e. sites who's income consists Soley of advertising/ and memberships (excluding pron). Sucking capital $ dry and creating even more layoffs.

    However, there is allways data entry!!!!

    --
    How much is your data worth? Back it up now.
  228. Re:price of rent???? by ccoakley · · Score: 1
    In Santa Barbara, California, it's about $1000 per room per month. I have a small one bedroom place for $895 per month (water/trash included). Less than an hour drive away, you can get a 2 bedroom condo (with a small yard and a garage) for around 800 per month. Santa Barbara has 80,000 people. Goleta (basically a part of SB) has another 60,000. That's not a very big market, so when the economy was good, a new influx of 1000 people has a measurable effect on the housing situation. Ericsson, Raytheon, and some other big companies have offices here, and there were a number of startups that entered the market. The university has about 20,000 people (I think that includes staff). Those forces kept more than 100% of people with skills employed (my company hired one guy in a city that is three hours away, and several from cities that are 1 hour away). That has changed, and there are quite a few people out of work. However, I think that rent will likely remain high throughout the economic downturn. This is unfortunate for me. Even at my wages, I don't have much hope of making a 20% downpayment on a $500,000 house, which is about the right price right now for a 2 bedroom house (one bedrooms aren't that much cheeper). The fact is that there isn't a whole lot of new housing development, but the University is growing, and people want to stay in the area. We call it the Palm Tree Effect--people sell their houses elsewhere and end up living with a roommate just to live here.

    Finding a tech job here is extremely difficult if you aren't a specialist. Companies are hiring (we are trying to hire roughly a person a week), but enough companies have gone belly up that the job pool is saturated for non-specialists. Still, good skills are hard to come by. We only have one QA engineer and one more starts tomorrow. We've been trying to get a department of three QA engineers for several months. We want to hire another tech writer. We want to hire a couple more programmers. The company wants to hire more management. So, in many respects there is a shortage of talent.

    --
    Network Security: It always comes down to a big guy with a gun.
  229. Not so bad... by ccoakley · · Score: 1
    Find somewhere that is hiring entry level people. Thought there is quite a saturation in that market, people are still hiring. Because it is an entry level position, you are more likely to be hired on your interviewing skills than on your resume. It is your responsibility to be aggressive. Where I work, we still hire entry level people. I don't say this to offend you, but unfortunately for people like you, your resume has little to do with whether you come to work for us. It is a catch-22 in the sense that we may not let you interview based on your resume. However, I recently graduated from college, and an old friend who even more recently graduated bumped into me. We got to talking and I asked him what he was doing for a job. He said that prospects weren't good because of the market. I told him that was bullshit and that my company was hiring an entry level programmer. I told him to apply and preface on his cover letter that I recommended him. His resume looked like a real piece of crap (formatting and content)! However, we brought him in because I recommended him. I knew the guy had the analytic skills we were looking for. However, he didn't even have the academic background on the experience we wanted (we wanted a person who could do basic DB stuff. He took the course on parallel computing instead of the DB course. Apparently you get to choose quite a few elective courses in CS). On the other hand, he did well in the interview. I actually had him interview with a number of people even though he was going to be working for me. Anyway, it took him a couple of weeks to ramp up, but now he is a productive member of the team. He's still entry-level, but he has the skills to say when something is too tough for him and has the skills to look stuff up when no one else can train him.

    That was long-winded. The point: Entry level positions exist, but you need something other than your resume to get the job because of the market. You need to go out and meet the people who are hiring. My boss goes rock climbing--join a weekend climbing group. The president of the company goes running--join a running group. I drink--hang out in bars. Hang out in coffee shops. Meet people informally and start networking. You need to be (forgive me) proactive. Send in your resume for those entry level positions. Call about the position. Show up in person. Follow up on it. We actually have given a walk-in an interview. It doesn't happen frequently, but it does happen. Once you have your foot in the door, stay with the crap job for a year. Now you have something to build on.

    --
    Network Security: It always comes down to a big guy with a gun.
  230. Re:Market Update by ccoakley · · Score: 1
    Where do you live? There are cities in New Mexico (Anyone here from alamagordo?) with that average, but there aren't many 6 figure incomes (yeah, I know that *too* many would raise the average, but...). You have to be in a sizeable, poor city to support that kind of average/outlyer combination.

    I often think about moving to central Illinois and taking a job for less pay just so that I could buy a house. Well, that and half of my college buddies are going to UIUC for grad school.

    --
    Network Security: It always comes down to a big guy with a gun.
  231. Sam Kinison would know how to put this by eviljason · · Score: 1
    Why don't these people move to where the jobs are?

    THERE'S NO FOOD HERE! MOVE TO WHERE THE FOOD IS!"

    --

    --

    --
    You nah, me nah. Screw you guys, I'm going home.

  232. Seperation of stupid people... by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    Give me a break...

    Anyone who was making $100k a year can't figure out how to sell anything that's sucking his money up and get a minimum wage job to pay the remaining bills while he gets back on his feet?

    Money is money. Don't let pride stand in the way.
    Those guys would rather be homeless looking for charity than take a "crap" job and pay some bills off.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  233. I realize that... by Mustang+Matt · · Score: 1

    I understand that the valley is an expensive place to live. So if you're out of a job and it looks like your going to tank, get the beep out of the valley!

    I don't care if he's making 25,000 or 250,000. If you can't manage your money you're going to spend it all.

    --
    The man who trades freedom for security does not deserve nor will he ever receive either. - Benjamin Franklin
  234. Re:Capitalism doesn't look so hot now, does it? by djberg96 · · Score: 1
    Yes, YES! Dot-commer's of the world UNITE!

    Probably all mid-level managers and VP's anyway. Good riddance.

    What's the unemployment rate here again? Scoreboard! Scoreboard!

    --
    In the immortal words of Socrates, "I drank what?"
  235. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by AngrySpud · · Score: 1

    $1250 a month for half of a 2-bedroom apartment? I live in the Baltimore area, where there are plenty of tech jobs (even more if you have or are willing to get a government security clearance). My wife and I pay $990 a month total for a 1500 sq. foot 2-bedroom apartment.

    Maybe it's time for people in the Bay Area to consider moving to the Chesapeake Bay Area?

    --
    Keep your friends close. Keep your enemies in a little jar on your desk.
  236. Why? by Aceticon · · Score: 2
    Being proactive, improving your position and pursuing your objectives are actualy totaly reasonable things to do.

    If you look at job descriptions for Managerial positions you will see that mostly the look for this sort of person.

    Oh wait, the guy is a techie ....

  237. Will code html by Felipe+Hoffa · · Score: 3
    Will code html.

    http://www.jamesarcher.net/images/willcodehtml.j pg

  238. Hate to be a heartless bastard but. . . . by Com2Kid · · Score: 1

    shit, I kept on saying that all of this .com biz was B.S. but nobody listened to me. Honestly, all of these people rushed to get degrees in their own little limited field of knowledge and now that they are too specalized they are finding out that their opportunities have dried up.

    People should really think first before dedicating themselves to a company who's bussiness ideaology involves giving stuff away for free. Honestly, you guys actualy thought that would WORK? Hehe, I still cannot believe it, ::yawns::

  239. Look at the rent, man by Prof_Dagoski · · Score: 2

    I agree with the bulk of you comment, but the thing to keep in mind here is the outrageous rents in that part of the world. I was looking at starting salaries of $50,000 to $65,000 a couple of years ago when I wanted to go out there. Then I looked at the rents and saw studios going $1200/mo. The mindset when you get laid off is to try and get right back up on the horse and get a new job. Only problem is that can take months, and if don't have huge savings the rent eats up you cash real fast. And, unless you cut and run right away you can get stuck without the resources to move. Mind you, this whole situation made up my mind not go out there. As a native Californian, there's something I know that lot's of people don't. And, that is that the place is great with a dynamic and long term viable economy. However, it's also the land of the Gold Rush. Every few years there's a new one and people charge out, ride high on the wave, and get slammed hard into the sand when it breaks.

  240. always have a backup. by www.sorehands.com · · Score: 2
    It's not just the overpaid and the phonies. It's also the coders that work for companies that keep promising the check and had not paid.

    Oh yeah, your paycheck is in the mail.

  241. Re:Midwest by homer_ca · · Score: 1

    "Oh, sure...blindly accuse regions of the country that you've never been to of racism."

    No I didn't "hear about it on TV". If anything TV shows set in the Midwest paint a much rosier picture than real life or just ignore the issue. Drew Carey and WKRP in Cincinnati were the first ones I thought of. I'm talking about first hand stories of friends going someplace and getting harassed. Like the Asian families who drove to Florida on a road trip and were harassed by some bumfuck small town sheriff. Or the white girl who always got stopped when she was riding in a car with a black guy because the cops just assumed she was being kidnapped.

    And I'm not accusing the entire region of racism. I think most people are decent and not bigots, but it only takes a few racists to make life very unpleasant, and some places are definitely worse than others.

  242. Midwest by homer_ca · · Score: 2

    Aside from us liking the weather and the mountains and beaches, there's another reason why some people don't move out of California. There are a lot of minorities in Sili Valley and LA, and there's a perception here that minorities aren't treated that well in certain parts of the country. Maybe not so much in the Midwest, but definitely in the south. For the single guys, a lot of them might think they don't have a chance scoring with the chicks if they're not white, and for families a lot of them may not be comfortable sending their kids to school if they were the only non-white kids. I'd be interested to hear what the /.ers from the heartland have to say about this.

    1. Re:Midwest by Alatar · · Score: 1

      Oh, sure...blindly accuse regions of the country that you've never been to of racism. "There's a perception here" seems to mean, "I heard about it on TV", and we all know how bias-free the bicoastal media is when it comes to dealing with the interior regions of the country.

    2. Re:Midwest by catherder_finleyd · · Score: 1

      I will differ for the following reasons:

      1.A lot of the Midwest college towns/cities, s.a. Ann Arbor Michigan or Columbus Ohio, have been diverse for a long time. When I attended Ohio State, I ran into faculty, students, and businesspeople from virtually all parts of the world.

      2. The area, even small cities and towns, have become diverse. When I recently visited Ashland Ohio, a small city, awhile back, I visited the Public Library there. The Lady at the Information desk was Asian. When I grew up there in the early 1960's, there were almost certainly no Asians, and even few Blacks. Things HAVE changed, definitely for the better!

      3. Midwest companies have become very globalist in the last decade. They had to, in order to get out of the "rust belt" conditions of the early 1980's.

      4. Midwest Farmers have probably become the most outward looking of all. It used to be that the "price of eggs in china" was a term applied to those things considered "irrelevant". Now, midwest farmers will take interest in "the price of eggs in china", especially if they wish to sell egg products or poultry to the chinese!

  243. Easier To Find Jobs In Bay Area by xp · · Score: 1
    Actually my experience has been the opposite of what has been reported here. I graduated out of a school in Wisconsin and I was having a hard time finding a job in Wisconsin or Illinois. So then I drove out to the West Coast and have been able to switch jobs twice, each time for roughly double my previous salary. Even if something happened to this job I should be able to get another one easily simply because there are so many more opportunities here (compared to the midwest).

    Also I have my own shareware business so that is a nice little safety-net. And if nothing works out I can always go back to tutoring college students, which is how I paid my bills when I was in school.

    Here is an easy way to find jobs: make contacts, go to programming user group meetings. You don't have to snivel and beg for jobs. Just say hello to people and have normal conversations. Next time they see an opening for which you might be appropriate they will call you. People prefer hiring people they have met before over people they have never met.

    So the key element to success is to be resourceful. A job in Dell or Microsoft is not the only way to make a living. There are many other opportunities out there if you are only willing to look and try it out.

  244. Re:No, not that bad by Donut2099 · · Score: 1

    Everyone knows you eat for free when you work in a fast food joint ;)

  245. "tech worker" ? by Quixote · · Score: 1

    Just like a "hospital worker" is not always a doctor, a "tech worker" is not always a degreed CS/EE/etc. major.
    We hear about hospital workers being laid off; but how many doctors are in the homeless shelters? :-)

  246. Re:No, not that bad by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1
    I forget who had it (I think maybe the Los Angeles Times), but someone ran an article recently about the fast food industry being a hidden source of wealth for those willing to stick around. People who started at entry-level positions and could deal with it for a couple of years were very likely to make management, since the turnover rate keeps most people at the bottom. They profiled one person who took the job because he had no marketable skills, and less than two years later was running three restaurants (using the term loosely) as a regional manager and making $60K a year, plus performance bonuses, and probably will have his responsibilities grow in the very near term. Not a bad turn from starting on night shift at $6 an hour.

    The bottom line is that persistence and a willingness to wait for one's fortune pays off. Those same middle- and high-level managers that many of us condemn got on the fast track somehow because they got impatient, knew they were destined for greatness, and are now our clueless leaders. Find a job with a career path, explore the role, and find the good managers at the company to understand what it takes to be a good manager. At least in my life, I've found that the great managers are those who want to be good ones and can remember from whence they came.

    --
    You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
  247. Better increase those H1-B Visas! by partingshot · · Score: 1

    If we don't get more hi-tech workers, the
    u.s. economy is in _SERIOUS_ trouble.

    A flood of super-cheap labor is just what
    the economy needs to get moving again.

    --
    Anonymous posts are filtered.
  248. Work for lower pay by toybuilder · · Score: 1
    If the problem is with a tech job where your qualifications and the job position are reasonably matched; just take the job even if the pay isn't so good.

    Almost all of my career changes have been "lateral" or even "downward" in terms of starting salary; but in every case, I got a significant (20%+) raise within a few months when the employer realized what I could do for them. The first time this happened, I didn't even ask for any reviews or adjustments. They just did it.

    Besides, even if you don't get the pay increase, the fact that you're employed will: a) pay the bills, and b) be a stepping stone to the next position somewhere else.

  249. It is really that bad by IronChef · · Score: 5


    In my past dotcom life I was a "product manager." As an unemployed bum, I haven't had but 2 interviews in 4 months of looking. I think that employers are figuring out that "product manager" means "talentless middle-management hack" and they are figuring out how to do without us. :)

    I am not a programmer, but everywhere I look I see job opportunities for them. That part of the job market looks plenty strong to me. But if you don't actually PRODUCE something, god help you! I'll be working at Kinko's soon for 1/3 the salary. The last few months have definitely been a personal low. (Can I get a +1, Pity now?)

    1. Re:It is really that bad by WildBeast · · Score: 1

      Yeah it's kinda funny. They ask for ASP, MS SQL, VB, PHP, MySQL, Perl.
      Why would I apply for a job where I don't know which platform I'll be using? You can't have half a site done in ASP and the other in PHP.

    2. Re:It is really that bad by xenocide2 · · Score: 1

      And submit your resume to someone who wants to give you good pay (60k+) a year and get drownded out by all the applicants.

      --
      I Browse at +4 Flamebait

      Open Source Sysadmin

    3. Re:It is really that bad by Robert+A.+Heinlein · · Score: 1
      During our second round of layoffs some workmates and I have a "dead pool", program managers and product managers lead on every list.

      I just wish they would get rid of some of the real middle-managers. They will probably use the chance to get rid of effective managers who give realistic dates and refuse to kiss ass.

    4. Re:It is really that bad by coffee17 · · Score: 1
      Fred Myers? Ugh, stuff like that was for highschool, not after. I'd rather go back to living as homeless (I did that for a few months voluntarily... it helped motivate me to work, as being homeless sucks ass, especially if you look like a street punk).

      However I agree with having no pity for those who live beyond their means. Granted, I don't have a great influx of income, and am stupid enough to live in a single apartment in the Valley (a bit over 1/3 of my take-home pay goes just towards rent). However, since 10 months ago when I was homeless with ~$500 cash on hand (I wasn't in poverty, just homeless and unemployed... it's amazing, I went for like 6 months on $2k, and had $500 to help with rent (however, without friends to get my foot in the door, I'd likely not have crawled out of that hole)), and now I've got my debts in control, 3K in savings, and an additional $2K in cash stashed away again... that gives me a nice buffer zone where I don't have to fear unemployment. But then I mostly take the bus, and won't pay buku dollars to go into debt for a new car, rather I bought some $800 car which has lasted me 6 months so far, limit the DVD purchases etc...

      I don't understand the debt-happy people, and grin in evil smugness at thinking of my old (talentless) manager who had recently just gotten a new mercedes SUV a month before being fired a month before the tech slowdown. I'd like to think of him living in his SUV, always parking someplace new at night afraid of repo-men coming to take it away.

  250. Re:Yes, it really is getting bad by QuaZar666 · · Score: 1

    Do you mean MIS or M$ ? because if you meants M$ then i could understand they are worthless and most of the time do not know anything except for that which they were tested on for MCSE. Ive heard horror stories of MSCE's not understanding Ping, traceroute, netstat, et al.

  251. Re:No, not that bad by QuaZar666 · · Score: 1

    thats food they serve? Are you sure its not some kind of animal biproducts being disguised as food ?

    Qua

  252. More to the story... by decesare · · Score: 1

    Today'sSalon has an update on the plight of the so-called "homeless dot-commers". Turns out there's more to the story than initially posted.

    Also, Newsfactor posted a piece yesterday titled, "Despite Cutbacks, IT Jobs Go Begging". The title says it all...

  253. An anecdote from my experience by ambclams · · Score: 1
    I can't resist the urge to tell an anecdote from my experience at this point...

    For the past few years, I've been involved in a program that distributes food to the homeless: each week we make a few hundred sandwiches, then pass them out in San Francisco.

    One week we happened to be transporting the sandwiches in spare iMac boxes. This led one of the homeless fellows in line to comment "oh, wow, did you bring me an iMac?"

    A fellow volunteer replied "yes, but do you have a place to plug it in?"

    I was completely unprepared for the homeless individual's response:
    "oh... no, damn it ... but I do have a T1 line".

    Only in San Francisco, I suppose...

    --
    Life is far too important to be taken seriously.
  254. looks like they got found out... by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

    This just goes towards proving my theory that M$ is trying to ensla- Employ all the IT "talent" out there. ever wonder why nobody ever has to visit the servers in the M$ commercials? 'Cause M$ wants you to think that's how to do it. Early on in the E-Biz thing, we saw ads from IBM showing roomfulls of IT professionals getting the job done. What happened? Everybody went out and got certified (I got my MCSE in a box of "Sugar Smacks"...)Went to work, found out that an MCSE dosen't go far at all in the real world, got lazy, surly and incompetent, somehow management found out, and now they're all unemployed. The "Software." still needs people to coddle it along, but there are no people to do that. They all work for M$'s "Tech Support" line, where you can press one to purchase an "Incident", or press two to go fuck yourself.


    And that's got to be the most gratuitous use of the italics tag ever...





    --

    Shift happens. Fire it up.
  255. The market is getting worse by SnapperHead · · Score: 1

    Why, becuase sites like /. are running the same damn story several times a week. Spreading FUD is not making matters any better. We are all aware of how bad the market is right now .... lets leave it at that. Unless your touching something completly news ...


    until (succeed) try { again(); }
    --
    until (succeed) try { again(); }
  256. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  257. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  258. Re:Oh yes by Sir_Real · · Score: 1

    Who robs homeless people?

  259. It IS impossible, guys... by theNAM666 · · Score: 1
    It's more than a little annoying to hear people here saying "if you had real skills, you could get a job..."

    I know more than a few really good people who can no longer find work. Two people who were at Apple in the first Mac years, for instance; a programmer and manager who once was President of a division of a Fortune-100 company; and so forth. It's a terrible time to be looking in the Valley, and everyone is running scarred; a bunch of clueless MBAs hold all the money and, despite the fact that they're the idiots who created the mess, still act like they know what's going on and can determine salaries (see the post someone made above).

    About a month ago, I sat around the table one Friday night with five sysadmins, all recently out of work. Some had been downsized from places like Schwab, with generous packages; others had shown up at work and been told "you can keep on working, but we're not going to pay you... for the last month, even, by the way."

    Each of these people had at least five years solid experience, and could PERL themselves out of a box if necessary. Some had a lot of C and Java. None has a job now, or particularly any prospects thereof. I myself have been a sysadmin or programmer for the last ten years, including two years at BBN Planet. I've led two multi-programmer projects to completion. I've only had a handful of interviews since my startup tanked -- due to an embezzling CEO, among other problems -- and each simply led to a lack of a concrete match, for one reason or another -- some places could have used me, yes, if the interviewer had a clue; others really didn't need or want someone like me -- an aggressive, type-A starter -- in their corporate or even geek culture.

    A friend recently summarized the situation here well: "The sky is falling, the sysadmins can't even find jobs." Sure, this is due to the "irrational exhuberance" that led everyone who had heard of a for loop and his brother to Cali -- and there are some advantages, such as an 8% drop in average rents in San Fran alone last month. Yay that some people are getting out of here, and perhaps the traffic will ease!

    But the comments about "people not having skills" and "don't you have savings?" and etc. that are getting modded up to 5 are neither warranted, appreciated, or useful. There's ignorant and low blows from people who have no idea what it's like here. Sure, a bunch of MBAs made some money, and some tech people made it on the boat -- but there are a lot of skilled people here who lost their shirts, myself included, working for 35K+ equity and not getting paid. I know one CTO of a startup that was funded to the tune of $22M, for instance, who (like me) is essentially bankrupt. He recently showed up to pick a check from a ('till then evidently solid) company he was doing Cisco installs for. He had $12K in equipment and travel expenses outstanding, and $8K or so in salary owed. The door was chain-locked and it took him two weeks to find anyone who would return his call. Result: essentially bankrupt, no source of income and a nice debt... some of it still there from the top-rated CS program that he got all As in...

    I won't even go into the level of pure fraud and greed that inspired this whole mess, and how good people put in 90-hour weeks for nothing while execs walked away with silver linings -- let's save that, and how much the lawyers are going to make off the whole mess, for another thread, shall we?

  260. You have to adapt by satch89450 · · Score: 2

    OK, so I'm currently keeping the lights on by bean-counting and picking up the odd free-lance writing job. So I stop coding for a while. I'm enjoying the vacation, a little bit.

    My experience trying to find a technical job? I chase down openings, only to be told that the openings have been pulled "because of the economy." Some companies like talking to us older people, some prefer kids out of school. So be it.

    I'm in Nevada, and want no part of the California lifestyle or expense.

    Just my pair-o-pennies(tm)

  261. Excellent advice. by dstone · · Score: 2

    First, you're 100% right-on to advise people to make a plan and then build their own companies with other competent people. Many who attempt to do this will of course fail, many others will cave into temptation and turn into PHBs themselves, and a few will stay true to their principles and actually make it work. In my opinion (and I'm a practitioner), it's well worth the risk and experience to attempt it.

    However, as for your "guaranteed cure for unemployment" (the link you gave was: www.aynrand.org)... YEEEESH! Well, as powerful as her philosophy is, she's also a guaranteed cure for an erection! Yikes. They really need to change the welcome image!

  262. It's true by avatar4d · · Score: 1

    I am a current IT student and I have been looking for a co-op/perm entry level position for months to no avail. I finally got a job offer and it is lucky something I want to do so I am going to shoot for it, even though I would have gone for it if it wasn't something I wanted to do, just because of the lack of any other jobs coming my way.

    --
    Confucius say: "Man who associates with smarter men than himself is smarter than the men he associates with."
  263. Stop panicking, mate by cbr372 · · Score: 1

    All industries go through tough times now and then. The software industry had a lot of lay-offs (I think that's the American term for rentrenchment, isn't it?) in the late 80s, but bounced back in the 90s. Economics is a complicated subject and the fact is that markets do jitter from time to time.

    Think about this - from here, there is nowhere else to go. Businesses can only go one way from here - computerization and technological improvements. Whether anyone likes it or not, technology must go forward. In the 1800s factory workers and mechanical workers working on the new technology that was coming out undoubtedly went through similar experiences when the initial industrial rush was over and companies and goverments had to decide what the best way to continue the industrial revolution was.

    The fact is that the economy will always find new markets based on new technologies, and bounce back. In the short term, you might find that in a few weeks the NASDAQ goes up by 2% and that leads to the FTSE going up by 1 1/2%, and suddenly I.T companies get more investment and need people desperately again. In the longer term, you might even find yourself laid off again, only to get a head start in another technology industry and earn MORE than you were.

    I was working at a medium-sized company until a few months ago, when I got a stellar offer from another company. It's one of the largest network companies in SA (South Africa), yet when I got there, I couldn't believe the incompetence of most of the people. Of the 20 or so MCSEs (or would-be MCSEs) there, only 2 "knew DOS"!!! There is one good routing guy there, the rest are trained monkeys. The Unix and Novell departments are slightly better, but even there, there are only 2 or 3 guys out of tens that have any real competence. The Technical Director asked me very seriously "What a FreeBSD" is, and "What a DIN connector" is. He is supposedly a network expert, yet doesn't understand the fact that a gateway must be on the same subnet. The management of the company is pathetic. I won't mention the company, but I am leaving it very soon. Am I pissed off that they made me an offer when I was at a perfectly good company (albeit smaller and less well-paying) only to discover that it was a circus and that it was impossible to work effectively there? Yes, I am. The fact is that there are tons of "qualified" people that are morons out there, no more than trained monkeys. If you know what you are doing, (which I suspect you do, but I can't be sure, after all, "Lead Production Engineer" doesn't sound as good as "Technical Director", and we know what a moron that guy is, despite having a CCNP and CCDA, and an MCT, MCSD and MCSE) then you will certainly find a job again.

    Good luck to you...remember one thing, though: Don't panic. Your post sounds panicky. Panic is not allowed. It will not help your situation. Be persistent and keep in mind what I have posted here. You probably won't be without a job for much longer. It's probably your own attitude holding you back, not external factors.

    --
    Cedric Balthazar Rotherwood
    Sun Certified Programmer for the Java Platform +
    System Admin. for Solaris
  264. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by ThomK · · Score: 1

    What area do you live in? I can't believe the economy is *that* bad.

    --

    TK

  265. Re:Yes, it's really that bad by astar · · Score: 1
    I heard that about 425 companies are announcing profit warnings, twice the number this time a year ago. And on a more fundamental level, for the first time since statistics have been kept, global steel production was down last year. Gotta have some atoms, not just bits.

    It is not just a dot-com bubble, but a bubble in general, as can be seen in a number of indicators for the physical economy as opposed to the financial superstructure. I think next month we will all be agreeing that the economy is going down the tube.

  266. Take a look at the real world gumbo! by SparkyMartin · · Score: 2
    Well if these inexperienced people were a thorn in your side to your magnificent IT career then why did you hire them in the first place?

    Take a look around bub! It's not just dot.coms that are laying off people, it's the entire Tech sector from software to telecommunications and it has spilled off into other industries including automotive and most others. Nortel just layed off 20000 and just announced that another 10000 are going and that includes entire divisions that have been shut down. Do you thing those are all entry level html coders? Alot of those are engineers and people with computer degrees! Almost all tech companies have announced profit warnings and layed off people.

    Man, think and use your head next time before you speak, less shit will come out of your mouth.

  267. how to get hired (hopefully) by Cardo+Decumanus · · Score: 1

    After deciding my old standby Monster.com was a "dry hole," and switching my efforts to find a Java consulting position in Manhattan over to Dice, I got rewarded by a bombardment of phone calls from recruiters at about the same rate as when the Nasdaq was at 5000. About a week later, I was sitting in my first interview, up by Penn Station, and was greeted with the usual "fill out this four-page quiz" introduction. At least it wasn't all irrelevant Applet/Swing questions like most of those quizzes, and had a few relevant Servlet/EJB ones. I quickly plowed through it, leaving one question blank that involved constructing an outer join sQL statement. Ok, I stick with zen-simple SQL in my code. At the face-to-face part, the interviewer picked up on this flaw and tried to dig into me to, like they do, to find out if I was lying about my skill background (I'd just volutarily left my full-time position in e-commerce at an investment bank). Since I promised myself I'd never sit through this kind of petty interrogation before, I immediately turned the interview around and spent the next 45 minutes grilling _him_ about his project, e.g., what platforms they use, if they were using load balancing, what the current trafffic is, why they chose the vendors they did, etc. He was the one who got embarassed when he couldn't answer many of my questions. By the end of the interview, he was talking to me as if I'd already gotten the job. As I left, he sighed and put my resume on top of a stack of others (_that_ didn't happen last year) and confessed that it was refreshing to talk to someone who wasn't a complete phony,and that 80% of the resumes made the person look like "a rocket scientist" but that they didn't know up from down in tech. When I left, I knew I'd never see him again. It's not that they won't offer me the contract position (_only_ sixty bucks an hour! I suspect the contract agency will still charge them the same high rate as last year, but is pocketing the difference) but that I will turn it down if they do: they want me to develop EJB/Servlet applications (which I do) but also to perform data entry on the Excel spread sheets for much of the time. I think I'll keep looking. My voice mail had five messages while I was in that interview. Most don't pan out, but of course, you only need one.

  268. Re:Bad? That's an understatement. by impotentmonkey · · Score: 1

    Right now I'm temping at my former high school in my town, but calls to Yahoo, Microsoft, Dell, Compaq, HP, eBay, etc. have all gone unanswered

    There is your problem right there. These are the big timers in the industry they recruit people. Especially Microsoft, you either got to know someone there or be the best damn programmer around. Try looking for small local buisnesses that do software or the like, or look for non-IT firms that have IT-departments.

    Your aiming to high for starters, think job first, then think big job.

    --
    sig?
  269. Midwestern small town by mami · · Score: 1

    I read here a lot of advice to look for jobs in the Midwest, where real estate and living costs are lower.

    But are there really jobs in small town Midwest, where you can work as a programmer, system admin or website designer ?

    I can't quite believe that might be that easy to find.

    1. Re:Midwestern small town by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

      I don't know about "small town Midwest," but Chicago, St. Louis, Denver, St. Paul, Indianapolis, etc. are not exactly "small towns." Of all these, Chicago is by far the most expensive re: cost of living, but it still doesn't compare to San Francisco or San Jose.

  270. The lovely Job market by chenry007 · · Score: 1

    Actually I dont think the problem is that people cant find a tech job, its just that when you are used to making 80+ thousand a year, you will find it impossible to live on 40 thousand. The last time I checked there were like 50 states, so why are the tech people rushing to California where the cost of living is sky high? I mean there are other places to work like North Dakota or Iowa. They might not be as exciting as California or New York, but then again when you are broke and umemployeed there are certain changes you have to be willing to make to your life style in order to survive, even if it means being the CIO of a cornfield.

  271. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2
    You say the jobs are there... no, these are "junk" jobs. In fact, getting such jobs isn't even that easy. The managers will know you're not the kind of person to stick around for a couple years to make the training worth while.

    Mmmm, many jobs in retail have turnover rates well in excess of 100% -- I've seen numbers for fast food chains of well over 200% -- so I find it hard to believe that managers would be that worried about your not sticking around for a couple of years. Nobody sticks around for a couple of years, and at least you're likely to show up on time and sober.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  272. Uhh, I lived in the Bay Area, and although I moved recently to a place where rents are cheaper, I'm well aware of how much it costs and still have plenty of friends and family struggling with the rental and real-estate situation there. It's absolute BS to claim that $1800/month will only get you a 400-sq-foot apartment in the Bay Area. Of course, it depends hugely on WHERE in the Bay Area you are looking. Sure, if you want to be in a really desirable area like San Francisco itself or some of the more affluent cities on the Peninsula, that can be true. But until recently, for example, my brother had a share in (an admittedly pretty run-down part of) Oakland for which he was paying around $300/month. He actually was making pretty good money, but the cheap rent was his way of saving up on the down payments for the truly outrageous cost of a house.

    If you need to cut down on rent, the two best ways are to (a) live in a crappy location and (b) to get as big a place as possible and split it among as many people as you can, so you essentially get to amortize the cost of the common areas across more people. So instead of getting a bachelor apartment on the Peninsula, you rent an old, run-down house or something in the East Bay and have five people living there. And incidentally, even a tiny place can accommodate more than one person if you are really motivated; I used to date a girl (this was in New York) who was one of two living in an apartment that was no bigger than 300 sq feet. (I dated another girl who lived in a so-called "railroad flat" where one of her roommates had to walk through her room in order to get to his room -- and back through her room if he wanted to, say, go to the bathroom in the middle of the night -- which is a *really* interesting living arrangement.)

    Just out of curiosity I went and checked out rental listings on sfgate.com. There are a handful of 2BR places listing for $1100-$1200 in San Francisco itself. Now, it's just a few listings, and I'm sure they'll be gone faster than you can say "make the check out to...". And I'm not suggesting that sharing a 2-BR place three or four ways makes for a fantastic life, nor that the real-estate situation in the Bay Area is not insane (it clearly is). I'd hate to have to go back to that kind of lifestyle now that I'm comfortable and can take care of myself pretty well. But my point is that people need to reconsider their standards of living when the shit hits the fan career-wise and they've got nothing to fall back on. Lots of people live this way all the time, and I'm frankly surprised that a techie would be so deeply insolvent and uncreative about his living situation that he'd find himself relegated to a shelter.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  273. Re:The Jobs Are There... by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 2

    You're right, I may have overgeneralized by saying "retail" when it's the fast-food places that have the really outrageous (triple-digit) turnover rates. Also, as you hint at, the smaller operations seem to have much less turnover than big chain stores. I don't have any hard numbers to back that up, but it's definitely been my observation as well.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
  274. this is retarded by Preposterous+Coward · · Score: 5
    "Even those who qualify for unemployment benefits soon discover the $40 to $230 weekly check will not cover an apartment here, where rent averages around $1,800 a month."

    I guess it never occurs to people that they might do what college students, recent graduates, and other financially strapped and/or marginally employed people have done since time immemorial: Find a roommate! Sheesh. When I got out of school in the early 90s and went to live in New York City (making a princely $10/hour -- this with significant business and tech experience and a degree from a top-ten university), I had friends who somehow managed to get by on even less than I did. Typically their living situation went something like this: Minuscule two-bedroom apartment with three or four people occupying it. Either there were bunk beds in the bedroom(s), or someone had a bed lofted over the couch in the 80-square-foot living room. Dinner was ramen noodles, the entertainment budget was sufficient to cover maybe two beers a week (though probably not if you bought them at a bar), and there was nothing as extravagant as cable TV.

    This does not make for a glamorous life, but then again, it doesn't require much income either. Assuming rent of $2,400 a month, that's $600 divided four ways. You can cover that working at Starbucks: Every time I visit the Bay Area, I laugh when I see the help-wanted signs offering $9+/hour plus tips and benefits and, probably, a handful of stock options! Maybe that's not quite enough because you've still got student loans or something, so you get a second job temping or whatever. Oh, the tragedy.

    Basically, I contend that former dot-commers who declare themselves homeless are either (a) unwilling to stoop to a job they consider beneath themselves or (b) unable to throttle back on their consumption. There are homeless people with real problems: They're substance abusers, or mentally disturbed, or illiterate, or single parents with kids. Them I feel sympathy for. These posers who are whining about not being able to find sufficiently cushy jobs, on the other hand, are not about to earn my sympathy.

    --

    "Biped! Good cranial development. Evidently considerable human ancestry."
    1. Re:this is retarded by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

      "If you live in a substantially large urban area (like NY), the chance of landing a really cushy job over $6 an hour is almost nil, "

      WTF are you talking about ? Every day I drive by countless MacDonalds and other fast food joints with "Help Wanted" posted all over them.
      And yeah, it is "a substantially large urban area"
      : Chicago.

      --
      ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  275. They were lucky it lasted as long as it did. by 0bjectiv3 · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but when you
    1. take a job at a company with a lame business model, and
    2. see that you're being paid a salary that's "too good to be true", and
    3. don't save money for the future,
    then can you really be surprised when your company's last public appearance is on fuckedcompany.com, and you end up in a homeless shelter?

    --

    "Saddam Hussein cavorts with terrorists."
  276. Things are tough all over... by percey · · Score: 1

    Personally I feel that this story is trying to sensationalize a particular event in a person's life to paint a broad generalization about dotcommers to invoke the "Ha! Serves them right!" response that all the MBA's that didn't make the jump are saying to themselves. We don't know too much about the backgrounds of these people. Perhaps there's other circumstances behind their being sans abode. On the other hand, we do know from the article that the Schlenz and Sacrosante were "Freelance" or independant contractors. We all know that the downturn has hit these areas particularly hard. That is always the case that the contractors are the first to get the boot. Additionally free-lancers value their freedom so highly that some of them would rather try to hold out for a contract than to work for someone, especially after they've had thier own work for years.

    There's no denying, however, that there's a downturn, and that the hiring freeze is going on and at the same time hundreds of thousands of techs have been fired from companies (Can you think of any gigantic tech co ranging from Sun to Cisco that hasn't cut at least 5k of workers?)
    So this is a horrendous circumstance, a glut of workers in the market, hiring freezes, and additionally an increase in the H1B Visas that are being issued. All this is combining for a lose - lose situation for every aspect of tech workers. Foreigners now have about a month to find another job or are told to go back home, massive competition for the few open jobs. It means that new graduates now have to compete against Cisco veterans to get the few open jobs. However, I feel hiring will even out once the economy turns back up, what we do is very elastic. As companies are formed and expand they need to have tech workers. Our best shot at that happening this year is in the months following the $300 tax rebate. Things won't be the same, because the web is never going to expand at the rate it did.

  277. The Solution by nick_davison · · Score: 2

    Soylent green is... programmers!

  278. Re:Companies don't want to hire pricks by Lord+Vipor+Scorpion · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or does this AC (ironically) sound like a real a$$hole? Befriending marketing types generally means you're just a classic Dogbert type. I'm not even sure about this person's genesis as a developer. It doesn't make any sense--there would be a ton of holes in this person's ability if this is a true story. How could ASP & VB throw them off, but PHP & all things Java be a cup of tea? Oh well, from now on I'll just tell everyone I'm a really "GOOD GUY."

  279. Zero to Homeless in Months? by deebaine · · Score: 1
    I don't know if it is correct to say that things are "that bad." At least here in Boston, the jobs are out there, and though no one promises that you can retire with a fortune in three years, they will pay the rent, provided you live sensibly.

    That last part is what troubles me. Though I feel for the people mentioned in the article, I can't help but wonder how people making 60-100k annually end up in shelters. What happened to savings? I don't make either of those sums and I'm saving sufficient money to keep myself out of a shelter even if I do end up jobless for an extended period of time. Even if I double my rent, I still can't figure out how I would sensibly spend 60k (after taxes) per year. And I'm not skimping; I have a nice apartment (though not alone), I drive a late-model sports sedan, I go out, etc.

    I think the technology industry is in the middle of swallowing a bitter pill. In spite of what we wanted to believe, or what the press led us to believe, or what the economy seemed to indicate for a time, there's a real business world out there that will still govern technical work. We as tech workers may have unique and highly desirable skills, but we are neither invincible nor immortal.

    -db

  280. Moving? by elizaz · · Score: 1
    I've seen a number of posts asking why these laid off dotcommers who are living in homeless shelters in the high rent districts don't just move back to Kansas or where-ever.
    The problem with that is that moving costs money. A fair bit of it, expecially if you are moving long distances. Between deposits and first-month-rent on a new apartment, set up fees for phones and utilities, and U-hauls and the like, moving can cost hundreds or thousands of dollars. And if you are living in a homeless shelter, you probably don't have that kind of cash on hand.
    While I question the wisdom of those who were making large amounts of money and didn't save enough to weather thier crisis, or didn't "stoop" to getting a retail or foodservice position (speaks one who works in retail and foodservice at the moment) before they ended up on the streets, once there, simply packing up and moving to some place where rent is cheaper isn't always an option.

    Eliza

    --
    http://www.grass.org/~eliza "You've got to dance like nobody is watching and love like it is never going to hurt."
  281. Not that bad by dxnxax · · Score: 1

    Judging from the linux and unix jobs popping up at Mojolin (http://mojolin.com), jobs are available for the person willing to be a bit flexible in where they want to work (IE, willing to move). Telecommuting jobs are at a premium, so if they want to stay in the heavy urban areas where supply is greater than demand, they better get used to the shelters.

  282. Re:Reminds.....(we do have welfare here in the US. by Conrad_Bombora · · Score: 1

    I know this is getting a tad off topic.
    But the problem with welfare here in the US is that only 30 cents of every welfare dollar in the welfare budget goes to some who needs welfare. The rest is eaten up by the fed bureaucracy.

  283. they need the "internet in a box" program by Conrad_Bombora · · Score: 1

    Sounds like some of these people could use the "internet in a box program"
    Do any of you remember this piece shit from 2 years ago it was a ½ hour infomercial hosted by that dopey actor from home improvement. They bundled a ton of freeware into a box and sold it for 200$ or five easy installments of 40$.
    It would some how always be on whenever I was doing bong hits with friends. "...good times..."

  284. Market Update by Johnny+Starrock · · Score: 1

    Yes, the tech job market is bad. Relativly bad. Gone are the "I KNOW WHAT HTML IS SO I'M A SMARTY MAN" workers.

    If you're competent and can play nicely with others you'll have no problems finding a job. At least that's the situation in the midwest. Hell, I just left my job for a 6 digit salary in an area where the annual average is $21k and *I'm* barely competent... =)

    --

    end communication
  285. Generalists Not Wanted by The+Monster · · Score: 5
    I've come to basically the same conclusion: I don't have "deep" skills, specializing in one narrowly-defined area. I am a generalist - I can build boxen, network them, install OS/apps, troubleshoot all of it when it breaks, train users how maybe not to break things so often, write scripts to glue different technologies together...

    The problem is that I'm simultaneously underqualified and overqualified - I don't have the depth of experience in any one or two skills to make me the "best" candidate for a job with a narrow focus, and all the extras just tell most employers that I'll be looking to leave ASAP, so they'll have to hire someone else anyway (which isn't true in my case, but they don't know that). My last IT job was working technical support for a well-known tax-preparation company's consumer tax software. All my "evaluations" said I was doing well above average, but I was still one of the 98% or so laid off in the middle of April.

    And do you know what I'm doing for money now? Any day I don't have an interview (most of them) I'm down at the day labor agency at the crack of dawn; when I'm lucky I get called to work for barely above minimum wage doing semi-skilled construction work.

    --

    [100% ISO 646 Compliant]
    SVM, ERGO MONSTRO.

    1. Re:Generalists Not Wanted by CKW · · Score: 1


      Yeah, but SF is a *spectacular* place, if you can get the apartment with a view of the Bay Bridge and the sunrise...

  286. Re:The Jobs Are There... by SpcJWH · · Score: 1

    I believe it was Bill Gates who referred to burger-flipping as "opportunity". Sad but true. I spent nearly two years working graphics and code for a dot-com startup, and today I'm throwing freight (at about a third of my prior salary). Not my first choice, but it's keeping the power bill paid. Taking a job outside your chosen field can be a bit of a trap, but it's far easier to survive.

  287. Re:4.5% Unemployment? by acceleriter · · Score: 1

    Boy howdy! Now all the active military are counted as employed (lowering the real figure). Those that have given up seeking employment are not counted. And there are a number of other changes, as you pointed out, in the way the Office of the President computes unemployment figures to make them look artificially low.

    --

    CEE5210S The signal SIGHUP was received.

  288. Huh? by topher71 · · Score: 1

    What's the difference between a computer engineering degree and a CS/MIS degree? Last I heard, CS == Computer Science and even a B.A in C.S. will get you a job.

    Of course, getting housing in Sucka Freaks is pretty much impossible no matter what you do.

    And I don't know what kind of area you work in, but the top end DBAs I work with make up to $300K/year. Of course, if they screw up, certain phone companies and cable providers would lose their customer databases...

    --
    -- topher71
  289. Unemployment rate means absolutely nothing... by Thaidog · · Score: 1

    The unemployment rate is calculated by taking the percentage of people who are laid off and are currently looking for a job. That is the "economists employment rate calculation". It's what everybody sees on the news in America and says: Wow, we're great! It does not take into effect the population that is unemployed and is not looking for a job. And since it is at best a statistical sample of the population, it's still going to be off by some +/-tolerance.

    --

    ||| I still can't believe Parkay's not butter.

  290. Keep the shelter open for ppl who actually need it by drew_ri · · Score: 1

    I would be hard pressed to imagine that these people are truly needy to the extent that if they had no charity/shelter to take them in, they'd be unable to provide the basic needs of every human, food, shelter, etc.

    There are people who have more legitimate needs, i.e. metally challenged, substance abuse, etc. which makes it much harder if not impossible to live in an independent fashion. I am not trying to defend the more conventional types who take advantage of welfare services (i.e. lazy/drunks, etc.) However, it seems even more perverse that able-bodied persons, who were only recently considered responsible enough to help build multi-million dollar corporations, would go and milk the system for free room and board, etc.

    When pride isn't and issue, necessity becomes the mother of invention when times get tough...these guys could get jobs for sure. Instead of serving up some ASP files, they should try serving up some food as a waiter, or maybe they could parse orders at the register instead of parsing parameters ;)

    Maybe they could make money by authoring books about their turbulent carrer and lifestyles. Perhaps the book can read something like:

    "Once I was paid $100K to 'think out of the box'; now I just live in one"

    Seriously, I am sending the orignal article to my friends because I really get a laugh out of how foolish the whole thing is.

    BTW: I am a young tech/geek/prof. and after reading about those fools, I am going to take a good hard look on how to make sure I don't become one of them. (Maybe picking up a new BMW should be put on the back-burner after all)

  291. Re:price of rent???? by Meatlog · · Score: 1

    Same situation here in NYC. I'm moving in soon and looking at 2 bedrooms right now. Most parts of Manhattan are completely out of the question (~$3000/month). Brooklyn Heights is fantastic and should be about $2200. But I'm very hesitant to pay that kind of money given the current market. I have a friend who was denied an apartment when the landlord found out he worked for a dot-com.

  292. Fools by rebelcool · · Score: 1

    if you're making a 6 figure salary and not saving up for the inevitable bust, you're a goddamn fool. Sorry to say it, but i have no pity for the hacks who managed to get so lucky, only to lose it all through stupidity and not planning for the future.

    --

    -

  293. $600?? by rebelcool · · Score: 2

    Christ, I pay $1400 a month for my place here. Then again, I do live right off of UT's campus. Still though, austin is pretty expensive compared to houston, where i have friends with the same sized apartment that costs $500 a month.

    --

    -

  294. JUST MOVE! by fmaxwell · · Score: 1
    Unemployment checks not covering your $1,800 per month rent? Then either move where the jobs are or move where the cost of living isn't outrageous! If your Acura hasn't been reposessed, load your shit into it and drive.

    The U.S. is not reliant on dot-coms for the entire IT job base. You might get a job doing network administration for an insurance company or serving as a webmaster for a car dealership. I'm sorry if that's not as exciting as working at a cutting edge dot-com with other twenty-somethings that skateboard in the halls, wear baggy shorts, drink free sodas, play Space Invaders on the restored machine in the break room, and spout acronyms and buzzwords that they don't really understand -- but it will pay your bills while teaching you real job skills.

    And next time save some money while you are getting a paycheck! The old rule of thumb was to figure on one month of job hunting per $10k of salary. Making $100K? That's about 10 months of job hunting. While I know that there are more exceptions than examples to this rule, it still is a valid concept. I am constantly amazed by single people in this industry -- with incomes that dwarf the national averages for entire families -- who can't go a few months without a paycheck. Next time, don't buy or lease a car that is worth more than your entire life's savings. Don't rent the $2,500/month apartment with the view of the bay. Get one for a lot less money in a less picturesque location. Skip the gourmet coffee at Starbucks and just drink the stuff they give you for free at the office.

    Alternatively, you can ignore that advice, spend all of your money, have to take a job as a waiter or sales clerk, and taint your resume for the next decade.

  295. Re:Not a surprise by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

    "Ugh - I'm moving."

    There isn't anything wrong with moving. There are many Midwestern cities where you can live on half or a third of what you would require in CA. True, the weather usually sucks (boiling in summer, freezing in winter, no beach), but personally I'd rather take the boiling and freezing than being evicted for failure to pay $2500/mo rent.

  296. Re:Interesting comment about 100 men in the shelte by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

    Women don't go into engineering or programming as frequently as men do.

    Women engineers/programmers don't end up working in San Jose as often as men do.

    The last comment is NOT a flame, but an observation: women are more likely to go back home to Cincinnati or St. Louis, live with their parents, and get a database programming job for an insurance company when they get laid off, rather than hanging around in SF or SJ waiting for the "next big thing."

  297. Re:The Reality as I see it by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

    St. Louis is a great city! When you find someone who fits your requirements, tell them what a great deal it is to live there. You can buy more house than a single person needs between $100K and $200K.

  298. Re:Do you people really belive this drivel? by ikanakattara · · Score: 1

    Has it occurred to anyone that if a man has some nominal ability to earn a living, but lives in a homeless shelter, and either stays unemployed or underemployed, that there may be another reason? For instance, the government can't dun him for back taxes / alimony / child support or other debts he may not be interested in paying.

  299. And I thought I had it bad. . . by T300bps · · Score: 1

    . . .working 2 jobs and making only about 10,000 a year.

    I'll never complain about rice again.

  300. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1

    By the standards of anything other than the last few years, 6 or 7% is damn low. By the standards of virtually any other country, 6 or 7% is again, damn low. Most of Europe is double digits and almost always is. When we were approaching 4% economists were going nuts because they didn't think it could get that low without the economy crashing. 6 or 7 % is still a very good economy.

    --
    Why?
  301. price of rent???? by Kraft · · Score: 1

    I live in an inexpensive 2 bedroom apartment with a friend, and my share of the rent is $1250.
    Ehh... what?! I live in France, and this price just seems far-fetched. Is that $1250 dollars a month? Pr. person??

    -Kraft
    --

    -Kraft
    Live and let live
    1. Re:price of rent???? by Kraft · · Score: 1

      What EXACTLY do you mean by 'No income tax'?

      -Kraft

      --

      -Kraft
      Live and let live
    2. Re:price of rent???? by servasius_jr · · Score: 1
      Ehh... what?! I live in France, and this price just seems far-fetched. Is that $1250 dollars a month? Pr. person??

      Yeah, that's probably right, but bear in mind that the cost of real estate in San Francisco is absurdly high. Here in Columbus, Ohio, I'm paying $225 a month for my half of a fairly nice two bedroom apartment. It's probably pretty comparable to what the guy in SF is paying five times as much for.

      The cost of living is low here, and the economy is great -- even McDonalds has to pay $8 an hour to get people in, and I know people who stock shelves at grocery stores for $13 an hour. Even the indolent, the ignorant, and the unskilled are able to live comfortably here. Ah, America.

    3. Re:price of rent???? by C.+Tengo+Hambre · · Score: 1
      we pay $1800 and have two bathrooms, so it's a sweet deal.

      You should have your taste buds checked.

  302. Tech workers and to much ego. by apocalypse76 · · Score: 1

    I've been working in the tech industry for a few years now. One thing I have noticed right off is that when someone is hired they get comfortable and quit learning. That stagnates them, then they become obsolete. Once that happens companies decide to hire someone else while the obsolete person stays on. After some time of that happening you may get one or 2 people that are actually worth something. After layoffs those two people who work day and night to stay on the edge are happy about people getting laid off, they are just fluff that always asks questions instead of RTFM. Instead of getting comfortable, keep learning new technologies. Keep learning new tricks learn everything about what you do, and what you can do to make it better. That's the way to stay ahead of everyone else and be successful. I am tired of people whining about not having jobs, I also know there are a few cases out there that are good and don't have jobs. This post isn't for them.

  303. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by codingOgre · · Score: 1

    Moderators, mod this post *UP*!

    --
    Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement. --Red Hot Chili Peppers, Californication
  304. Re:So how did life turn out? by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    What you want is a 9 to 5 job. You don't want to put in any extra time at all and you resent those who do because it puts pressure on you to do the same. So what do you do? You leave the industry. That pretty much proves your a moron. You think its any easier in publishing or media? There's people who bust their asses in EVERY industry and slackers like you will always make them look good. Computer Science is mainly the major of hackers. If you don't want the hacker lifestyle of work all day, hack all night then you should never had picked it as your chosen profession. Your absolute crappy arguments against the foreign students who work hard or your idiotic rants against a "achievement based economy" prove how stupid you are. WTF do you want? A "slacker based economy?" You boast how you didn't learn skills that will be obsolete in a year and instead learned general skills, well since you are currently JOBLESS how useful are those GENERAL skills? I have every confidence you will find a job once you mature but not a minute before then.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  305. You expected way too much for what little effort y by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 1

    Honestly you were from the start way in over your head. You had no concept of the hours hackers put in for their work. And its not for money. The real hackers just love to hack. They love to program, tinker, administrate....etc. They aren't the ones who bought the Mercedes to begin with, mainly because they spend so little time actually away from their computers to drive. 80 hours a week is honestly conservative here in Boston. Its more like 90 on the low end all the way up to 100-110 hours a week. And they LOVE it. So they're work-a-holics, so what? Do you resent them because they work more than you and raise the bar for your own performance? So we should all work less to make your life easier? Lots of people with degrees work hard and do NOT get rich. Most doctors, lawyers, engineers....etc work their butts off but don't become millionaires. They do it because they love the work. Same with hackers. When a company decides they need someone who knows a specific language instead of a general CS grad they are saying "We need someone who can do the work NOW, not someone with a lot of "potential" who really can't produce for us immediately". There's no illusions about it. If anything you sound a bit naive. You expected the corporations to regard you higher simply because you went thru 5 years of college and got your degree. Big deal. The reality is you CS grads are a dime a dozen. Show us something above and beyond the degree to justify your complaints. You don't HAVE a wife and kids right now. Working long hours shouldn't be a problem for you. The industry isn't a sinking ship. Software hasn't suddenly begun to write itself. Until it does there will always be a need for programmers. Your degree is "nice" but unless you keep up with the latest languages and technologies and CONSTANTLY upgrade your own skills you will always be considered outdated. Its a constant rat race and it sounds like you burnt out early. That you got burnt out because you didn't investigate the lifestyle issues of the profession beforehand means nothing about the state of the industry overall.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  306. Look to other similar fields..... by zerofoo · · Score: 1

    I got a BS in computer science. I've gotten the classical computer science/programmer training. I went looking for jobs and guess what i've found? There were tons of IT administration jobs! OK, so they weren't the cool programming jobs I was originally looking for, but the money and advancement possiblities are good. I like C++ and Java, but the market wants guys who can build, administer, and secure mixed environment networks...so that's what I do. This isn't Burger King and you can't have it your way!

  307. Re:What about all those H1-b visa employees?? by wandazulu · · Score: 1

    The fact that you ask this question at all means you know nothing of how our government works. To make such a change in our immigration policy would take BARE MINIMUM a year and probably more. By that time, the economy might be on the upswing again and everyone will be saying...where are the workers? This also completely ignores the fact that the H-1b worker compared to the US worker at a particular company just might have better skills or be a more valued employee. You are saying the company shouldn't have a choice of who to hire and who to retain.

  308. You have a choice... by steadph · · Score: 1

    And they opt to go to a homeless shelter. That's their choice and everyone is sensationalizing it?

    If what they say is true that they can't find a job, the internet economy is down, etc. Then why don't you reinvent yourself by finding a non-technical work or going to other states like phoenix.

    1. Re:You have a choice... by LouisvilleDebugger · · Score: 1

      I tried, but Phonix is not a state *sob* *sob* :)

  309. Re:I'm happy.. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Think about it: skills such as web design and system administration (the two big "janitorial" IT jobs) are very commonplace.

    SysAdmin "janitorial". Yes, perhaps because we have to deal with all the crap that other IT people leave behind.

    There are SysAdmins and then there are SysAdmins: the ones that create directories, user accounts, and so on are perhaps "janitorial". The ones that do enterprise wide planning, load measurements and infrastructure mainetenace and design are on other league.

    If system administration was an elite skill, then companies would have a hard time hiring system administrators

    In all the previous jobs as SysAdmin I have taken, the position has remained unfilled from anything between 3 and 6 months before I agrred to join (no .com bullshit jobs mind you, in areas completely unrelated to the .com madness).

    Your perception of what a SysAdmin is seems to be uninformed.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  310. No job; credit load; tight market == pain! by SinceEBCDIC · · Score: 1

    It *is* that bad here in San Francisco. I had a six month hiatus (from Dec to May). Luckily my mortgage is small, no credit load (when I hear that my peers owe an average of $15K), and lots of savings. I can understand how someone with high rent or mortgage, lots owed the credit card companies, and with a paycheck-to-paycheck lifestyle could be on the edge. It scares the hell out of me. Now that I'm working (consulting; Java/JSPs) I'm squirrelling away every damn cent (and earning just less than ONE-THIRD of what I got last year). This is a cold, cold market. It's going to get much uglier before it gets better, and the tide of incredibly cheap H-1Bs and two-years-at-a-dot-com folks are making it uglier.

    --

    I was born not knowing and have had only a little time to change that here and there. -- Richard Feynman
  311. Move! by MrNovember · · Score: 1
    There are still places in the country where unemployment is so low that ANYONE gets hired. I happen to live in such a place and one result is that customer service absolutely sucks.

    Not only is unemployment low in these places but so is the cost of living. Not only that, they still pay high salaries to IT folks because there just aren't enough to go around.

    My point is that San Francisco is really great (unless like 95% of folks there you live by a mini-mall outside of the city proper) but go where the jobs are. Awww it's not a big city and it's cold in the winter. Too bad.

    If you are a good programmer with 2 years experience in Java/C++, there are jobs going begging. I know because I try to fill them with consultants but they want FTEs. If you are the aforementioned programmer, you'll probably start at $60k. A house in a good neighborhood starts at $140k.

    You might be not be working on the sexiest of software but you'll be working. This stuff is no big secret -- look on Monster or Hotjobs. Duh!

    States to think about: Missouri, Iowa, South Dakota, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Minnesota.

    Send me an email if you're good and want to find out more.

  312. Squeal Server by eWulf · · Score: 1

    I prefer Squeal myself

    --
    "If Stupidity got us into this mess, then why can't it get us out?" - Will Rogers
  313. No, not that bad by BIGJIMSLATE · · Score: 4

    No, its not that bad. But most .com'ers won't settle for too much less than the huge startup they're coming from. There's thousands and thousands of jobs, many minimum-wage or aroud there, and they can at least find SOME income instead of that "I can't find a job and will rely on the rest of you guys to support me" mentality.

    There's jobs, but no former CEO would catch himself dead flipping burgers or working retail, even though they're perfectly good jobs for anything. No, its not an IT job or something "high tech", but its a freaking INCOME. Glad my taxes aren't only going towards the guys using the money to buy more drugs, but lazy former suits who would rather not work than work for $5-$8 an hour.

  314. Well, you might just have to move by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 2
    Like it or not, this is life sometimes. HAppened to my family when I was 6. We had a nice big house that my parents had overseen the construction of themselves, lived near my father's parents, and were generally very happy. Well, a new manager took over the company that my dad worked for who my dad just couldn't get along with so he quit (he would have been fired if he hadn't). Turns out he couldn't find another good job in Boulder, so he took an offer in Flagstaff, Arizona and we moved. None of us (me espically) wanted to, but you do what you have to do.

    Even if you can't find a great job elsewhere, moving can be a good idea because just about everywhere costs less than SV to live in. In Tucson you can get a deceant studio apartment for $300/month. That's cheap enough that you can live on $7/hour and still keep a cheap car. To be sure, you're life would need to be frugal, but it is doable.

  315. Re:Survival of the Fittest by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 1

    Haha that's very funny and true. I've known so many people who know jacksh*t and bs'ed on their resumes, using fake references such as "administrator for Rainbow Tech Inc." and then have their friends lie for them.

    Once the HR started catching on, it backfired not only on the liars, but on the real pros who know what they're doing.


    ---------
    Did you just fart? Or do you always smell like that?

    --

    eTrade SUCKS
  316. Survival of the Fittest by Jesus+IS+the+Devil · · Score: 2

    I colocate my servers at a local ISP. They grew from 10 employees to over 200 employees in 2 year's time. A month ago 80% of them were laid off. They don't even have a support staff 24/7 anymore. They've cut off peering with many other isps in order to generate a profit.

    Now I'm scared like hell and am thinking of moving my servers elsewhere where there's more stability.

    Out of the 150+ people that were laid off, not ONE person has found a job in the past month.

    This isn't surprising to me though, considering the amound of dumb paper mcse's that were hired during their heyday. There were idiot support guys that would answer my calls and not know what a netmask or a traceroute was. I mean, they are IDIOTS!

    So it's no wonder so many former dotcomers are having a tough time finding a job elsewhere in the high-tech industry. They were just bandwagon dotcomers to begin with, and aren't worth much in real life. Perhaps they should switch their careers BACK to what they were doing before. They could find lots more luck there.

    I think this time of turmoil is a really telling time where the weak are weeded out and the strong stay on board.

    But of course I think the economy will pick back up again and the future will definitely be a bit brighter. Until then, those unfit for competition will have to eat Charles Darwin's theory of "survival of the fittest". It's a cruel world, but that's capitalism. Oh well...


    ---------
    Did you just fart? Or do you always smell like that?

    --

    eTrade SUCKS
  317. Guess What Guys... by IgorFL · · Score: 1

    The lack of a well rounded education, as well as a sense of entitlement, is coming back to hurt some of those guys. Laugh at philosophy majors all you want, but at least they don't have a problem with stacking books at your local Barnes and Noble to make a living.

  318. Look on the bright side by flacco · · Score: 1
    Maybe we'll see an end to those absolutely fucking idiotic dot-com TV commercials slathered in incomprehensible visual metaphors.

    Oooooh, the "D" generation. Wearing a sherpa cap and zipping around the office on a Razor scooter is a sure sign of brilliance.

    Ahhhhh... "Bubble Technology" - complete with computer-generated bubbles. That tells me a lot, and really makes me want to invest.

    "Lucent. We're a bunch of really brainy fellows, as you can tell by our marketing. What we produce is so sophisticated that we can't actually describe it, but instead, here are some tantalizing visuals of... well, nothing really."

    A shake-out was necessary, and unavoidable, but it's too bad so many people are getting hurt. Maybe the "D" generation will end up standing for "Disillusioned".

    But seriously - good riddance to the ads. I wish it were the ad weasels living in cardboard boxes instead.

    --
    pr0n - keeping monitor glass spotless since 1981.
  319. The Monkey Trap by Ms.Taken · · Score: 1
    In India they have an interesting method for catching monkeys. They bury a small-mouthed jar up to it's neck in the ground then fill it with nuts. A monkey comes along, sticks its hand into the jar and grabs the nuts, but its nut-filled fist is too big to pull back out through the mouth of the jar. As the hunters approach, the monkey shrieks and screams, but it just can't stand to let go of the prize, and so is caught.

    When I read about people living in homeless shelters because they can't stand to sell their remaining dot-com stocks or move out of Silicon Valley, I have to wonder how far human intelligence has really progressed.

  320. Re:Diversification by kurt_cagle · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the comments about Beginning XML. I'm wrapping up a chapter for Professional Schema by Wrox, if you liked the other one.

    Self education is a critical part of staying employed in this industry, and is something that I've seen a lot of people have problems with. I look upon any job that I'm in anymore as being temporary, even if I'm getting a salary as a "permanent" employee. The projects that I'm working on will change, the boss that I work for will change, the chance that the company itself will disappear overnight is always a possibility. By handling your education yourself, you basically remove that particular hold that your current employer may be able to use later as leverage to keep you either from advancing or moving elsewhere. Moreover, you can keep the reference material this way, and you can claim them as education expenses on your tax forms.

  321. Re:Diversification by kurt_cagle · · Score: 1

    It's a known problem, and one I need to fix. It will work with IE because that browser handles white space in query strings differently from others.

  322. Diversification by kurt_cagle · · Score: 2

    I've been through three tech recessions, the first back in 86-7, 91-92 and 95-96. During the first, colleges that had been pushing computer grads were suddenly getting push-back from the industry saying there wasn't any more need for them, that CS was a mature field ... then networked PCs became the vogue and all of a sudden industry was screaming for more workers. In 1991 a general recession hit the US, mild by historical standards, but enough the you were seeing PostDocs working at KMart. In 1995 there was a period where the multimedia and game industries collapsed - too many startups, too much anticipated demand that never materialized, too much hype. We've just ended the first great Internet push. Someone was complaining here about those companies that were hiring HTML programmers for top dollar at that time but didn't really understand that at the time HTML programmers were what was needed. Many of those HTML programmers went on to become senior web programmers, webmasters, sysadmins and IT managers. The point in all this is very simple - being in IT means keeping one eye out on what is coming down the pipe and taking the time to learn it. Note that this means that it is your responsibility to stay current, not your employer's (if you are still employed). This is unfortunate, and is yet another indication of the breakdowns going in business, since for many, many years, a good employer knew that keeping their staff current with technology would give them a competitive edge. However, pertinant to this discussion, the onus now falls on you; take evening classes, set up a spare computer in the back room and play with new tech, or even old tech that may be experiencing a resurgence (Perl/CGI is expanding, for instance, and Python is enjoying something of a renaissance). Learn everything you can about XML, then learn some more, even if you're a C++ or Java programmer; we're fast moving to a time when every stream that an object produces or consumes will be in XML, and the more you know about Web Services, distributed programming, database to XML conversion and so forth, the easier it is for you to jump from IIS to Apache to WebSphere to whatever. No one is going to hire a web developer in this day and age, because too many managers have assumed (incorrectly) that because the Dotcom bandwagon burst, the Internet is no longer important. It is, but not for serving up web pages; the demand that is beginning to grow is for on demand weblications, custom, in-house, and relying more on component development skills than on the ability to to build large-scale stand-alone apps. Diversify your skill set; deep knowledge is wonderful, and from the recruiters on this board deep knowledge may be desirable, but on the flip side the reason that you get so many C++ "experts" that couldn't tell a virtual interface from virtual reality is because those same companies don't want seasoned veterans who can command higher wages, they want cheap but skilled labor. If you have secondary or tertiary skills, then you can walk into situations where you can use those skills, though with the realization that you won't (and shouldn't) get the same pay as for your primary skills. Finally, realize that a company is not your friend, mother, nanny, or benefactor. Companies exist to make money. The more enlightened ones treat their employees well, but enlightenment tends to go out the window when the stocks are tumbling. Most managers have a need to fill and will get people to work for them to fulfill that need, and if they can get away with it, will jettison that person the moment the need no longer exists. This is what the Just-In-Time economy is all about, unfortunately. Finally, diversify. Get into writing. Start a side business that has nothing to do with programming. If you're a marketer, spend some time learning about code. So many of the people that entered into the dot com market directly out of college have tied their entire identity to their jobs, and are only now beginning to understand that they are not programmers, or marketers, or managers, but people, with creative impulses that were stifled to get into the IT rat race. -- Kurt Cagle -- Author, Professional XSL, Wrox

  323. Job Change Blues (A RANT) by IBitOBear · · Score: 1
    So in December I took several months off between the end of one job and the beginning of the next. By the time the new job was supposed to start the company where it was to take place had tanked.

    Between March and Today the entire DC beltway area has been on a hiring freeze. A lot of the "jobs" you see in the paper and on line have turned out to be mirrages created by the slowly suffocating "technical placement" firms. I have had 5 companies try to put me in for the same single open job.

    If I had been laid off things would have been better as I wouldn't have been sitting on my ass burining savings while having a nice vacation. There would have also been things like unemployment insurance and such.

    I have sucked $5k out of my 401k-plan and can do that a good 11 more times were I to have the need. (The tax penalty sucks though, thanks IRS! 8-). In general I am fine but annoyed and surprised at how desicated the job market is even for defense contractors etc.

    So I am "all but certian" to have a new job here in a couple of days, and I got a roommate (mostly for fun though 8-). And I'll recover.

    The impossible part was getting my resume through the background chatter of truely incompent bozos out there. ANYBODY who has tried to hire anybody technical knows how incredibly lame the average interviewee is. How do you believeably tell the person reading your resume that you haven't "hedged" here and there?

    Apparently you dont. The data just can't get through the noise and if you, like me, have a wide range of experience you are doubbly screwed because you are "overqualified" which is HR speak for "will get bored and probably leave soon" which is also "not me" but is "what I look like on paper."

    Yes, I saw the crash comming. It was several years late actually so I consider myself to have been "wrong." Yes, on the avreage if you are paying more than $30k a year for a "web" anything you are getting ripped off. (The web browser is, metaphorically the display adapter and not that terribly interesting a problem set.) and what do you know, the stock markets really need to "correct" a good 5k points off the DOW without the whole econmy getting snagged up like fishing-line on an over-spinning reel.

    Is there an answer? Yes. Common sense. Unfortunately that will have to "seriously inconvienance" (sp?) a butt-load of people reguardless of skill or deservedness. The danger of said common sense actually occuring is, however, quite low if history is to be any indicator.

    So you do your interviews, and you take your calls, and you wish fervently that you could smack the sheite out of every single person you encounter without the common courtsy to speak true and return calls. You watch your spending, which you always *SHOULD* have been doing anyway. And NO MATTER WHAT, you don't let your frustration leak out onto the lives and events of the people who *are* trying to make your situation better.

    If you feel boned at every turn, take a moment to try to make the grocery checker smile and consider that one intestinal parasite or hemmoragic feever could make *any* of your current circumstance a lot worse.

    In short everybody within the sound of my RANT needs to learn to "appreciate the missery and suffering of others". Sometimes that "appreciation" is sardonic and cruel ammusement that the butt-head that just cut you off in traffic is now stuck behind the person you were stuck behind in the first place, and if the butt-head passes them, then they will be stuck behind the next guy and so on for ever. Sometimes apprecation comes in the form of understanding that money, and spending same, are as much an addiction as crack and the mighty-over-priced fall, and fall quite hard and get called a laughable failure for their efforts because it is always fun to see the mighty take int in the shorts. Sometimes appreciation is realizing that the Pointy Haired Bosses are not incompetent by choice but are, in fact trying their best despite the earned resentment of those they simply can not comprehend.

    And you can at least be happy you don't have AIDS and otherwise "take comfort in the knowledge that your dog is getting enough cheese."

    The curule fact are, among others, these:
    -- The job market sucks just now.
    -- We pay our teachers crap and expect decent students.
    -- When the kids today see Opie having trouble with the neighborhood bully they ask their parents why he didn't get Sherrif Andy's gun and take him out.
    -- If we are going to save the forests then the lumberjacks are going to have to be fired, and someone is going to have to figure out wha to do wiht those machines that pluck old-growth trees out like errant hairs.
    -- Nuclear energy *can* work, but probably wont be worked right by the people in charge.
    -- We need the space program even if people here are starving 'cause "grain production" doesn't spark the mind like "living on the moon."
    -- The job market will continue to suck if nobody can figure out anything more useful than pr0n to put on the internet.
    -- People who can't commit to the proper care and feeding of a cat are having babbies.
    -- Bunches of people think that "making dead beat dads pay" is a "priority" but teaching kids not to get pregnant is unthinkable.

    Scapegoats look like you. If not today, then tomorrow. "Never underestimate the power of a large number of stupid people" needs to be ammended to take note of the fact that the rampaging mob of idiots think the "smart people" owe them something to the point that they will try to take it out of your hide if you have any sense.

    In the land of the blind, the one eyed man is diseased and deluded terribly because he claims to have the mystical power to locate things and people magically across unreasonable distances, but only sometimes.

    But I digress....

    --

    --
    Innocent people shouldn't be forced to pay for inferior software development.
    --"Code Complete" Microsoft Press
  324. Incompetents and HR are likely in the way... by coffee17 · · Score: 1
    I agree with your hiring tactics, and won't get into the nit-picking that a lot of people seem to be going for. As a 'nix admin, I have a few stock questions to apply to potential juniors (why do you not use 'rm -r .*' to get rid of the .directories and etc... these things aren't really hard, they are just looking for minimum competency.

    However, part of the reason why you might be having such trouble finding competant programmers is because there are so many people out there without a clue (heck, I haven't done much programming in 2 years or so but could still answer the "reverse a string" "reverse a linked list" and etc easy questions). They clog the system, and lie a lot on their resumes, so HR will pull in the liars and waste your time interviewing them, meanwhile the competant people are getting passed over because they are honest, and don't overstock their resume.

    Perhaps you might want to have a talk with your HR droid and let hir know that if you are only looking for someone who knows C, that's the only thing they should be looking for on the resumes, and in fact if someone has a *large* string of known languages (possibly starting with VB or visual foxpro) that the odds are quite likely that very little about each language, and VB might possibly be all they know (for some reason it seems like a lot of VB programmers seem to think they can quickly pick up C or C++, without bothering to even learn a little before an interview). Heck, you might want to go on dice or monster yourself and try to find someone... heck, your company might even give you some money for the referral. If they list a number have some quick questions to ask over the phone. that or else you might want to think up some minimum questions to have HR ask, but make sure they are right/wrong answers, as HR doesn't have the ability to evaluate grey areas about coding. Rather either ask them to write down the answers, or tape it.

  325. Re:Dotcommers got what might have been expected... by LouisvilleDebugger · · Score: 1

    I swear I tried to put them in, but gave up.

    I tried XHTML 4.01 BR tags, and when that didn't
    work, gave up from the lateness of the hour.

    I am aware that this is documented and won't
    make the same mistake next time.

    Thanks!

  326. Dotcommers got what might have been expected.... by LouisvilleDebugger · · Score: 2

    I tend to agree with the Anonymous Coward who described this issue in terms of "buzzword dotcommers." Computers are changing life on Earth. But if one follows Moore's law backwards, it is changing it at the same *rate* as it did when ENIAC, UNIVAC, the Bletchley Park computers were new. Defeating Goering's U-boat code: now THAT is a 1942 "killer app" that I fortunately need not download from Alphaworks....thank you Dr. Turing! The fact that the world is "more changed" by computers now than in Babbage's time is a function of the cumulative "time integral" of the rate of change, not the rate of change. (No coincidence that it's now that computers are "more important than ever." The dotcom thing is a business phenomenon, not a computer phenomenon. Computers still work the way that Lovelace and Babbage described. Better and faster, but a Turing Machine is an Analytical Engine is a Pascal Calculator. The sociological effects of computing (or any human endeavour) are cumulative, their observed results tend to belong to history, not the news. I feel sorry for and care about people whose personal lives go awry, be it through a bad marriage or a business failure. Who knows, it could be me that's next. But I have to agree that a good deal of the people around me don't really seem to be working all that hard for a living. These are my very cubicle-mates. I think they're all very nice people: even to a person! I'm 32. I've been making money on computers mostly since 1994, when I started office temping to learn PC applications. In 2001, I'm about to have a servlet filter I wrote published in a Java white paper on XSLT. So 6 years in "business computing." Not too impressive for the dotcommer who wants a career (SUV) in 6 months.... But I've been enjoying computers since 1980, when as a 12-year-old I was hooked at school one-on-one to a Teletype DSR-33 with a Honeywell 66 behind it (110 Baud, Half Duplex). I have breathed and lived the idea of "computers" since I was a little kid. And I'm not hurting in my job: 62K with no degree, in my beloved hometown, often included on "most livable places" almanacs. I don't know if I'm lucky for keeping a job or just lucky that computers exist and they're interesting. But I would challenge those who read this far in this post, to look at the weaker ones around you and imagine the potential for the planet if they understood the machine as you do. In Mammoth Cave in Kentucky, we call it the "Flint Ridge Con." Describe a peculiar approach to the newbie, hook her/im on the possibility implied, and wait for them to just badger the living shit out of you with questions. To paraphrase Feynman, I think this is the only way in which any sort of progress can be made. Thanks in advance for the bandwidth. Alan p.s. This is my first Slashdot post. I tend to respect the views of people I read here, even if I don't agree with them (simple reason: a lot of good thinking goes on here.) So if you don't agree with my post, just tell me why I'm wrong. Mainly I have seen people get angry on these kinds of fora and I really would hate that more than anything.

  327. This is nothing new by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    This has been going on for forever. When times are good and there's plenty of money, companies hire loads of people they don't really need. This is a direct result of management ego - it's much more prestigious (and looks better on the resume) to be the boss of 500 people rather than 50.

    As a result, some people get lucky. They get a nice cushy job with a six figure salary and lots of perks. But then, when things go sour, they are the first to get canned and then they learn the awful truth -- the rest of the world is wise to the scam and knows that you aren't really worth $100k a year.

    The whole dot-com boom threw everything totally out of wack. Now there were hundreds of new companies with billions of VC dollars to burn. Lots of people, many of them young with little maturity or life expericence, and just barely qualified to work at Burger Barn, were landing high paying jobs. And just like the rube who wins the lottery, they immediately dove head-first into a new lavish lifestyle that's way overboard, even for their inflated salary level.

    And why shouldn't they. After all, this is the "new economy" -- things have changed and this is the way it's going to be forever. Not to mention all those stock options that will be worth millions in a couple of years.

    As Homer Simpsom would say. DOH!!

  328. Re:Yes, it's really that bad by rudy_wayne · · Score: 1

    Yes, the enconomy in general is slowing down. That's nothing new -- it happens in regular cycles about every 9 - 10 years. ('73 - '82 - '92 - '01).

    The dot-com bust was over due. Billions of dollars spent and nothing to show for it. Eventually, investors get tired of burning money and bail out.

    Even if the economy was much stronger right now, the dot-com bubble would have burst anyway. The overall economic slow-down simply hastened the inevitable.

  329. Re:$600?? - he's right, it's like that in Cali too by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    I live in Sacramento, CA. You can get a rather nice 1 br/1ba apartment right in downtown for around $500..and no, it's not a ghetto ass place. Real estate is still fairly inexpensive up here.
    Amtrak takes people right into the Silicon Valley.. I think they have like 8 trains a day.. or you can drive to Stockton and take the Altamont Commuter Express.
    The biggest problem for dot-commers is when they buy the brand new Ford Domination or the Dodge Durango or the Boxter. No wonder they're broke. Yes, it's about a 2hr commute from Sacramento to the Bay Area, but the money you save would hopefully go into savings.. :P Better to he unemployed with $500/rent than $2100/rent...

  330. ...a definite solution by Tregod · · Score: 1

    i can see it now... with so many failures (not to be mean), there's bound to be some good in all this. can you say 'homeless.com' ?

  331. GIMMIEFOOD.COM by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 1

    Out of the cubicle and into the gutter! I have no sympathy for those who just can't cope with their bad fortune. Yes, I was a .com worker, doing PHP development for bazillion.gone and I was there when the company went under, I had a hard time finding work *boo-hoo* and almost thought about leaving the tech sector entirely *shivers* What did I do? I started my own IT consulting business. Now I make 4x what I was making working for someone else, and I love it! Fact: those who can't adapt perish viva le recession!!!

    1. Re:GIMMIEFOOD.COM by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 1

      What professional site uses PHP?
      Thousands.

      Kinda like saying what professional site uses ASP *shudders*

      PHP is not Perl no, but I write Perl as well. PHP just happens to be in big demand right now. I get about 2 new clients each week. Each one wanting PHP, each one being a corporation, and each one paying mad cash.

      Perl IS NOT the end all be all. Perl is a wonderful scripting language that I will always use for back-end tasks via Cron. Perl is not something I generate web pages with.

  332. Re:Do you people really belive this drivel? by slashdot_commentator · · Score: 2

    Yes, I believe that there are degreed tech workers at a shelter in the Silicon Valley area.

    Why, because employed tech workers were living at the homeless shelters BEFORE the crash.

    The housing market out there sucks.

    I don't have a idea why anyone with good credentials would consider working there. One friend of mine suggested that it had to do with all the action occuring there, "being a player in the industry".

    Well, the industry is dead, and will be for a while. Go someplace else. There are tons of opportunities across the country. You'll just have more competition for a spot on the liferafts in CA.

    --
    There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
  333. Failing european socialist economies? by Smid · · Score: 1

    Well, there only seems to be one world economy which is failing at the moment...

    And you're sitting in it.

    Smid

  334. Re:Why would "experienced" risk working @ VC start by NutscrapeSucks · · Score: 1

    Absolutely -- During the big recession of the early-90s (well, it was big in CA), the layoffs were primarily driven by BIG corporations such as AT&T (laid-off 100,000 people IIRC), IBM, and the defence contractors.

    These were the "safe" big company jobs that Joe Morgage punched the clock at until unexpectedly getting the boot, repalced by an army of contractors and outsourcers. The resulting decentralization in labor talent and total decimation of company loyalty was one of thing primary motivating factors which lead to the "dot-com economy".

    --
    Whenever I hear the word 'Innovation', I reach for my pistol.
  335. Midwest is fine and well by VampireByte · · Score: 1

    No doubt, I posted my resume last month, had an interview two days later, job offer in another week. Walking distance to my home in the Loop, and more salary than I was asking for. I could have gone up to Wisconsin or down to Indy for more money relative to the cost of living, but I like Chicago and staying near my friends. Sure it's not as exciting as California with the earthquakes, mudslides, fires, and power shortage. It's really boring here at the lakefront, 75 degrees, sunny... I better go outside!

    --

    Run and catch, run and catch, the lamb is caught in the blackberry patch.

  336. Other Employment Opportunities by RWarrior(fobw) · · Score: 1
    I've had to avail myself of other employment avenues over the past couple weeks. I was terminated from my A+/Network+ teaching job in February, and since then I've landed one contract that was cancelled (and I didn't get paid for what I did work).

    With a background in network design and implementation, security (firewalls and permissions design), NT/2K networking, and Linux implementation and administration, and enough certification paper to bury a 10 story building, you'd think I could land SOMETHING.

    But no.

    I start tonight delivering pizza for Domino's.

    This dot-com market glut crap is real, even for those of us who are not marginally skilled and who are just unlucky. With Web-based job hunting places sprouting ads for nobody but headhunters, the chances of your resume (out of 20,000 submitted) getting looked at are miniscule, even if you can shit gold code.

    Life sucks if you're out of work in this biz, gang. Those of you who have jobs ought to count your blessings, because the market just isn't there for hopping around every six months anymore.

    --
    Remove the caps and hold to a mirror.
  337. Here's a clue ... by The+AtomicPunk · · Score: 1
    Get the hell out of California!

    Here in Phoenix, we've been searching for 3 months for a basic Sun/Solaris/Veritas/EMC admin with half an ounce of talent. No luck!

    Then again, anybody who's not bright enough to move out of the most expensive area in the country with the worst technology layoffs and lower their standards slightly to get a job, I wouldn't want working on my stuff anyway.

    Hell, I'd probably even stoop to becoming a Windows admin if it meant putting food on my plate! :)

  338. Bad? That's an understatement. by SilentChris · · Score: 1
    "Is the job market really that bad?"

    Bad? That's an understatement. Nearly *all* of my friends (in every discipline, not just computers) who have graduated in the past month have found NO work whatsoever. Right now I'm temping at my former high school in my town, but calls to Yahoo, Microsoft, Dell, Compaq, HP, eBay, etc. have all gone unanswered. In the local classifieds, there's less than 10 IT jobs a week, and most are silly things which either require less technical skill (teaching children) or skills techies don't generally have (fixing computers at Pantone -- and doing artist work).

    I never thought I'd be doing data entry after my BA in Computer Science, but here I am. I'm just hoping ONE company gives me a call for a decent IT job.

  339. Re:Bad? That's an understatement. by SilentChris · · Score: 1

    BS's weren't available at my school (Sarah Lawrence). It was definitely liberal arts, and everyone earned BA's.

  340. Re:Oh yes by C.+Tengo+Hambre · · Score: 1

    Other people have nerf guns too?

  341. The Jobs Are There... by PhreakinPenguin · · Score: 1

    The jobs are out there for the taking, but it's the people that don't want the jobs. Believe me, I would be a burger flipper if my family needed money after I got laid off. The cases of people being laid off and being forced to homeless shelters are people that won't accept anything under their "standards". If they were making 100k a year, then they believe they shouldn't take anything that's half that. Believe me, when you have a wife and kids to support, you will accept any job as long as it provides food for your family.

    --------------------------------------------------

    --


    My sig of choice is Marlboro
    1. Re:The Jobs Are There... by adalger · · Score: 1
      some of the things I heard frequently are "overqualified" and "this would not challenge you enough" and "you'll be bored here"

      I've heard that in interviews, and gotten the job anyway. You won't get the job if you deny it or beg, but you will if you admit it and go on to say that you're not looking for cahllenging or interesting or fulfilling, you're looking for "pays the bills and leaves me maybe physically tired but still mentally alert enough to do what I like for intellectual stimulation on my own time." Hell, if all else fails, go back to college. There's plenty of government assistance out there, and even if you're forty or fifty, fast food managers see you as pretty much the same as all the other college kids they've got working for them.

      --
      -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  342. Re:Indy bigots by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

    "Just Friday I was talking to someone on the phone in Indy who said "yea, I'm meeting with some guy named Woo, guess it's a chink or jap or whatever."
    "

    He said chink or jap? How fucking terrible!
    What are you going to do, fucking cry and call police?

    Thanks to idiots like you soon people won't be able to talk to each other except in stiff official-talk.
    No jokes, no borderline terms ( btw ..which make live so much more interesting ) everything will be gone thanks to stiffs like you.

    --
    ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  343. Re:Poor Babies! Savings? Relocation? McDonalds? et by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

    90% ?

    I remember reading it was more like 45% !!!

    --
    ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  344. Re:It is pretty bad by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

    It is not BAD...
    It is normal.

    --
    ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  345. Re:Swing/JFC by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

    "wondered why older programmers smiled and laughed a little whenever talk turned to the 'red-hot job market' for programmers. "

    They do. This is exactly how most onPaint events for GUI controls are written ( assuming one cares abote flicker free redraws.)

    --
    ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  346. Re:Swing/JFC by GPLwhore · · Score: 1

    Shit. Wrong paste.
    Above post was a reply to :
    "If C/C++ programmers had to double-buffer their UI calls directly in user-space memory and blt them on every draw, the performance would suck there too."

    --
    ...and you can't blame meteors for everything.
  347. Your Lost Because Your Stupid SPQR by Zorro2001 · · Score: 1
    You have evidently not learned from experience & laughed in the face of those that tried to teach you anything. C ,Java & many of the other languages have have been parasites on the back of honest assembly code for many years; I don't think your going to find Basic or Assembly coders on the bread line for a long time to come.

    You guys thought you had the inside track because you knew the secret passwords to make that crap-code work but they changed the block & now your on the outside; thats the price of playing with the Free Masons, they give you crumbs long enough to buy you out & now you got nothing, your basic Masonic Bitch [thats their big secret, the evil empires' been run by vicious broads, how'se your signifigant other been acting lately?

    Now they got c# & xms, your out & the assemblers are still coasting along in unix. There's still a lot of work to do but because you choose to let Windows & Java squeeze the planet w/o a single patch or rewrite to salvage the system... they have defined the game & you're out.It would be child'splay to redefine the system protocols to create a faster system within a system; but since you won't cooperate in doing so you are of no threat, therefor of no value. Hell you could write your own bios then Mr. Gates would have to come to you.

  348. Not a surprise by metachimp · · Score: 1
    I started working in IT in 1995, for a start-up that made web-based applications for HR systems, and we did well, well enough to get bought and for all our stock to be worth something.

    So I took some time off and started with another start-up last fall, which went bust because nobody would fund them.

    I tried going independent, but all the companies that I could have had jobs with earlier had ceased all web development (mainly intranet type stuff). Everyone I talked to was either in a hiring freeze or was actively laying people off.

    I have five recruiters out there working on my behalf, and went on one interview.

    I have all the right skills, I'm a great writer, can do analysis, work with clients, all the good stuff that might make me a standout candidate, but I get nowhere out in California. Seriously thinking about moving the hell out of here.

    Fortunately, things seem to be picking up again, as companies begin to realize "Hey! That internet stuff does work!". A few months ago, lots of companies irrationally slashed their web-based development efforts because they heard something on the news about the "Dot-com bust", figuring it had something to do with the technology behind it, not investment bankers getting ahead of themselves. Now that it's over, larger vendors in this area like PeopleSoft, who five years ago said "This internet thing will never work" are now claiming to have a "total internet" platform, and IT managers will be scrambling to get their staffing back up.

    The days of the hot startup are over, and I'm glad to see them go, but finding work has been really exasperating, as I have heard the same thing over and over again "We'd love to hire you, but we don't have any openings." or, "I'd love to hire you, but I have to lay off three people next week." Ugh. I'm moving.

    --
    The system has failed you, don't fail yourself. --Billy Bragg
  349. move to birmingham! by trash+eighty · · Score: 1
    my previous employer, a dotcom from the old skool days, was liquidated at the end of february. 100 people on the dole, within weeks most were in jobs again. indeed everyone has a new job now, even me!

    there is a definate IT skill shortage in england

  350. Re:Get out of California by flewp · · Score: 1

    Well, first off, I realise some (I admit, not all) of the ramafications of California sinking towards in the ocean. (Worst off all, 311 might go down with it, or Washington and Oregon may go down to)
    My main point was just that here in the midwest we tend to only hear of the bad things that happen in California, and what's worse, we hear a lot of complaining. This may be a result of California being so big (geographically and population-wise) or maybe we midwesterners are just jealous of California and want to make it seem worse than it is.

    --
    WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
  351. Oh yes by chili+snow · · Score: 1

    We can distribute nerf guns to them too. You can't rob people with nerf guns.

    --
    -chili snow
  352. Re:Yes, it really is getting bad by adalger · · Score: 1

    What points this out as a troll is, there is no such thing as "lowest ranked law school in the U.S." The bottom 50% are all lumped together as "fourth tier" by the body that ranks law schools. I know this because my local law school just recently graduated to third tier, which is above all fourth tier but below top 25%. First tier is the top 50 schools, and second tier is everything else above third tier.

    This brought to you by James Audubon's Field Guide to North American Trolls.

    --
    -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  353. Re:HOW TO GET A FAST FOOD JOB by adalger · · Score: 1

    Hm. I put "Nuclear Reactor Operator" on my app and still got hired at Taco Bell. How? Told 'em I'd like to be around for a while and not have a job that takes a lot of exceptionally difficult thinking, so I could relax at work for a change.

    The reason most of the fast food places won't hire people with experience and/or brains is not that they think you'll use the job as a stepping stone; rather, they think you'll be bored out of your skull. You won't have any job satisfaction, you'll be surly to the customers and condescending to your co-workers, you'll be insubordinate to management, and even if you do stick around you'll be hard to justify as a positive contribution to the company.

    If you're up front and honest, and tell 'em "Sure, it's not my dream job, but it's better than nothing and it'll be a relief to not have all the responsibility on my shoulders for a while," chances are you could get hired in to McD's even with a Ph.D.

    I actually did work at Applebee's with a waiter who had a Master's in P.R. and several years of experience to go with it. What he said was, he got tired of being paid to lie. That's what got him in.

    Foodservice doesn't want brainless zombies exclusively. It makes do with them because it can. There are, though, opportunities for bright, talented, educated people who can take a realistic set of expectations and a good work ethic to the interview.

    --
    -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  354. Re:Get out of California by adalger · · Score: 1
    We don't have sushi bars or weird ass geeks roaming the street

    We don't? What part of Ohio are you from? I'm in Toledo, and one can find sushi in the mall here.

    You really know when you're a geek when the Chinese waiter at the Chinese restaurant admires and envies your chopsticks. Happened to me over the weekend.

    --
    -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  355. Re:Yes, it really is getting bad by adalger · · Score: 1

    Ummmmmm . . . you are calling me a dumbfuck for saying something you admit is correct? What a trivial sort of person you must be.

    Now look at those scores. All of them are arrived at by statistics (except the purely subjective ones), and all of them fall in a range of 0.9 point. Most of them fall in a 0.5-point range. The top school has a score of 100. That means the difference between the highest and lowest of the tier 4 schools is less than 1% of the range. This means that the purely subjective criteria or the margin of error associated with the sampling technique may be the difference between the top and bottom of tier 4.

    What it all boils down to is, that score is a statistic. If you treat it as an exact number you're a bigger idiot than anyone ever thought. But, if you insist, I'll slide you over from "troll" to "disproof-of-Darwin-stupid" on my little tracking board. Have a nice day, and please die at the end of it because you're using valuable oxygen needed by crackheads and pimps.

    --
    -- Robert Bunn, gun-toting neo-Nazi anarchist redneck freak
  356. I'm happy.. by tofu-X · · Score: 1

    Ok here is why this is a good thing (atleast for me).

    It is said that less than 2% of teenagers want to persue a high-tech career since all the layoffs. What does this mean? This means that teens like me who still want to do it will be in high demand in a few years.

  357. Come to CO by negativenine · · Score: 1

    They'll hire anyone and I mean anyone, fast food employees are making 8 bucks an hour 9-10 for managment and you can find appartments for 500 a month with utilities, everyone needs monkeys, dot com employees need to stop whinning and start looking around.

    --
    Windows I got windows, I got curtains too
  358. What about porn? by van+der+Rohe · · Score: 1
    Wasn't there an article somewhere (perhaps here) a few months ago about how, despite the slowdown in the tech sector, the online porn industry was still thriving?

    Provided you're not overcome with guilt about the moral issues, there are probably plenty of jobs out there.

  359. Do you people really belive this drivel? by maximelt · · Score: 5
    I find this story really hard to swallow. Somebody should get in touch with Mike Schlenz and John Sacrosante and find out why they're really in a homeless shelter. (Of course, getting in touch with them might be a bit difficult since they don't have phones any longer) Degreed tech workers living in homeless shelters? I don't think so. 30 unemployed tech workers out of 100 men in Montgomery St Inn. ... Well, just because you held a position at whatever.com doesn't necessarily mean you were technical in any sense. (And notice that they use this "mongomery inn" as the entire basis of the "statistics" to back up their claims) This article has all of the earmarks of a typical piece of media fantasy:
    1. A few weak statistics to "back up" their claims.
    2. A "personal perspective" (interviews with individuals) to show that the statistics are true.
    3. "Expert" commentary. (Ilene Philipson, the clinical psychologist).
    4. Overdramatized prose. Like: a surprising number of former high-tech workers are rubbing elbows with society's castaways
    Remember how we were being told that there was a terrible shortage of tech workers one or two years ago? Perhaps there was, but I certainly didn't see it. At the last two companies that I've worked for, I spent a significant amount of time interviewing SW-Engineer candidates. Time I should have spent programming. If there was such a shortage, then were did these people come from? (btw, most of them were very qualified)

    Like most of what you see in the media, this article is partial-truths, rumor-mongering, hype and fiction.

  360. Here come the (resume) liars! by guitfiddle · · Score: 2

    Watch those resumes- the liars are coming! More specifically, those inflated titles and skillsets from all of those fly-by-night.com houses will be in print. Isn't there something wrong with a resume that boasts of 6-7 years of experience, but the person has only been out of school for 3 years? Check out some of those GIANT titles, too. FYI: those senior positions (i.e. sr. architect, etc...) really require years of development experience combined with a more recent tech set. The real problem is the ignorance of the people who are hiring...shame and a sin. Nobody asks (on interviews), "How much time was spent on new development and maintenance?" This is extremely pertinent! Instead, it's X years of this; X years of that. Yikes! Most of those places.com performed horribly! Anyone (e.g. fool) can take someone else's money and go on a hiring spree. I was surprised of magnitude of the ignorance that supported them and their "no proof of concept" approach. All the best, DjM (Sr Super-Duper Technical Lead Architect Specialist AND Vice President AND part-owner)

  361. It is pretty bad by codehenge · · Score: 1

    I am a recently laid off dot-com'er and have just now found a job after looking for almost a month. As a software engineer I thought I would be able to get a good job in a few weeks. I was use to free soda, casual dress, flex hours, good pay, and games at the office. I of course, wanted to get a job with the same perks and close to the same money.
    So I filed for unemployment and posted my resume on all the job sites to see what would happen. It didn't take long for the calls to come in for interviews, but when I got them they were mostly recruiters(I hate recruiters), consulting companies(not really what I want to do) or government contracting(boring). I went on some interviews and was really depressed when I realized how good I had it. 'You mean I have to come into work by 8am everyday?', 'I have to wear what?', 'So, where is your foosball table?'.
    I know, I know, I'm a spoiled engineer, but I was used to all of these perks. Then when I got some offers, I realized I am going to be taking about a 20% pay cut from where I was. Most of my laid off co-workers were in the same boat and we were fighting over the same jobs.
    So I basicly had to take a big pay cut, just to go to a company where I would be working with smart people and doing good work.

    --
    Sigs are just way too much work
  362. Easy come, easy go by Zapp+Brannigan · · Score: 1

    Don't these people know how to save?

    How about a new required CS/sys engineer class:
    Financial planning 101

    Homeless shelters? Why don't these people move back into their parent's basements? Seriously, this is taking resources away from people who need them. Imagine the yuppie pulling up to the food line in his SUV wearing the $1000 suit.

    And finally, get a job! Swallow your pride and work at McDonalds. There is still 4% unemployment people!

  363. Yes, it is that bad and i know WHY... by mrn0b0dy · · Score: 1

    I am a software developer with over 8 years of actual commercial experience. I have worked for a number of very large companies and in the last couple of years for two startups. Both of those failed (though they were NOT .coms and they have dealt with some very good technology).

    I have an actual B.Sc degree in computer science, i can come up with a better algorithm then anyone. I am not just an average coder. I have participated in some open source projects and some well known code has my name on it.

    Yet since the last company went out of business i had trouble even getting to interviews.
    Why? Because of all the H1B "speciallists" and their likes that flood the industry. Indians, chinese and my countrymen russians that used to clean floors for living all went to become "programmers". In fact just last week i had a recruiter that was actually surprised to learn that i have a degree. She told me that "many are programmers after they take a course, you know".

    So here we go - in the pile of liar resumes with pseudo achievements mine will not even be visible to employers. And those that do talk to me try to pay little because they know what a mess i am in. 2 interviews in 2 months. Granted this is New York, hardly a mecca for
    software developers.

    Moreover, i cannot even feel proud about what i do - saying "software engineer" brings in everyone's mind a face of the golddigger hardly speaking english.

    A little story to this end: back in 97 when the whole tech boom has just began, i was offered a job by a little company in a northern VA. I am sure they know who they are. The job was to quickly teach their newly brought in from *one foreign country* (take a guess) consultants ALL I KNOW ABOUT UNIX (thats the official title) so that then they could "sell" those people with fake degrees and fake resumes to unsuspecting client companies. Needless to say, i didn't take the job - but i am sure someone did.

    So here you go - make your own conclusions...

  364. Re:Reminds me of the 1800's by jojoboy · · Score: 1


    Apparently you've never heard of adoption. Or *gasp* birth control!

  365. Makes me wonder how screwed I am..... by jojoboy · · Score: 1

    I'm currently a UNIX admin in the NY area, paying $1000/month rent for a 2-bedroom apt. I've ben at my current job for 3 years, making well below the boom price (I went from making $42k-$66k year in 3 years). On the one hand, I feel like an ass for not taking advantage of the ridiculous rates some folk were getting a year or so ago, but on the other, I wonder if it will all even out since if I did get laid off from my current job (god forbid), the next employer will see on my resume that I stayed in one place for a while (I like where I work, even though the pay can surely be better) and may consider me to be less of a flight risk than someone just holding on until something better comes along.

    I would like to buy a house now (I have over 50k saved thanks to an inheritance), but I'm still petrified of screwing myself over since this does not appear to be a good time to buy a house, low interest rates or no.

    I dunno, looking at dice.com, I still see a good amount of UNIX admin job postings, most with higher salaries than Im curntly making. Is it really so bad? Granted, Im sure there is more competition, but if I did get laid off, I hope It won't be so hard for me since I have like 5 years experience now. (I admit that I've gotten rusty, but it's nothing that re-opening a book or 2 or a couple of months can't ake care of).

    Anyone really having trouble finding a sysadmin job around NYC?

  366. Location location location by jojoboy · · Score: 1

    It would certainly help your case if you mentioned what region of the world you lived in...

  367. It don't play like that in Cleveland... by ispland · · Score: 1

    Maybe they really do have lost techie souls wandering the streets and clogging the homeless shelters on the Left Coast. From here in Cleveland, it just doesn't appear to be the case. We're still having a tough time finding anyone to hire with real skills, a working brain and a work ethic. I've got three open positions for Linux sys admin, C and perl hackers at 40-50k/yr and can't fill them.

    --
    What would Groucho do?