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What's It Like Working For Worldcom?

Tetch asks: "I work for a multinational IT company which seems likely to transfer its "network services" team to (MCI-)Worldcom under the terms of a business arrangement (Worldcom's gonna run our company network for us). I'm contemplating transfering from my current position to that network services team but would quite like to know more about Worldcom's corporate culture before taking the plunge (since it seems I'd become a Worldcom employee in fairly short order). Does anyone have any experience of life at Worldcom they could share?" It's always smart to try get an idea of the climate in a company before you you try and sign up.

"Is it all white shirts, and singing the company song at 07:00, or is it T-shirts, jeans, company masseur and free donuts ? Do they work you into the ground till you burn out and then cast you aside with the trash, or do they look after you, nurture your career, notice your contribution without you having to sing your own praises the whole time. Are Worldcom folk *happy* and enthusiastic, content to be a valued part of a committed team effort, or are they cogs in a faceless machine, living in isolation and fear of visits from beancounters looking for yet more cost-savings to make for the stock-holders' benefit?"

170 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. You've got to be kidding me. by Skyshadow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Besides being a totally irrelevant article:

    Getting info about an employer from a discussion board tends to only draw out the people who want to bitch about it (and all companies have disgruntled employees with horror stories). If you really want to know, go visit the place. Insist on getting walked around before the interview to observe and see if it seems like the sort of environment you'd want to be in.

    --
    Every year during my review, I just pray the words "slashdot.org" aren't mentioned.
    1. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by Doomdark · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Uh, you are kidding right? It may be that disc. boards bring you more exaggerated horror stories and biased opinions, but honestly... Do you think walking around there would get you any more objective information? The best way would of course be to have a friend who works (or worked) for the company, and ask him/her (better yet, more than one...). "Inspecting" the place before (or after) the interview doesn't hurt, but it's unlikely to really tell you all that much about the place (or more importantly the company and its management... which usually is the source of problems)

      However, the person who submitted the story apparently doesn't have the better option(s) available. Asking here shouldn't hurt. So, read Slashdot, go to interview, walk around, try to find someone who's been there.

      --
      I like paying taxes. With them I buy civilization -- Oliver Wendell Holmes
    2. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by karmayodha · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Lately, it seems that Slashdot has been diluting its focus on "News for nerds, stuff that matters". Hey CmdrTaco, note the line where it says "stuff that matters", not only is this article totally irrelevant, there are other sites which cater to exactly these kind of questions. I am betting that no self-respecting geek would have problem finding such sites for himself/herself.

      So, CmdrTaco, whazzup with the irrelevant coverage??

    3. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by Score+Whore · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Umm. Actually you'll want to not get escorted around. You want to be deposited with the group you'll be working with and hang for a bit.

    4. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by BLAG-blast · · Score: 1
      Do you think walking around there would get you any more objective information?

      If you can see through the bits they want you to see... then yes walking around an office/work site can tell you a lot.

      When I went for a job interview at Oracle I ask what the different parts of the department where and could I see them. After a nice tour we started the interview, what the interview was telling me and what I had seen wheren't matching up (of course then my interviewer told me the CVS had no merging facility)...

      However, the person who submitted the story apparently doesn't have the better option(s) available. Asking here shouldn't hurt. So, read Slashdot, go to interview, walk around, try to find someone who's been there.

      Well, at least its better then the stories Taco gets paid to write....

      --
      M0571y H@rml355.
    5. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by PD · · Score: 2

      Getting bitches about a place to work can be very useful. I'm a contractor, so I change companies quite frequently. More than once I've been taken out to lunch by my new co-workers, and as people do, they started complaining about their jobs. After a while, they realize that they are bitching in front on the new guy. "Oh I guess we're giving you a very bad impression of our company on your first day of work." I always reply "Don't worry. I haven't heard anything new, just the same stuff everyone complains about everywhere. If you had complained about something that I'd never heard before, then I would worry."

    6. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      You have to find the clues, Watson.
      What is on people desks?
      What are the people wearing?
      whats the mood?
      is the restroom clean?(service often begin to feel the effects of change first)
      if you need work, take the job and keep looking. sure its not loyal, but if the company thought it could make money by firing you, do you think they would consider loyalty? no.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by kilgore_47 · · Score: 1

      What is their primary platform?

      Though many would like to deny it, culture and platform choice are often closely related.

      --
      ___
      The way to see by faith is to shut the eye of reason. --Ben Franklin
    8. Re:You've got to be kidding me. by ballpeen · · Score: 1

      Slashdot ought to be held to the journalistic standards of The Economist.

  2. Well, like any company now a days... by Kelt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They are making their money off of consultants they hire out. If you wait for an account for you, you are costing them money and with the current times you are likely to get cut. So, before you move, make sure you are covered for a good while before you 'move on to another project' and end up weighting down a bench.

    See if you can get your 'years of service' in your current company moved to worldcom (hard since its not a buy out) because there are certain benefits that will only kick in with extended time behind out.

    As for worldcom themselves as an ISP, they aren't the best, but definitely not the worst.

    -Kelt

    --
    My intelligence insults itself.
  3. You'll probably not see any culture... by z84976 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If it's anything like the sellouts I've seen working for a big fortune-whatever company, there won't be a lot of change. A year or so a lot of us got "outsourced" to a rather large company. There have been rumors that the rest of us are soon to be IBM employees.

    But I don't think it's going to matter much to you. The people I work with that got outsourced got huge (equiv to 6 mos salary) bonuses and generally make 10% higher salary now. Is it saving my company money? Of course not. Outsourcing never does (don't believe that hype--- outsourcing is done so that you can be EXPENDIBLE and FIRED at their whim). But culturally those people didn't change.

    As a matter of fact, you have to imagine that the larger consulting firms don't really care about you... you're a number to them, a mercenary for hire, working for them this week. So they don't care. Not only would I not expect anything NICE out of MCI, I wouldn't expect anything much at all...

    1. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... by Snotnose · · Score: 1

      outsourcing is done so that you can be EXPENDIBLE and FIRED at their whim).
      I've got news for you. You're EXPENDIBLE and can be FIRED at their whim anyway. Contractors just know this and aren't surprised to find out friday is their last day. Employees are expecting a gold watch in 40 years and are shocked to find out friday is their last day.

  4. take what you can get! by edrugtrader · · Score: 5, Insightful

    man, in this job market, if worldcom will pay you for dicking around with computers all day on multi million dollar networks and 16 processor servers... uh take that job.

    better than eating ramen.

    --
    MARIJUANA, SHROOMS, X: ONLINE?! - E
    1. Re:take what you can get! by kaimiike1970 · · Score: 1

      I really like ramen. You just gotta get the right kind.

      --


      Do a google search before posting.
    2. Re:take what you can get! by cymen · · Score: 1

      You just gotta get the right kind.

      So, uh... What kind? Come one, if you are going to go off topic, go all the way!

      Oh, and for those working for WorldCom: do a good job please! My SDSL line is now owned by WorldCom due to them buying Rhythms (or getting Rhythms network, whatever).

    3. Re:take what you can get! by Zerth · · Score: 1

      maruchan creamy chicken, with about 2 teaspoons of cream cheese and some chives.

    4. Re:take what you can get! by cymen · · Score: 1

      Sounds tasty. I'll have to give it a try. Thanks.

    5. Re:take what you can get! by kaimiike1970 · · Score: 1

      Going waaaay off-topic, I have put together a 'tribute' page for my favorite ramen...

      here

      Seriously, find these, mmmmmm, rammmmen.

      --


      Do a google search before posting.
  5. Ask by rnb · · Score: 1

    Your best bet may be to actually ... get in touch with people who work there. While I'm not sure of the specifics of your situation, perhaps you could ask people you currently work with if they could put you in touch with people who work where you might. Send them e-mail and ask around. That's really the only way you'll find out what it's like.

  6. Oars by tomblackwell · · Score: 5, Funny

    Everyone gets an office with a window.

    Unfortunately there's an oar coming through the window. A drummer drums, you grab the oar and row as if your life depends on it. Because (heh heh) IT DOES!

  7. Let me go out on a limb here... by tswinzig · · Score: 5, Funny

    1. Those employees that hate working at WorldCom will tell you how bad it is

    2. Those that love working at WorldCom will tell you how great it is.

    3. You will not know who to trust.

    4. The rest of us will be bored out of our minds.

    Thank you.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
    1. Re:Let me go out on a limb here... by photon317 · · Score: 2


      Yeah that's pretty much how it will go :)

      But honestly, I've had lots of jobs in the past, and if they were still all going great obviously I would still be at all of them... that said Worldcom is the only past employer I've had that I would feel the need to publicly bash. They really are rats in the level of how good they try to sound when you're there and how bad they stomp you when it suits them.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    2. Re:Let me go out on a limb here... by Tuzanor · · Score: 2
      But at least he will hear the good and the bad about the company. Some companies are simply shit to work with, whilst others are decent or simply wicked. When they were on top of the world, companies like Cisco, Nortel, etc. treated their employees like gods.

      If i were joining a new company, I'd want to hear from the people who love it most, and the people who hate it most. That way you can safely assume that your experience will be within those boundaries.

    3. Re:Let me go out on a limb here... by fm6 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      4. The rest of us will be bored out of our minds.
      On the contrary. There's very little chance I'll ever end up working at Worldcom. But I tuned into this item with great anticipation. Worldcom is one the key internet providers, what with their backbone networks, data exchanges, and ISP operations. Anything they do impacts us all, and insight into their corporate culture is of much interest!
    4. Re:Let me go out on a limb here... by pcidevel · · Score: 2

      Hmm.. I worked at WorldCom back before they acquired MCI (actually, I quit just as the deal was being finished).. I actually liked my job there.. I quit to further my career, but the department I was in was excellent...

      I don't know if my opinion really counts tho.. the department I was in was a seperate company that was purchased and integrated into WCOM. At the time it was a small company, so it was basically just made a department inside of WCOM with almost no changes. The group was an excellent group with great managment (hence why WCOM wanted to purchase them rather than just contract to them).. the job I did required that I worked the midnights shift (I was sorta a program's analyst on a mission critical project that required attention around the clock).. So I worked all night and didn't have to spend much time with the WCOM politics..

      Actually, I miss that job most of all.. we were in a HUGE building, full of cubes that was completely empty.. the particular project I was on was only busy about 4 days out of the month, the rest of the time was spent pretty much idle.. we had a total blast.. we'd go through peoples cubes and rearange them.. we'd have cart races down the barren hallways.. we'd take off for hours and go to denny's in the middle of the night.. there was almost no one else in the building, so we were pretty unsupervised and all college age students.. so we had fun fun fun! :)

      IMHO WCOM was a blast to work for.. but I bet your results will vary! :)

      --

      I thought someone said there was going to be free beer!

    5. Re:Let me go out on a limb here... by xdroop · · Score: 2, Insightful
      4. The rest of us will be bored out of our minds.

      So don't read the fucking article. Contrary to popular opinion, not every single byte on Slashdot is required reading. Vote with your eyeballs and read something else if that's at all possible.

      --
      you should read everything on the internet as if it had "but I'm probably talking out of my ass" appended to it.
  8. Get out while you can by photon317 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I would highly suggest not working for Worldcom. They like a nice PR imagine (see Generation D commercials and whatnot), but on the inside they treat high level technical employees like dirt. I worked there for roughly 4.5 years. During that time, every time they acquired a new company's technical staff, they inevitably found a way to cheat them out of as much benefits as possible before laying them all off at the best time they could find stock-price wise (so that incentive options or profit sharing shares weren't valuable when they were forced to be redeemed). I was an original Worldcom employee, and eventually I suffered the same fate. When the big industry layoffs started they laid off my whole building and forced a short time to excercise then-worthless options which should have been good another 10 years. They did this with no warning to a very advanced research group that was making more progress than 99% of the company, and actually putting out widely-used internal software and showing real numbers for the company. What was preached as a bright and long-term future with the company, and what appeared to be 100's of k worth of stock options turned out to be a quick kick out on the street at their accountant's slightest uninformed whim with just the shirt on your back left.

    --
    11*43+456^2
    1. Re:Get out while you can by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Umm.. ya, and I can make up stuff too:

      I used to work for Worldcom, and they are such a good company, I retired after only 2 years of working there, and im only 25 years old! I had 3 secretaries that were more then willing to provide me with personal 'fringe benefits' as well as a full wetbar right in my office. In fact, they didn't use cubes there, everyone had an office, all 5000 employees. We all got Lamborgini's too. Just make sure you talk to Joe Smith at the front desk, give him that magic handshake, and you'll be setup.

    2. Re:Get out while you can by deanj · · Score: 1

      Heh....You sound like someone who's never had a real job. There are too many places out there just like the original poster described.

    3. Re:Get out while you can by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Thats really not the point I was making. Slashdot forums aren't exactly the place to get information such as this, as really anything posted on here has to be taken with a grain of salt.

      And yes, I do work, on my 6th and half year in the tech industry (pretty much supporting stuff, im not trying to make it sound fancy or anything). Anyway, I hope my little joke didn't go over your head, I'll try to use elementary humor next time.

    4. Re:Get out while you can by photon317 · · Score: 2


      Take it with a grain of salt then, but don't be rude. My account of the events is quite truthful. Ask around and talk to the former MCI employees (pre Worldcom takeover), Current EDS employees (who used to be Worldcom employees and were essentially sold to EDS like property), Former Wiltel employees, Former UUnet, etc.... every time Worldcom buys something out, they generally do what they can to put a sugarcoated railspike up the *** of the employees.

      --
      11*43+456^2
    5. Re:Get out while you can by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Ya I hear ya, I think i fell in a hole =( Only tech related anything around this whole area is contracted support =(

      *looks for a rope to get him out of this hole*

  9. old MCI employee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I worked for MCI after they merged with WorldCom here in Atlanta and it was pretty laid back. I was working on an internal, Web-based, sales app. It was very laid back, though it was still a bit corporate. As long as you got your work done they really didn't care much, but then again I had a great manager who was as laid back as us developers. It seemed that their IT staff in general wasn't of the highest quality, but that could have been just in my location. As far as corporate environments, it wasn't a bad one.

  10. More evidence that Slashdot has... by jea6 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    ...for some time become 'News for somebody else. Stuff that doesn't matter to me.' Sad.

    --

    sarchasm: The gulf between the author of sarcastic wit and the person who doesn't get it.
  11. Prediction by budcub · · Score: 1

    I wonder what the odds are, that some disgruntled WorldCom employees will post horror stories anonymously, WorldCom will get pissed off and try to get a court order to view /.'s log files, to track down these malcontents. Great big battle ensues.

    1. Re:Prediction by reddeno · · Score: 1

      Don't waste my RAM and CPU cycles with your stupid prediction. The odds are nil.

    2. Re:Prediction by budcub · · Score: 1

      Too late I already did.

  12. What makes you so sure? by Talisman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Did they specifically state that they plan on hiring you? Most of the time, they simply obsolesce your presence. It's sort of their business plan.

    I'm not ragging on you, but have you gotten any assurances, in writing?

    Talisman

    --

    "Study your math, kids. Key to the universe." -The Archangel Gabriel
  13. Worldcom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I used to work for one of Worldcom's subsidiaries, a little outfit called UUnet. I left when they bought Digex web hosting and shipped all of our work off to them. I did however have a good time working there and had the Digex buy-out not gone through and my customers were not given away I would still be there. I guess the thing that bothered me most about Worldcom's taking over of UUnet and then killing off the UUnet web hosting with the purchase of digex was the way that they crushed all that was left of the UUnet culture in the process. But that's what happens when companies get bought out.

    1. Re:Worldcom by Blrfl · · Score: 1

      If you really worked there, you'd know it was spelled "UUNET" and not "UUnet."

  14. Re:A Review of Mandrake 8.1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    After all, Microsoft Windows comes free with most PCs....

    You've got to love that one.. :-)

  15. Why do you want to leave your current company to go to a company you seem to know very little about(other than what they do) What are you doing currently and what can you do to make it more fun for you?

  16. huh? by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 1

    How the hell is this a front-page-worthy story?

    What's it like working for Burger King?

    - A.P.

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
    1. Re:huh? by Zico · · Score: 5, Funny

      What's it like working for Burger King?


      Hey, just give it another 6-8 months and I'm sure the current batch of Slashdot editors will be able to answer that question.

  17. Re:I used to work for Worldcom by Hector73 · · Score: 1

    Thank you for so eloquently capturing the essence of this "Ask Slashdot".

  18. I used to work there by Walter+Bell · · Score: 5, Informative
    As a former Worldcom employee (now working for NASA) I have a few observations to share:
    • Private industry gives you more work and usually more challenging work than the government. Conversely, private industry pays better in general. I took a pay cut when I left Worldcom for NASA but I haven't worked a single weekend or evening so far (and it's been over a year now).
    • I was a network engineer and they worked me to death. They use salaries to avoid paying you overtime when you get paged in the middle of the night and have to come in at 2am to babysit a router (it happened to me several dozen times). I don't mean to imply that I am p-whipped but my wife forced me to quit that job.
    • Worldcom is in a competitive industry and they treat their employees like dirt. You'd be better off working for AT&T, who is the market leader (so they have more cash to throw around).
    • Worldcom laid off 1/3 of my office (not including me). How did they do it? They deactivated the employees' access cards so they couldn't get back in after lunch. People got their belongings shipped back to them after several weeks. You be the judge.
    • Worldcom consistently screws with payroll to save money. One of my former co-workers noticed one day that the company was taking out a few extra percentage points for Federal income tax, but that extra money didn't show up on his W2. He believes that the company adds a few dollars here and there to payroll deductions as a source of profit.
    I could go on, but I won't. It's a Bad Place to Work(tm) and I'd never work there again. Even if I was desperate.

    ~wally

    1. Re:I used to work there by blair1q · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      >get paged in the middle of the night and have to come in at 2am to babysit a router (it happened to me several dozen times). I don't mean to imply that I am p-whipped but my wife forced me to quit that job.

      What is up with that?

      I got the same grief from my ex.

      I mean, what's it to her? She's asleep. I'm going to work. And I'm paid hourly, so I'm getting plenty of loot to spend on her. It all spells "hero", but she acts all hurt and dissed.

      My guess is it kicks in some female instinct that you're just going out to find another cave that smells like estrus, because what else would make a man not stay sleeping...

      --Blair

    2. Re:I used to work there by Boomer2 · · Score: 1

      Just proof that anyone who brings in any personal stuff they would mind losing is insane.

      I've never brought in more than I could carry out in my arms. And none of it that would bother me to lose. (e.g. only pictures that I could get more copies of, cheap picture frames, etc.)

    3. Re:I used to work there by vanguard · · Score: 1
      Worldcom consistently screws with payroll to save money. One of my former co-workers noticed one day that the company was taking out a few extra percentage points for Federal income tax, but that extra money didn't show up on his W2. He believes that the company adds a few dollars here and there to payroll deductions as a source of profit.

      I have an accounting (and comp sci) background and I consider this unlikely. If he noticed more taxes coming out of his paycheck it could have been:
      • A correction to the correct amount.
      • Maybe he finished paying his SS tax, didn't notice his pay went up, then noticed it went down when it started the next year.
      • Maybe he was simply mistaken.

      The one thing that gets me is that you said, "They consistently screw with payroll." Which implies they did it all the time making it unlikely it's just a mistake.

      Still, it's really illegal to take money from employees in the form of false taxes and I've never heard of *any* company doing it.
      --
      That which does not kill me only makes me whinier
    4. Re:I used to work there by GreyPoopon · · Score: 2
      I mean, what's it to her? She's asleep. I'm going to work. And I'm paid hourly, so I'm getting plenty of loot to spend on her. It all spells "hero", but she acts all hurt and dissed.

      A few possibilities -- I'm sure there are more...

      1. If he doesn't sleep at night, he has to sleep some other time. You can bet it won't be during the work day, so it'll probably be in the early evening when she would appreciate his presence and attention.
      2. When you get used to sharing your bed, you're uneasy when you're alone at night.
      3. When that pager goes off, you aren't the only one that wakes up. When I was on call, it really messed up my wife's sleep patterns.
      4. She genuinely cares for her husband and couldn't stand the thought of him being mistreated like that. The money was not nearly as important to her as his well-being.

      My guess is it kicks in some female instinct that you're just going out to find another cave that smells like estrus, because what else would make a man not stay sleeping...

      This is always a possibility. I can assure you that if I was constantly getting called out in the middle of the night, my wife would probably have to suppress some fleeting doubt in her mind. I can't say that I would be any more trusting were the tables turned.

      One thing that people always seem to forget is that the reason 24x7 companies have staff "on call" is because they are probably too darn cheap to hire or train full-time staff to work the night shift. It's all in the name of being competitive. You decide whether all of this raises our standard of living.

      --

      GreyPoopon
      --
      Why is it I can write insightful comments but can't come up with a clever signature?

  19. Bad company move by strredwolf · · Score: 3, Informative

    I would have to say that having MCI/Worldcom/UU.NET run your network is paramount to being blacklisted.

    As far as I remember, MCI/Worldcom/UU.NET has never shut down a spammer's site that they hosted. They nicely got the dialups under control, but web sites are a different matter entirely. They are very grey, if not almost completely, black hat.

    --

    --
    # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
    $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
    1. Re:Bad company move by ichibrown · · Score: 1

      [I would have to say that having MCI/Worldcom/UU.NET run your network is paramount to being blacklisted. ] Uhm. What exactly has UUNet/Worldcom Done to you personally that cause you to think that they are terrible at running networks? Perhaps the metro bus didn't stop quick enough and accidentally hit you. But honestly Give one ounce of proof that the network is poorly run.. and I want Honest truth not some kook-filled deja-dream. [As far as I remember, MCI/Worldcom/UU.NET has never shut down a spammer's site that they hosted. ] Keeping track of somebody's entire list of websites they host must be hard. Especially a company of UUNet/Worldcom's Level of grasp?. Is this internationally too? or just american UUNet, and are you considering the canadian UUNet to be UUNet or are you just saying the minimal amount of websites you've ran into in your kooking. I mean think about it chief. Do you really think that the largest ISP in the world, would get away with not shutting down websites? [They nicely got the dialups under control, but web sites are a different matter entirely. ] So what happens when websites are under control to your happiness? will you still complain about something or will you leave them alone? and move to another ISP, or will your wanna be werewolf days be over because your goal in life has been accmplished, harrassing people with two to three times the intelligence as yourself.? [They are very grey, if not almost completely, black hat.] haha. Please explain this? How are they so black hat.? and when you do explain this please give evidence or proof. and if you can't find it, then please dont post anymore on this thread especially if you have no proof. jeesh people.. words are fun but words that are true are better.

  20. Re:Narrow Ask Slashdot.... by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

    Yea.. im sure there will be many trolls here with big long descriptions of a heaven of a place to work, he takes the job, finds out it sucks, and he then may realize that he shouldn't ask slashdot about what they think of a corporation =)

  21. I dont work there, but I wouldnt either.. by iamsure · · Score: 4, Flamebait

    I have seen *seven* rounds of layoffs in the last year and a half here at the world headquarters for Worldcom. In that same period, they opened hiring nine times for the very positions that got laid off.

    In other words, they strive to minimize costs by reducing the number of benefits-deriving employees.

    As a stockholder, that might be nice, but as a potential employee, that is a warning sign NOT to work there.

    I know several people that have gone to work there, been laid off, and then called for the SAME position not three months later.

    Its ridiculous.

    1. Re:I dont work there, but I wouldnt either.. by cavemanf16 · · Score: 2
      I've never worked there, but know of one person who got laid off permanently, and another who still works there and apparently doesn't think it's bad work.

      However, my opinion on the work situation for any sufficiently educated person is this:
      The bigger the company is, the bigger the headache working there becomes. Now don't get me wrong, it's not that big companies don't give out first rate benefits a lot of the time, but because they have to focus on the shareholder's interests (becuase there are so many shareholders to please), the easier it is for them to jerk employees around.

      My roommate works for a small Java programming shop (~20 some employees total), and they've had their share of missed and delayed paychecks, but he still enjoys working there. Why? Because the company president takes him out to lunch sometimes to discuss how the company is doing, because the work he does is his own, he takes credit for it, and everyone recognizes a strong work ethic when he exhibits it. That sort of thing happens less and less the larger the team, department, organization, and/or company gets. Keep that in mind, because Worldcom is a VERY big company, and I think there will be plenty of stories from people stating how they were eventually 'upgraded' straight to the street to improve cost-cutting measures.

      So which would you rather have: a relatively secure salary and benefits and a boring to miserable work experience in a big company, or an exciting and rewarding, although sometimes financially shaky, work existence in a small company?

    2. Re:I dont work there, but I wouldnt either.. by zbuffered · · Score: 1
      Back when it was MCI, I worked for the desktop support team here in Colorado Springs. Because I was under 18, their health insurance wouldn't cover me, so what I ended up doing is working as a temp for a company called Kelly Services. I basically made up my hours every week, gave them to the nice lady, and watched my bank account grow a few days later. I didn't make much money, but I didn't exactly do much work either. Most of the time I sat in my office and napped. I was fortunate enough to have an office, because a large part of my job involved me taking somebody's computer and holding it for ransom for 4 or 5 hours, until they paid up. Or it got fixed. My impression of the place was this: there isn't much in the way of culture, you go there and work, then you go home. If you're lucky, once a year your department goes on a ski trip or to the casinos or whatever.

      What I can say is that there were quite a few rounds of layoffs, all involving temp workers (such as myself). I suppose this was so that they could keep costs down, and keep from hiring people on permanently. They would fire 75% of their temps, then later hire them back, and when it came quarterly earnings time again, lo and behold, they would lay these people off yet again. Such was the cycle. Permanent employees had less to worry about. But in the end, I didn't like the management, so at the tender age of 17, I resigned. I would work there again, but you're likely in a different place than I am. I need to make $25k/year, you probably need to make 50. Or more. Good luck.

      --
      Synergy is your friend
  22. Next Ask Slashdot Submissions in the Queue by zeno_2 · · Score: 5, Funny

    1 - I need to take a shit, what should I do?

    2 - Ive decided to go to work today, is that a good descision?

    3 - Im watching a really bad show on tv.. im undecided if its ok for me to hit the channel up button, what should I do?

    Ya.. this last Ask Slashdot sucks, what does this guy expect..

    1. Re:Next Ask Slashdot Submissions in the Queue by Mike+Schiraldi · · Score: 3, Funny

      Ask Slashdot: What time is it?

    2. Re:Next Ask Slashdot Submissions in the Queue by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Ahh forgot that one

    3. Re:Next Ask Slashdot Submissions in the Queue by _LFTL_ · · Score: 1

      7:14 PM

    4. Re:Next Ask Slashdot Submissions in the Queue by Mahonrimoriancumer · · Score: 1

      no, it is 7:26pm (MST)

      --
      So climate's changing. So what? It has always changed. The big news would be if it wasn't changing. - Dr. Philip Stone
  23. Go to http://www.fuckedcompany.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This may sound like a joke but is not really one... Go check out FuckedCompany and see stories about your new employer. Then go and check out what people have submitted. Usually there are (in addition n+1 trolls etc) a few company employees who share their war stories. Of course it's not the most objective source for information (everything's anonymous for starters), but really... it does tell something about the way company treats its employees.

    If you can't find any entries (unlikely, for bigger companies), it indicates that either:

    • Company's doing fine, everyone's happy, or
    • Employees are clueless dolts that have never read FC. :-)
    Needless to say, it's more likely to be latter than former.

    ... and if you want to browse the pages from work, perhaps consider using SafeWeb ...

  24. Bull Shit! by 13013dobbs · · Score: 3, Informative

    UUnet shuts down more websites in a month than most companies have. Don't let this raging kook tell you otherwise. UUnet/WorldCom is quite good at handling abuse issues. Just because UUnet/Worldcom won't give this loon a personalised report about spam, she(?) bitches about it. I can only guess it is because she does not know just how big the company is and what all they are responsible for.

    --

    No replies made to AC posts. Please log in.

    1. Re:Bull Shit! by strredwolf · · Score: 2
      Yeah. Right. When I visited the company in my own back yard. (Yes, it's an hour drive or so, but both UU.Net/WorldCom is in Virgina, accessible by Metrobus).



      Now take a look here:
      DejaGoogle Search: uu.net in news.admin.net-abuse.email A ton of discussion about UU.NET, and that a blacklist is going to go up soon. 21.700 articles.




      All the spams and reports, current, ever posted to NANA.sightings. Hmmm, I guess the dialup blocking preventions are *NOT* working. PAGING JOHN ST CLARE TO THE PINK CURSODY PHONE!

      --

      --
      # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
      $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
    2. Re:Bull Shit! by 13013dobbs · · Score: 2

      Here is a free clue: "UUnet does not exist. They are called WorldCom now."
      As far as NANAE goes, no one cares what a bunch of kooks say in lusenet. And no sane admin that wants to keep thier job is going to black list all of WorldCom (aka AS701). If you want to block it on your low-rent ISP, that is fine, I doubt that WorldCom will care. Your customers might care when they find that most of the internet is not available to them, but that is between you and your customers. With respect to your acerebral comment about port 25 filtering not working, there are several ways for a spammer to get around that: insecure formmail scripts, SOCKS proxies, WinGates, SMTP servers on non-standard ports, etc. But, I can see you are too busy frothing on NANAE to figure that out. Also, his name is spelled St.Clair and there are no pink 'cursody' phones at WorldCom. And there are no pink contracts either, if you have proof of one, post it somewhere, otherwise STFU, loon.

      --

      No replies made to AC posts. Please log in.

  25. Ramen? by t0qer · · Score: 1

    Dude get dennisons chili beans for a buck a can! much tastier (and more protien content) than ramen.

    1. Re:Ramen? by rhost89 · · Score: 1

      heh, ramen is cheeper 11 cents per pkg, although dennisons chili can help heat the place... so i guess its a matter of climate ;9

      --
      I will bend your mind with my spoon
    2. Re:Ramen? by Eristone · · Score: 1

      The fact that you guys know the exact price and cost difference between the two products frightens me to no end...

    3. Re:Ramen? by Black+Perl · · Score: 2

      Then you may not have heard of Asperger's syndrome, which many of the techno-elite have symptoms of. Emphasized focus on numerical data (dates, prices, etc) is one of the symptoms.

      --
      bp
  26. Where is IT paradise? by Vortran · · Score: 1

    Ok.. ok.. so does anyone work for that OTHER company where things are wonderful? Does such a place exist and are they hiring?

    --
    Knowledge is like ignorance.. too much can be just as bad as not enough.
    1. Re:Where is IT paradise? by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      Im at TV Guide Right Now, It may not be paradise, but I have enjoyed it so far... (been here a little over a year, coming from WorldCom)

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  27. Re:Mmm... Can you taste Mississippi yet? by 13013dobbs · · Score: 1

    No. Most likely he will end up in Ashburn, Va. That is WorldCom's NOC-HQ.

    --

    No replies made to AC posts. Please log in.

  28. run very fast... by night_flyer · · Score: 3, Informative

    the OTHER way... as an ex-employee (who was NOT laid off) I can say that their management staff is incompetent, Bernie Ebbers is a fool, and you will be happier somplace else.

    They have no desire to be competitive and even the management jokingly says WorldCom is a training ground for other corperations. If you MUST go ther, get as much training and money as you can then expect to leave in 1 year, as that is all they want you for.

    --


    Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
    Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
  29. Re:MCI experiences by thedude · · Score: 1

    federal law dictates that if you ask "Please put me on your DO NOT CALL list" they cannot call you, and further calls will give you the ability to sue them.

  30. fast track to nowhere by kech · · Score: 1

    I worked for Worldcom. It was the first job I got when I left school. Since I needed money bad, I took the job. But the interview should have been a clear sign that not only is it going to be a waste of time but also major stress for little money.

    The best advice I can give you is, no matter what big company you will work for it's all the same. You are treated like shit and in the case of Worldcom, you will be just another number. If you don't do it, they will replace you in a heartbeat with someone that knows less then you, but they will make more money. It's not what you know, it's who you know and how well you kiss ass (if that's your thing).

    I don't like to be taken advantage off, so any chance I got to screw with middle-management i took it. In the long run, I left that company because of shitty hours, poor pay, and the way management treats people like shit. Now i work for Lucent Technologies. Much better. But they have their problems too.

    In a nutshell, no matter where u go, u will run into some bullshit. If u think u are gonna learn anything there, haha, u better think again, cause the talent that Worldcom has is horrible. How that company stays in business when the CEO used to be a gym teacher is a mystery.

    smith&wesson:
    original point&click device

    1. Re:fast track to nowhere by AppyPappy · · Score: 1

      "Now i work for Lucent Technologies. Much better. But they have their problems too."

      Oh my sides. I guess that whole "stock drop to the basement" didn't help a bit.

      Off topic so moderate down.

      --

      If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem

    2. Re:fast track to nowhere by kech · · Score: 1

      i'm a sucker for responding to an idot like u. Worldcom has so few talented people it's sad. Very talented people, none. Next time you reply to anyone READ what the topic is before you go off and insult people U FUCKING IDIOT.

      have a nice day :)

    3. Re:fast track to nowhere by kech · · Score: 1

      let me ask u something do u work for worldcom?
      "I can believe there are (stupid) managers.."

      Doesnt' really matter if you believe or not. This is the way it is and if you still have doubts i will gladly give you some people to call, they will all tell u the same. Worldcom sucks!
      (having a glock is like owning a corvette: u need something big and loud cause u need to compensate for your small dick)

  31. I'll answer, begrudgingly... by thilmony · · Score: 1

    I used to work for Lucent and Worldcom actually had a department that tested products before buying them. This was a network router that could do up to OC192. Not sure what has become of it, or in other words, to hell with Lucent.

    But back to the main point, it seemed cool to me if you worked in the area of new equipment and software evals. I'm glad to see they have that kind of stuff and don't just rely on Lightreading.com

    --
    YES, there is a McDonald's in Hanoi Square.
  32. From a Worldcom Consultant . . . by jgaynor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I consulted at Worldcom in Spring and Summer 2000 at their offices on Centennial Road in Piscataway, NJ. I was part of the Private Network Engineering group, which gets the bigger and more complicated clients.

    Here's what it was like when I worked there, followed by what I HEAR its like now:

    My work time was split up between drafting customer documents like pretty network maps, configuring routers/switches, and participating in teleconferences to help techs around the world install that equipment after its been shipped. The work was fun if youre the engineering type - but youre not a paper pusher. your creative side has an outlet too as most documents require some artistic skill to appease clients.

    The environment was standard cube-farm. I came in contact with project leads and managers all day, and none of them wore anything dressier than slacks. Its a real khakis and polo kinda place. My co-workers were very helpful and even took the time to explain new technologies to me If I was unfamiliar with them. Its not very cut-throat and I was suprised at the HUGE mix of people and educations that did this highly technical work confidently.

    Engineers have access to training labs stocked with some pretty serious new equipment. This was probably the coolest thing about Worldcom - the free training. Shared on the network were SCADS of e-training courses from top vendors on subjects as diverse as design, configuration, and administration. We'd have trainers come in on big projects if we were going to be introduced to new vendor equipment. A few times a year you can ask for an outside training course and youll probably get it.

    Overall I really liked it and would highly recomend the Piscataway, NJ or White Plains (Rye), NY worldcom offices to anyone involved. Actually the Rye ofice was mad cool with beer on "managers' sick" days and nerf weapons out the wazoo.

    Ive heard Worldcom has been plagued with problems lately though. Theyre low on funds to the point taht they sometimes can pre-order the equipment theyll need for a customer. Many of my old co-workers are watching DVDs for days on end for lack of clients. Lets hope the market comes back up for em.

    -My 2 cents and THANKS JIM NOCELLA for gettin me that job :)

  33. Worked at worldcom for three years by lonesome+phreak · · Score: 2, Informative

    It depends where you work, and if you are at a legacy MCI site or a legacy WCOM site. I worked at the Cherokee plant in Tulsa, with about 4,000 employees. I did both t2 deployment and fiber monitoring in the NOC. It was one of the main locations of legacy WCOM.

    As far as I could tell, the culture was cool until the EDS deal. They took most of their tech staff and switched them to EDS payroll, which resulted in a massive loss of stock options, authority, and senority. I know many people who left WCOM at that time.

    They weren't the best pay in the world, and the loss of stock hurt. Then again, that was when their stock was $70/share...Another thing to watch for it that WCOM makes no counteroffers when you try to work somewhere else. There are many people here who shuffle from WCOM to WCG, then back...raising their pay $15,000 in a few years.

    --
    Maybe we DID take the blue pill. You wouldn't remember anyway.
    1. Re:Worked at worldcom for three years by night_flyer · · Score: 2

      in otherwords, WCom University :)

      been there, done that... started out OK, went to pot in a hurry... which mod were you it?

      --


      Thanks to file sharing, I purchase more CDs
      Thanks to the RIAA, I buy them used...
    2. Re:Worked at worldcom for three years by lonesome+phreak · · Score: 1

      We where actually behind the mods near the loading area, then got moved to 3.2. It was fun, because I was all over the complex all day...much of it just trying to figure out wonderfull location descriptions like "1.2 #218" and such. The only good thing was when the Starbucks went in...

      --
      Maybe we DID take the blue pill. You wouldn't remember anyway.
    3. Re:Worked at worldcom for three years by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 3, Informative

      I did the WCOM to WCG deal to avoid EDS. Actually, I planned on staying at WCG. But I enjoyed the working environment at WCOM much better, and as it turned out, about six months after EDS took over, things started looking up. And pay (the big factor that had people mad) was raised across the board.

      NOTE: EDS really knows how to run an IT department. Get this... they actually buy things if they are needed! But the "Look at the extra money left over in my AFE!" slush-fund went away. It was a great way for managers (and project managers) to buy toys or other things that the department actually needed.

      EDS shares are doing well, too, which made people FAR better off than their WCOM or WCG shares today. You might take another look at EDS and see how it is today.

    4. Re:Worked at worldcom for three years by lonesome+phreak · · Score: 1

      I remember the huge snafu that happened when they went over to EDS's way of buying equipment for work PC's off a webpage. No one understood it, so the manager's authorized anything that came on their desk. Within six months they where $14 million over budget for PC upgrades. They laid off almost all the contractors doing upgrades there off.

      During those six months, I personally upgraded hundreds of PC's with ram/HD combos, doing 4-8 per day. It was insane.

      I too remember when they fired all those people. I had freinds working at the Williams' Solution Center, when Williams still did the password security for WCOM (they still do for legacy mainframe). Suddenly, all these people where calling in saying "my password doesn't work". They found out it was because they where to be fired the next day, but WCOM security screwed up and cut them off too early. They where told not to tell them, but did anyway (because my freinds thought it was crappy and didn't work for WCOM anyway). Sometimes I wonder.

      The good place to work for in Williams is WMB, not WCG.

      --
      Maybe we DID take the blue pill. You wouldn't remember anyway.
  34. Completely agree. by aspillai · · Score: 1

    I completely agree. How is this "news for nerds" or "Stuff that matters"? I couldn't care less about Worldcom and what it's like to work there. I hear people bitching about new articles on Slashdot, but honestly, this is a new low.

    Me.

  35. I didn't like MCI by Greyfox · · Score: 2

    Back before Worldcomm acquired them, I worked at MCI and it was pretty much the white shirt be there by 7 kinda place. One of those offices where everyone talks about their golf scores. I picked a hell of a lot about networking up there, but mostly by osmosis as I spent the majority of my time nursing their lame-ass provisioning database, since little things like customers upgrading to a faster circuit would tend to lose that customer's IP addresses. I wouldn't be inclined to work for them again.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  36. Worked at WCOM / working at WCOM under EDS now by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 5, Informative

    Describing the working environment at Worldcom is much like the blind man describing the elephant. There are many reasons for this.

    First, you've got your different departments. Like IT, or Network Engineering, or Local Service, or a number of other departments. Each kind of sets it own tune.

    Also, your direct management will play a big part in your environment. For example, I see people in the building (during the summer) wearing shorts, t-shirt, and a do-rag or cap.

    Third, it also depends on the legacy of the site that you are absorbed into. The true Worldcom side is probably much more laid back than the former MCI side. Of course, UUNet would be different, too, as would legacy MFS (local service). So your location is going to determine which of the merged groups you get into.

    So, you've got your department, your local manager, and your merger legacy which all plays a very important role on how your environment will be.

    Just to give you my story, when I was a Worldcom employee under IT Infrastructure, the local management was 'uptight'. The department and legacy company (true WCOM) was relaxed. So, only jeans on Friday. All the other days were business casual. Comp time was free flowing. Schedules were laxed. But pay was stingy.

    Under EDS, this has changed greatly for me. The local management is relaxed. The legacy (call it EDS now) is... uh... still trying to get a handle on that one. EDS is more feudal in that you work for an 'account' more than you work for 'EDS'. Department is very good. Work at home relaxed. Pay increased significantly. Good deal all around.

    [BTW, would you mind emailing me the name of your company?]

    Best thing to do is to find out what entities you will be merged into and explore from there. There isn't much way to describe the company as a whole. The only thing I've seen over the past few years is a some shrinking. It is easier to find a parking spot.
    Sorry I cannot give a pat answer.

  37. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... NOTE by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Worldcom has a LOT of experience on mergers and acquisitions. Don't expect them to sit around and ignore you. They'll move quickly to integrate or to cut.

  38. It's... by Synn · · Score: 1

    In the small business sector.

    Why people work for a faceless corp when they can work for smaller businesses is beyond me.

  39. I figured it out!! by fwc · · Score: 4, Funny
    You know, I just figured out why there have been so many "what is it like at..." or "I'm looking for a job where should I go" postings recently...

    Obviously CmdrTaco and the crew have figured out that VA isn't where *THEY* want to work any more and are trying to figure out where to go next.

    It's the only explanation that fits...

    Now, on a directly related topic, I wouldn't trust anyone at WorldCom/UUNET/ALTER.NET to run *ANY* of my business traffic. Every time I have a problem getting somewhere it inevitably ends up being a problem on the ALTER.NET backbone, and if they treat their employees like their employees treat people who call their NOC *I* sure wouldn't want to work for them.

  40. Be Careful by jdurchen · · Score: 4, Informative

    I worked at MCI when they were being courted by BT and subsequently bought by WorldCom. There was a lot of talk about how benefits would change but be fairly equal. All decreases in benefits would be offset by increases in stock options. :)

    I left just about the time the actually awarded stock options. (7-8 months AFTER the merger during which time health benefits went down the toilet. Less coverage, much more money) The thing with the options was that they vested over three years. You could excersize them one third per year. So I would have to be there for one year to get any benefit from them. When I decided to jump ship all of my co-workers thought I was insane to give up all those valulable options. None of them have excersized any of them to this day.

    The reason I think this is relevant is to show you how brainwashed the employees of an absorbed company can be. Don't drink the cool-aid and keep your eyes open.

    I did like working for the company in general as my co-workers were some of the most competent people I have ever worked with. They took responsibility for their jobs and were proud of their work.

    So, my overall message is it is a good company to work for, but don't buy into hollow promises.

  41. Big companies SUCK. by supabeast! · · Score: 2

    Just a bit of advice about big companies like Worldcom: they love to treat employees like dirt. If you go to a company like that, expect to be nothing but a number, overworked at the excuse of a salary until the day they lay you off so that the CEO can save the company $2 millon and gives himself a $3 million dollar raise to celebrate.

    Unless you are young and looking to learn, look for small companies. If you have a high tolerance for BS, get into goverment contracting or work for the government directly. The pay is not as good, but in the long run you will be much happier.

  42. Re:I need to shit... by A+nonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Offhand (a damn good place for it! :-), I'd say you answered your own question by posting....

  43. Bad attitude by NineNine · · Score: 1

    You have a unhealthy attitude in this job market. You shouldn't care who you work for. A company is a company. You should care 1. If this job will help you improve your career and 2. IF this job pays well. That's it. Everything else is irrelevant.

    1. Re:Bad attitude by humanasset · · Score: 1

      Obviously you aren't familiar with the term "due diligence". You would be a fool not to do research on a potential employer.

    2. Re:Bad attitude by Sedennial · · Score: 1
      That has to be one of the stupidest things I've heard in a long time. You should care about your potential employer for several reasons:
      1. Money isn't everything. I've worked in hell, and I'm currently in my dream job. If I was offered twice what I'm making, but had to go work at I company I hate, I wouldn't take it.
      2. The reputation of the company can affect your future. If you work for a crappy company, with a totally cutthroat reputation and lousy PR, that will follow you to your next job and on your resume for some time.
      --
      root@universe # rm -fr /
      root@universe # ls -la /
      bash: ls : no such command
      root@universe # shutdown -h now
      System Halted.
      Power Off.
    3. Re:Bad attitude by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Obviously you aren't familiar with the term "due diligence". You would be a fool not to do research on a potential employer.

      Why would I bother? Considering the length of most IT jobs is just a few months, why does it matter?

    4. Re:Bad attitude by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Money isn't everything. I've worked in hell, and I'm currently in my dream job. If I was offered twice what I'm making, but had to go work at I company I hate, I wouldn't take it.


      You're kidding yourself. If course money is important. My goal in life is to retire (mean: spend my days how I want to) as soon as possible. If you want to spend the rest of your life grinding away at some low paying job because they give you M&M's or some silly shit, than that's your problem.

      The reputation of the company can affect your future. If you work for a crappy company, with a totally cutthroat reputation and lousy PR, that will follow you to your next job and on your resume for some time.

      On what planet is this? A potential employer is interested in what you can do for their company. Why would which company you worked for previously have any impact whatsoever on your ability to get a new job?

  44. Job Rotations by jazman_777 · · Score: 1

    At WorldCom they rotate you through the telemarketing division to do that for a while. That would explain all the worldcom calls I get. Should be fun!

    --
    Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  45. Would you work for a company that did this? by pyramid+termite · · Score: 1

    I had been using MCI World.com as my long distance provider for some time. Lo, and behold, they slammed me into having local service with them too. I wasn't happy about this and called Ameritech to have my local and long distance service changed back to Ameritech and AT&T. On my next phone bill I discover that I don't have AT&T, that I've been slammed into long distance service with MCI World.com and they're charging me 4 TIMES AS MUCH for phone calls - why? As the MCI operator explained to me, it's the slam rate ... now, how I can be slammed when it's actually a case of never being switched when I requested it, I don't know. I had my service with them disconnected and called Ameritech to have them switch to AT&T for my long distance.

    Guess what? I get my next bill and there's 135 bucks worth of charges from MCI World.com, at their ridiculous "slam" rate, including 30 1 minute calls my wife had made to her grandmother's house after she had gotten a stroke and gotten no answer. These were 50 miles away and charged 3.41 apiece. 3.41 for listening to a phone ring a few times! I called Ameritech and told them that I wasn't paying them for these charges, that I wanted AT&T and if they screw up my service one more time I'm going to rip the goddamned phone jack out of the wall and get a cell phone and screw them.

    Alright, you're probably wondering - what the hell does this have to do with working for them? Ask yourself two questions - if they do this to their customers, hell, people who don't even WANT to be their customers, how are they going to treat their employees? And if they treat the public in such a dishonest and greedy grasping manner, why would you want to work for them anyway? There must be an honest company you can work for. Hell, even Microsoft is a little more honest and competent than this.

  46. What's Worldcom Like? -- It's all relative. by wisejedi · · Score: 1

    I've worked at Williams Telecommunications, WorldCom and Sprint and they are much different environments. WorldCom's whole culture is merger, merger, merger. The first merger was LDDS and Williams Telecom and that is when the WorldCom name came about. Actually, even before that, I believe, LDDS was formed from mergers of RBOCs and such. After LDDS and WilTel merged, then came the MFS and WorldCom merger then came the MCI and WorldCom merger. I was even at Sprint when WorldCom and Sprint where talking merger. At the time, I was not a proponent of the merger and was joking to people that I was being stalked by an entire company. ;-) My experience at Williams Telecom and Sprint were was a great experiences, but I can't say the same for my experience at WorldCom. ** Everyone I came in contact with in WorldCom was very much in CYOA (cover your own ...) mode and running scared. ** That can sometimes be a good thing, but I don't believe it was in this case. Of course, since I haven't worked extensively in every part of WorldCom (nor could anyone) and it has been a few years, I can't guarantee you that your experiece will be the same. ** I'm sure there are some vary good parts of WorldCom, but I wasn't in them. ** Good luck! I think you will need it to get into a good area!

  47. Re:What does MCI stand for? by smashdot · · Score: 1

    It used to stand for "Microwave Communications Incorporated", but now, it's just still there because of the marketing $$ spent on the name.

    --
    "C" is for cookie, that's good enough for me.
  48. From Former WorldCom Employee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I worked for WorldCom before the merger with MCI down here in Boca Raton, FL. I have to say that it was THE best job I had. I did LAN and Computer support for 16 sites down here. My boss was in Tulsa, OK and he only bothered me once a month when he would call me to ask me if I needed anything. I had my own office, which was huge and all the old computer I collected I networked together in my office so I could learn more. I didn't have to punch a clock since we had a support queue and as long as my tickets were closed in a reasonable time, they didn't care if I worked from home or not. Awesome company to work, I'm sorry that I ever left the position. BTW I left because my dad needed help at his company. Had nothing to do with WorldCom.

  49. Re:Bull Shit! (Claims that UUNET Stops Spam Sites) by tanner_andrews · · Score: 1
    ) [UUnet shuts down more websites in a month...]

    Having reported many, many spammers to them, and having also done the occasional follow-up checks, I can assure you that it would be hard to find a more spam-friendly provider than UUNET.

    They reliably send out a form letter saying how they deplore spam, &c., and that is the extent of their action. Check on the spam-vertised web site, and it's still there, reached via UUNET.

    --
    Tilt at windmills. Occasionally one will fall over out of sheer surprise.
  50. 4 years, still goin.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm a former uunet employee, so not worldcom proper, so i can only speak from that experience. If you have clue, and manage to find yourself in the right group, it's a decent place to work. The network is huge. The training labs have more equipment than many ISPs, let alone the actual experimental labs. The network is fast, built with bleeding edge hardware, and you can bet that if it's deployed on this network, you can rely on it.

    The company is global, which means (or it used to) that if you felt like working elsewhere, you could. God knows that the working atmosphere in Europe is much better than North America. =)
    I work with brilliant people, and I've learned lots from them. Even if we're now officially worldcom, and part of Generation D (*gag*), and it's easy to feel like a cog in a big wheel since there's 15 departments in engineering, 93245 levels of management, stock options that are not even with reach of the Kursk salvage team, FUD concerning whether or not you're going to be employed 3 months from now, marketing focussed ways of life (I really really wish I'd bought those UUNET boxer shorts when I had the chance), and, well, I could go on, but, I still like working for the company. Why? No larger network exists, no other company still has the kind of resources we do, the big iron, the sheer scale of everything, and the people i work with. Every time I think about going somewhere else (who doesn't) I think "where?" and often draw a blank.

    Like any large company, it'll depend on who you end up working for as well. Maybe everybody will suck, or perhaps everybody goes out and shoots some stick after work. You won't know until you look.

    If you're going to work for worldcom proper, bear in mind that internet culture didn't extend to telcos until recently, so they're still coping with the shock of learning that ATM is *not* the future of networking. I'd check out the office you might be working for, and the people there. if it was uunet at one point, your chances of getting along are better, but that's just a guess really.

    Just 'cause WorldCom is laying off people everywhere doesn't mean they suck. you could be working for the airline industry. you could be working for Nortel. Everybody is laying off.

    To conclude, you won't find me telling you to run away as fast as you can. check it out.

  51. Working at worldcom by deacon_va · · Score: 1

    working at worldcom is ok if you don't mind working for a company that doesn't really care about its employees and attempts to save every penny (no more free coffee, decreased benefits every year, 5% raise is the best you can get with 3% being average and so on).

  52. How about from the consumer's point of view? by sowalsky · · Score: 1

    As a consumer, my experience dealing with WorldCom was extremely negative and I have recommended against their services in an decision-making process I had a say in. They're billing and customer service departments DO NOT have it together. They stopped billing cell phone charges for 3 months and then put a massive 4-month conglomerate bill together and expect me to pay. Especially when I cancelled my service 1 month before the 3-month period in question. It was resolved with a nasty letter from my lawyer, but it should be an example of the awful work ethic these people have to let an error like that slip by. My advice: avoid WorldCom. If they can't treat customers right, sooner or later they'll be out of business.

  53. Re:Bull Shit! (Claims that UUNET Stops Spam Sites) by 13013dobbs · · Score: 2

    Well, acording to these links. They are not the most-spamfriendly. Plus, you can actually call UUnet's abuse staff, how many other Tier1 providers can you say that about? You talk as if UUnet never shuts down anyone, and you know that is not the case.

    --

    No replies made to AC posts. Please log in.

  54. Standard Nerd Answer by rho · · Score: 5, Informative

    It Depends.

    The answer you get is going to be horribly weighted by somebody else's baggage, the circumstances under which they were hired, or fired, even where they were located.

    I worked for the Investor Relations department at the corporate headquarters in Clinton, Mississippi. Small department, great people. I loved my job and the people I worked with. The dress was corporate casual, and regular casual on Fridays.

    I worked with the Bernie Ebbers, the CEO for a few projects. He's a very nice, polite guy--driven, but many entrepreneurs are like that. Also, he's very tall.

    The IT department in Clinton is staffed with great people, the network/Internet/Intranet guys are top-notch and well managed. I still go bowling with them occasionally.

    However, some people don't have such nice memories. When Worldcom bought MCI, there was quite a clash of cultures. MCI's IR department had 2.5 times the number of people, and didn't do as good a job as Worldcom did. All of them were laid-off in the merger. MCI had something like 5 corporate jets. Worldcom had 2 corporate jets. Bernie sold most of MCI's immediately. Former MCI people were undergoing "attrition" at a fearsome rate. Worldcom's culture was of a gritty startup, almost. You worked hard, but you were compensated for your effort. MCI was much more corporate, only their stock price reflected that "corporate" wasn't cutting it.

    Unfortunately, MCI's marketing department stayed around. This is where you get those really shitty "generation d" commercials. And also why the web site sucks so much now.

    This was a few years ago, but from what I can tell, the culture hasn't changed that much--at least, not in Clinton, MS. Other locations are different.

    --
    Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  55. I still work for WorldCom... by MetaCow · · Score: 1

    I'm a contractor doing some programming work at WorldCom. The department I work in is not bad at all. No company-sponsored beer bashes or anything, but pretty nice. I haven't been pressured to put in excessive hours and the pay has been quite good. This job is a dream compared to my last job at Creative Labs.

    1. Re:I still work for WorldCom... by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 1

      Ha! Another former Creative Labs person doing work at Worldcom. Life in Stillwater was fun.

  56. About the layoffs... by chips · · Score: 1

    I see your boss employed the ol' "fix the glitch" tactic!

    Ah, the joys of draconian management...

    --
    -- Guns don't kill people, bullets kill people. Guns just make bullets go really, really fast.
  57. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... NOTE by gordo_lk · · Score: 2, Informative

    "They'll move quickly to integrate or to cut."

    Doubt that. WCOM has just now made a major push to fully integrate what's left of uu.net. Basically that means taking all of uu.net and breaking the individual departments up, then placing them under their "twin" within the WCOM structure.

    Another problem that I've noticed around here (WCOM) is that of MCI. One of the reasons WCOM was able to buy MCI was because MCI became bloated and fat. They had too many people sitting around doing one person's job. After the buyout, MCI was trimmed, but the bad habits die hard and the fat has only grown.

    I've been here for a couple years and feel that I'm in a secure position and department, but that hasn't stopped me from tweaking my resume. I've seen stock options handed out valued at $44.50, but vesting at $21.00, then handed out for the following year at $16 and some odd cents. What's the current street price? Oh, and no raises... not in two years. Being salaried sucks too as several of us typically work at least 20 hours over. Yeah, motivation around here sucks, so does the recognition ("Hey good job, really appreciate it, but can't show it any more than saying 'Great Job'.").

    I've enjoyed working here. I'm fortunate to work with a good group of people and a pretty good management chain. I still enjoy what I'm doing, and I get to work with some fairly interesting technology/notions. Just wishing I got more out of it than sore eyes, frustration and stress.

    "Maybe I can learn how to be a truck driver. Mav, do you have the number of that truck driving school we saw on TV? 'TruckMaster', I think it is. I might need that..."

  58. Re:Working at worldcom (one more thing) by deacon_va · · Score: 1

    the mci half of the company (not sure about the wcom half) has cancelled telecommuting. i guees they didn't buy into the generation d bullshit.

  59. My experiences as a (former) customer by Ear+Phantom · · Score: 1

    About a half a year ago MCI WorldCom was our long distance carrier. Around that time my partner was interested in getting a cell phone. One day we received an ad from them for a free cell phone with the commitment of subscribing to their service for a year. It seemed like a decent deal, everybody was doing such a promotion, and life was dandy. So we called them up and said sure.
    We gave them my work address to mail the phones to, since we have had problems in the past with people stealing packages from our front porch.
    So weeks go by, the phones never show up.
    My partner calls them up, gets put on hold for almost an hour. Finally, she gets somebody to talk to, and tells them what happened. Turns out they had the wrong address written down. They get the correct address from her. Seems fine.
    Except the phones still don't show up. She calls again, and, after being on hold for such a long time again, it turns out that they still had the exact same wrong address.
    This goes on for weeks, weeks pass into months. Eventually she gets sick of it and tells them we don't want the phone anymore.
    Except that then they decide to start sending us bills for phones we've never received. One day I walked in on a conversation with her screaming at them, telling them she will report them to the Better Business Bureau. You have to understand, she's a kind and gentle soul and rarely (if ever) have I seen her so riled.
    At some point the experience makes us change our long distance carrier: screw them if they are going to get any of our money.
    So far, the latest bit in the whole saga is that we recently received a bill for long distance calls made on this phone to strange places we've never even heard of. Evidently somebody got ahold of the phone and is using it to make several hundreds of dollars worth of calls. All this time with missing phones, and the idiots at MCI haven't even suspended the service.
    So she calls them and tells them about it.
    At this point, if they are losing money, it's their own fault, and we certainly don't owe them a dime.
    I'll never use MCI for anything again, and I would encourage others to do likewise. And I'd rather have a catheter the size of a garden hose than work there.

  60. The upside. by Mordant · · Score: 1

    If you go to work for Worldcom-MCI, you'll be the smartest person there.

  61. "Office Space" by toddhisattva · · Score: 1

    Just watch the movie

    "Office Space." It is almost a documentary of my year in MCI IT. Pay special attention when they start firing people to increase stock price. Es verdad, es verdad.

  62. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... NOTE by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2

    Correct. UUNet was an intention decision to leave as a seperate operating unit, completely outside of the rest of the company.

    I've watched a number of mergers, acquisitions, and spinoffs. MFS, MCI, EDS. With WCOM/MCI, they were merging the corporate networks even before the merger was completed. Teams on both sides that were deemed redundant were reduced to a skeleton level.

    WCOM has had the experience of taking over the network infrastructure department of EDS. They know exactly what they'll need to do in this case, and how the big picture works.

    Expect quick movement.

  63. If their customer service is any indication... by tuxlove · · Score: 1

    If the quality of their customer service, billing practices, etc., are any indication of the company as a whole, I would not suggest associating with them in any way. I absolutely refuse to use them for any services whatsoever after the crap they've put me through as a cell phone customer.

    I used to be a Cellular One customer, then MCI bought them out. All went to hell in a handbasket. They triple-billed sometimes, and though they were kind enough to warn you that they were having billing problems, it was still *your problem*. Getting through to a customer service drone on the phone sometimes took as much as 1.5 hours of holding. And canceling my cell service after getting fed up with this garbage took *5 months*. I called their customer service people repeatedly (after waiting in the queue for an hour or so each time) to cancel, and each time they'd tell me I had never cancelled and would I please pay the outstanding bill for the months since I originally cancelled service. And each time I'd have to re-explain that, no, I won't pay because I cancelled long ago and would you please stop sending me bills. And we'd go back and forth for a while and they'd finally say, okay, your balance has been wiped and your account cancelled. And subsequently I'd get another bill (or two or three, if they were having the multi-billing problem that month).

    Finally, magically, one month it all stopped, and I have since been MCI-free. Never again do I have to deal with them, except when an MCI telemarketer calls to sell me something. And that tends to be somewhat enjoyable anyway, because I get to inform them that they work for the devil and to tell them to begone to whatever pit of hell they crawled out of.

    So, unless you want to be one of *them*, I wouldn't suggest going to work there.

  64. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... NOTE by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2

    BTW... your perception of pre-merger MCI being bloated is shared throughout the company. Four people and one manager for every job that would take a single person. (Okay, I put a bit of spin on that.) I think also that MCI was more policy/procedure oriented than Worldcom. More "going through the process" as opposed to Worldcom's "just get it done and go onto something else".

    The downside of the WCOM legacy was that they were probably a little TOO thrifty, and not as professional.

    About bad habits/fat grown... a bit, yes. For example, how most all the WCOM's all got pay increases to the MCI levels. And the growth of policies/procedures which slow work down. But legacy MCI has been trimmed in the process.

    But don't get me wrong. I absolutely LOVED working at Worldcom, at least where I was. The atmosphere was incredibly good, and I had an awesome manager. I only left when EDS was going to take over my group. After I found out that they didn't run things into the ground, and actually started running IT (and the people) far better than WCOM, I came back to my old job.

    Still enjoy it.

    There are jobs here which are REALLY GOOD. There are jobs here that REALLY SUCK (be it because of a manager, pay, workload, whatever). But for me, WCOM is a very good experience.
    Its a big company. Experiences are going to be hit-and-miss.

    BTW... I feel sorry about your stock options. But back in the late 90's, they really panned out for us. One year, my "standard issue of shares" given to average employees panned out to something in the neighborhood of $10,000 after taxes. Bernie believes in giving shares to his employees. Just the market value of the stock recently has ruined that lately.

  65. that doesn't sound quite right by cpeterso · · Score: 1

    I took a pay cut when I left Worldcom for NASA but I haven't worked a single weekend or evening so far

    I thought that janitors always worked nights and weekends.

  66. UUNet Does Stop Spammers by gopherdata · · Score: 1

    A company I was associated with for a while used UUNet to host spamvertised websites. After about a month of spamming they had the plug pulled on their T3 line.

  67. I actually work at wcom... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    No one will read this, of course, since I'm posting anonymously but what the hell... no one else that works here appears to be posting.

    What's it like working here? To make a long aswer short, it depends who your manager is. I'm lucky enough to work for people who let me run Linux on my desktop even though it's not "officially supported." (Windows is the official desktop OS).
    Other people, however, have horror stories due to the regulations in their particular group. I'm sure this is the way with most large companies.

    HTH

    1. Re:I actually work at wcom... by ShawnX · · Score: 1

      I used to work for UUNET in the country north of the USA and they were beginning to phase our our UNIX systems. i did not like that. im glad im not there anymore. They gave no insentive to stay even. I was in their network support dept.

      --
      Everyone wants a Tux in their life.
  68. Side note/Tangent: Tulsa by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2

    Since a number of people have given mention to the "Tulsa" or "Cherokee" site, I thought I'd make some mention of Tulsa. I agree with the other posters, in that it is a laid-back site. But don't be fooled, they get the work done.

    The city is a good one to live in simply because of the cost of living. You'll find most prices to be quite low. Gasoline, unleaded, is currently $.97. Housing is very inexpensive compared to other places. Say, a 1400 sqft home would go for around... ballpark... $80-120k.
    Tulsa is a good place to work at.

    1. Re:Side note/Tangent: Tulsa by Mr.+Foogle · · Score: 1

      It must have changed . . . or maybe not.

      BEFORE they moved to the Cherokee site, it was a ruthless cut-throat place to work. I'm sure the fact that I was f***ed on a contract there as nothing to do with my opinion, I'm sure .

      Tulsa is .. a fine place to live. I grew up there. The drawback is .. if a large employer craters (say, AA or Worldcom) you'll have to move elsewhere to find work. It's that kind of a (small town) place.

      --
      Display some adaptability.
  69. lucky man! by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I don't mean to imply that I am p-whipped but my wife forced me to quit that job.

    You should thank her. That's not even close to p***y-whipping, that's called "looking out for your partner when they're getting screwed". And it sounds like you were, like in so many tech jobs where you are "indispensible", but under-rewarded and ultimately expendable.

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
  70. WorldCom by buss_error · · Score: 2
    I know a marketing droid for them, and he's crying in his beer over the stock price. Pay's not so good to hear him tell of it, so stock is what makes the payscale.
    It's important to remember that customer service is part of what a company is. If it sucks, chances are that they have pissed off someone you may want an interview with at some point.
    If you don't have a job now, then take it. You can sleep in alleys, but ya gotta eat. If you are one of the fortunate that are working, you may want to give this a pass.

    I have WorldCom for LD, and I get nasty calls to collect before the bill even arrives in the mail. They keep wanting me to go direct debit, but if they can't get their billing cycles right, what makes them think I'll trust them with my bank account? I'd change, but since I make about 2 LD calls a year, it's not worth it to me.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
  71. There is a site which specializes in these Q's by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 3, Informative

    Go to vault.com. They can answer, in general terms, "What is it like working for company X?" Go to the "research" section. You'll probably want a free account. Oh, they sell a book, too. Actually, it doesn't look like it'd be bad at all. The message board and site's text that describes WCOM is a little stale,

  72. Re:What time is it? by Omerna · · Score: 2

    I've heard the police get 911 calls about this a lot.

    --


    No sig for you.
  73. Re:Mmm... Can you taste Mississippi yet? by concepthouse · · Score: 1

    I love these comments about Mississippi. They make me laugh at the ignorance of the posters.

    For what it's worth, Mississippi is ranked THIRD in the US in computing power (behind New Mexico and California) and would rank something like #8 in the world compared to other countries total power.

    40% of the US Department of Defense's computing power is in the state.

    This is a pretty amazing fact that most people don't realize. So, chances are that you are living in a state or country that has less computer resources than the one that you are making fun of.

    For more info I found a couple of sites talking about the state's computing power, clusters, and supercomputers:
    MSU's ERC cluster and the rest of the research center.

    I thought this info might be interesting for some of those on /. wanting to find out new information about some really cool facilities.

    Bias warning: I worked at the ERC for many years on visualization and virtual reality (they have a CAVE).

  74. Money Spent from the Home Office by Davak · · Score: 1

    I have never worked for WorldCom; however, I lived in Clinton, MS when WorldCom moved in. Holy cow do they spend the money!

    They first went in and built a huge complex that out-towered anything else in the state (okay, which doesn't take much.) Next, they spent large amounts of money on a nearby private Baptist College (Mississippi College). They built a multi-million dollar gym and performance center on campus... It worked out as well as WorldCom had free use of the facilities and the small college gained valuable structures.

    Multiple utilities were upgraded as well. That small town received city-wide cable-modem access even before Jackson (which is the capitol city) did.

    All of this to say... all least in that small Mississippi town, working for WorldCom was golden.

    Davak
    http://www.carotids.com

  75. 401k is a good reason by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 2, Informative

    If I remember correctly, they haven't changed their 401k benefits since I left. Something like 1:1 matching, up to 4 or 5% of your pay. Very nice.

  76. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    Right. thats why I used to get 7 spams/day/account out of uu.net customers. thats why uu.net continues to host so many companies that sell spamware so everyone can get even more spam.

    I bet they only shut down spammers who haven't paid pink contract fees.

    someone here once gave me the solution to dealing with uu.net. forward all spam to their sales people. funny, it worked. one complaint and the new spammer deletes me from the list. (the spammer doesn't go away - a trap account continues to get the spam, so uu.net does jack)

    uu.net is huge, and responsible at one time for 70+% of all spam. granted their network is huge, (basically the entire east coast I believe) but it doesn't excuse their blind eye to spam issues.

    also, abuse@uu.net no longer accepts complaints from spamcop. what does that say about them? every read the auto reply from abuse. pretty obvious they don't care.

    the only way to solve their spam problem is make the spam a bigger headache than the revenue it generates.

    disagree if you like, but I have the emails from uu.net to back it up.

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  77. It's like any other big company... by walt-sjc · · Score: 1

    Besides the fact that this is a REALLY stupid "News" article...

    Working for WCOM will be exactly the same as any other big company. Your experience will be dictated by your manager chain. You either have a good one and like your job or you have a bad one and life sucks. You are also just a number - nothing you do will mean squat for anyone 2 levels higher or any level latterally. You will also live in a cube farm - welcome to the Dilbert zone.

  78. No LD Needed by fm6 · · Score: 2
    I'd change, but since I make about 2 LD calls a year...
    You know, you don't have to have any LD company at all. Saves you the monthly fee, but you have to dial one of those 1010 prefixes every time you make a LD call. Probably worth it if you only make 2 calls a year.
  79. Working at WorldCom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I'm a WorldCom employee. I work at the world headquarters in Clinton, MS. Overall I'd say my experience with the company has been good. I've been a little nervous when the layoff-fairy has visited us, but who wouldn't be?

    The atmosphere at the company seems to vary from department to department. The dress code in most of the IT departments seems to be pretty lax. I can get away with wearing jeans and a t-shirt. It's possible shorts are allowed at some of the facilities, but not at the corporate headquarters where I work. My department is fairly close knit. We don't get paid a whole lot but we also have been sheltered from the layoffs (lower salaries mean smaller targets at layoff time). However, what we do get paid is pretty reasonable for Mississippi, so I can't complain too much. The company has pretty good benefits. The stock options currently aren't worth anything, but I expect that to change soon. The 401k plan, insurance, etc. are all pretty good deals (there are other perks like $25 of free long distance amonth, too). Another one of the benefits is that the company has paid for every training class I've wanted to take (even if it was training in something that didn't directly relate to what it is I do). I'm allowed to run whatever OS/software I want to as long as I get my work done. My department (like any department) has it's good points and bad points, but I'm glad I work where I do, and the friends I have in other departments seem to like where they work, as well. I'm sure there are some bad departments in the company, but I think overall WorldCom is a pretty safe bet (particularly for IT positions).

  80. Experience from MCI merger by mcdude · · Score: 2, Informative
    I started at MCI right when they got taken over by WorldCom, and worked there for about two years after that in two different groups, and I saw how things worked in several Colorado locations (Denver and Colorado Springs).

    It really appeared to me that WorldCom took over MCI and then basically cut off funding for any new projects. Budgets were incredibly tight for those two years, and we could barely afford to keep existing projects going. I think they somehow expected to continue making money off of MCI without any expectation of keeping abreast of the market or competition.

    Not only did they trim staff, they also went to great lengths to cut trivial costs associated with office atmosphere. For example they stopped stocking hot chocolate and coffee in the break rooms. At one point we didn't have toilet paper for a couple days and people seriously considered the possibility that WorldCom had stopped funding even for that!

    Both years I was there, there were huge layoffs around Christmas time to make the books look good for the end of the fiscal year. Then they would hire on huge amounts again in the spring, mostly people previously laid off. Because of this, a lot of people felt really insecure about their jobs. I saw many many many cases where employees were spending more time gossiping about layoffs than working, because it was such a crazy situation.

    MCI/WorldCom was also layered with way too many layers of management. There were bosses whose only job was to communicate information between a VP and five or six managers. It was really crazy.

    MCI/WorldCom was also somewhat formal, they had "casual Friday" when it was okay to wear jeans, etc. Very uptight compared to a left-coast startup but not as bad as a big consulting company or bank. Good luck!

  81. culture by two_tone · · Score: 1

    i live in the northern va area and have had a few friends work for uunet/worldcom. as far as the pay goes i hear it sucks, even for tier three network techs. but the plus side is they'll train you to death if you want them to, no strings attached. and they have a t-shirt and jeans kinda policy.

    --
    You see a problem, I see potential. - Vincent 'Vinnie' Antonelli
  82. Worked at UUNET/WorldCom for less then 3 months.. by ShawnX · · Score: 1

    Good thing I was on probation. The company treated me like shit they wanted to take my UNIX (Sun box) away from me and replace it with a Windows 2000 system and they gave no insentive to stay, they fired me due to their politics besides, my job had a high turnover rate.

    Good riddens!

    --
    Everyone wants a Tux in their life.
  83. damn by jorbettis · · Score: 1

    And here I sit sipping on Ramen broth.

    --

    Jordan Bettis

    ``Wherever you go, there's another stupid sigfile quote.''
    1. Re:damn by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1
      Yuck, "ramen broth"? You mean tapwater mixed with that nasty chemical flavor packet? I drain most of the "water" off of my ramen and eat the noodles, which retain the flavor imparted by the packet without the nasty tapwater dregs.

      --
      Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
  84. two-time UUNET employee by stonecoldt · · Score: 1

    When I was at UUNET Worlcom, a lot of the technically savvy gurus were leaving and getting replaced by generic political project manager types. If you work for one of those, no matter what they promise you, you'll never see a promotion or more than a 5% raise. If you're lucky enough to get a tech guru turned manager, then you'll be in good shape and will enjoy yourself. Unfortunately they're few and far between.

    For the record, I worked at UUNET, got no raise or promotion for two years, left to join a startup, it failed so i went back to UUNET (getting a nice raise), then learned enough to go contractor, and never looked back.

  85. "Does anyone have any experience of life at Worl by amunet · · Score: 1

    Yes, and I could not get out of there fast enough. I have worked for several big IT /communication firms and they are the top of the list for the worse. No free anything. You will be expected to work your 50 hours and be happy that you have a job. I did not see too many happy people there, career...what is that. They are a casual company for dress, but they are serious about squeezing you for everything you are worth.

    The only one worse would be Level 3 Communications

    Tread lightly and look at all of your options before you go into this. Have your eyes wide open.

  86. What's it like? by bedwyrbannog · · Score: 1

    lol Just watch Office Space, but just remember that you can't get even.....excellent security...oh by the way I hope you like dealing with NT. Back in 98 they got a bad virus on their systems and made everyone go to NT. Like that would help.

  87. My WorldCom Experience by Mr.+Foogle · · Score: 1

    FWIW. I worked for the part of World Com that used to be Wiltel. My time there was just AS they were merging.

    Cut throat. Management by politics. But that was just my little piece of the pie, other people have better stories, some worse.

    My contract was terminated early due to 'i couldn't do the job I said I could do' read: I was too naive to play the bosses political games.

    My replacement lasted not quite two weeks - he was paged to call the boss at her desk after hours. He called her from a phone booth in the rain, she put him on hold fro 15 minutes. He hung up, went home (mind you, this was a 20 minute drive at most) and had a call on HIS machine from the contracting company - don't come in, we'll send you your stuff and whatinthehell happened?

    --
    Display some adaptability.
  88. UUNET - close enough? by delong · · Score: 1

    Up until March 2 I worked for UUNET, "A Worldcom company." Big layoff. Very nice severance. :) A buddy of mine worked for a Worldcom support call center up to March 2 as well. Both our experiences with the company jive, so its probably a safe bet they may be applicable to your situation, especially since your company is in network services.

    My take on Worldcom is that it is a very relaxed, easy going culture and that the company treats its employees damn well. Save the occassional layoff, but hey. The benefits are great, plenty of time off, good pay. I worked at a UUNET data center, and the opportunity to play and get involved was tremendous. There are real opportunities to make COMPANY wide impacts. If you have good ideas, they listen, and IMPLEMENT them. Amazing, eh?

    If you work for the company I think you work for, you'll have a blast. If you don't get cut. If you make the short list, they'll treat you great. That's my experience from the UUNET angle, at least.

  89. Re:well said by Malcontent · · Score: 2

    I know what the answers will be.

    1) I don't know.
    2) If you don't know then I can't explain it to you.
    3) Nothing.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  90. Re:...because small towns are cheap labour by AshPattern · · Score: 1

    Er... no

    Way back when, Bernie wanted to put his brand spanking new Worldcom building right in the middle of downtown Jackson. Back then, downtown Jackson was a dump. He was planning to revitalize the entire area, create corporate housing for employees, and put a really huge building right in the middle of the area.

    Except that huge building went six inches over the sidewalk. So he had to get permission to build his building from the city council. Keep in mind that this would have been great for Jackson, which despite being the capital is po'. The city council denied his petition, attempting to hold out for more money. Clinton made an offer, he told the Jackson city council to screw themselves, and now downtown Jackson is still a dump.

    Incidently, it's much more expensive now to live in Clinton - property values skyrocketed.

    I've been working there for about two years, entering almost exactly when the internet boom ended. I've had great middle managers (don't hear that very often, eh?), but as has been mentioned, political concerns from higher up can and do take precedence over technical common sense.

    EDS is satan, and has ruined a lot of my joy working there. Rampantly contracting has been a bad decision, viewed from the trenches. It's certainly caused more problems than its solved.

    From my experience (YMMV), if you can perform, you'll keep your job, and get your 5% raise. If you can't perform and/or make yourself useful, you'll be cut out during the wheat/chaff seperation process.

    And I've heard what MCI used to be like... Every meeting catered, free food, equipment, intradepartmental tournaments... you people were spoiled rotten, which is why MCI was $500 mil in the hole, which is why Worldcom could buy MCI. You didn't think of the expense then, so spare us the sob stories.

  91. Re:You'll probably not see any culture... NOTE by Fesh · · Score: 2

    My perception is pretty much the same. My job is decent and we're a legacy WCOM group, although we're horribly understaffed. Our app feeds data to a number of diverse groups, and since each of them has their own way of doing things and totally different requirements, it can be pretty stressful trying to keep everything running smoothly. But hey, I work with competent people, and our manager does a good job of sheilding us developers from the chaos that comes from trying to keep many diverse groups happy.

    Bottom line: it depends. Legacy WCOM is a decent environment. Our dealings with legacy MCI haven't been all that much fun though (caused our most experienced guy to bail, unfortunately).

    And yeah, don't even think about the stock options.

    --
    --Fesh
    Kill -9 'em all, let root@localhost sort 'em out.
  92. Worldcom ain't Worldcom by Ora*DBA · · Score: 1

    When I consulted there a few years ago, they were outsourcing most of their IT operations to EDS. You might want to make sure it's actually Worldcom you'd be going to...

  93. The most important thing is... by cyclist1200 · · Score: 1

    Are you a certified member of "Generation D"?

  94. Re:all relevant by NineNine · · Score: 1

    it won't improve your career if you burn out or they have lousy OH&S and you get injured, or if they have a reputation of slackass employees that no one else wants to hire


    Burn out is a valid concern. Again, a company not hiring someone because of a previous employer makes no sense.

    does it pay well? well you need to look at the pay versus the amount of work you do. if the pay looks good, but you're working nearly 24/7, not getting enough sleep and your health is suffering, your personal relationships and friendships are going down the tube because you're not there when it counts.


    Very simple. Always work on an hourly basis. Only suckers work IT jobs for salaries.

  95. Re:well said by stilwebm · · Score: 1

    Then the problem is not with you, it is with her. This could me she doesn't like you, or she doesn't like your work, or she just doesn't like her own life. Whatever the reason, it's either time to move on or seek marriage counseling, because something is not working out.

  96. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by 13013dobbs · · Score: 1
    thats why I used to get 7 spams/day/account out of uu.net customers.
    You used to but, where does it all come from now?

    thats why uu.net continues to host so many companies that sell spamware so everyone can get even more spam.
    Define spamware. Any piece of maillist software can be used as spamware. Should those be banned as well? I can write a perl script that will send out spam, should perl be banned?

    I bet they only shut down spammers who haven't paid pink contract fees.
    There are no 'pink contracts' at UUnet. If you have proof of one post it somewhere. Otherwise, STFU!

    also, abuse@uu.net no longer accepts complaints from spamcop. what does that say about them? every read the auto reply from abuse. pretty obvious they don't care.
    Well, UUnet does accept spamcop reports, they goto abuse-noverbose@uu.net. The 'noverbose' means you will not get a detailed response, just a short message.

    You should not hold strong opinions about things you know little about.

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  97. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by 13013dobbs · · Score: 1
    I've spent time in their abuse department, so I can address this.
    You were in abuse more than 2 years ago, so no you should not comment on this.

    First, they don't shut them down fast enough (it's sad) so the spammers can get about 3 months of fun and games from the initial notice time, then pretending that they're going to fix it, then the final 30 shutdown warning. However, that's the legal contract, to basically give joe blow consumer every possible chance to fix their problem before they cut them off.
    Bzzzzt. Wrong again. once a termination has started, if the customer continues to generate abuse, the circuit is termed asap.


    BTW, How are things at Erols? *snicker*

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  98. I Love Perception by ReidMaynard · · Score: 1

    I contracted @ MCI at the time of the merger; I built and maintained Netview Maps for a NOC.

    More than once my harried Sr Manager came to us with a list of Worldcom customers who were paying for management, but no one was managing (6 months or longer)...so we added them ASAP.

    fyi, there was no fat in our division, at least from the cheap seats.

    per the orig req for corporate feel: it's the Borg

    --
    -- www.globaltics.net

    Political discussion for a new world

  99. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    "Define spamware. Any piece of maillist software can be used as spamware. Should those be banned as well? I can write a perl script that will send out spam, should perl be banned?"

    A program designed to deliberately forge headers in an attempt to hide the source of the offending email. These programs have no legitimate function.

    "There are no 'pink contracts' at UUnet. If you have proof of one post it somewhere. Otherwise, STFU!"

    Right. Why does sales refuse to deny their existance, hmmm? Yes I have emails from them, but not on this pc. Generally very evasive, not one outright denial.

    "Well, UUnet does accept spamcop reports, they goto abuse-noverbose@uu.net. The 'noverbose' means you will not get a detailed response, just a short message."

    No. I now see tags "uu.net does not wish to receive complaints about xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx" during the parsing. I forward these to abuse@uu.net and get the blanket statement which means nothing.

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
  100. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by 13013dobbs · · Score: 2
    Right. Why does sales refuse to deny their existance, hmmm? Yes I have emails from them, but not on this pc. Generally very evasive, not one outright denial.
    Why are you asking sales about policy? If sales said there were no pink contracts, would you believe them anyway? My guess is that you have already made up you mind and there is nothing anyone could say to change it.

    I now see tags "uu.net does not wish to receive complaints about xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx" during the parsing. I forward these to abuse@uu.net and get the blanket statement which means nothing.
    What IP are you talking about? Are you sure that UUNet is responsible for it. SpamCop does make mistakes, ya know. Have you tried calling UUnet's Abuse dept?

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  101. Hope this helps.. by SupaYoda · · Score: 1

    It seriously depends on where you're stationed. My boyfriend is a Senior Network Engineer for their Global Operation Center in Cary, NC. Mostly, he is in charge of keeping up various big buisiness WANs. It's not the most wonderful thing in the world, but it sure beats the heck outta my job! I got to visit with him once, and I loved the place Dress code is fairly casual, with t-shirts and jeans on the weekends. There is usually someone who is leaving the office to get food. It's fairly quiet and has a relaxed atmosphere, but I can assure you that there is no company masseur... at least he hasn't seen one.

  102. WC and job security by Nykon · · Score: 1

    I have a few friends who work at UUNET (a worldcom company) and both companies have been laying off alot of people, and have hiring freezes in most depts. take a look at your current job and job secuirty,esp in this market, and take that into account too.

    --
    "It's better to be a pirate then join the Navy"
  103. let me see by sik+puppy · · Score: 2

    A sworn statement, under oath, that uu.net does not allow pink contracts. ATT and PSInet used to proclaim no pink contracts and got caught. Pacbell has them as well.

    I don't have time to sit on hold for hours. And yes, i'm sure the ip addresses involved are in uu.net's block. I don't know the mapping, but probably a downstream provider as well. I'll check the next time i see one. I found complaining to sales got me removed from the lists. abuse didn't. someone knows something. My guess is "take these email addr off your list. we are sick of the complaints."

    Spamhaus used to list an executive (vp?) who apparently liked spam for its revenue. I see that link is gone now. Is the exec gone? If the senior idiots who allowed all the spam to continue are gone and there is actually action now, I will re-evaluate. I will wait and see the next time I get a uu.net spam. May take a month or two now. Don't expect me to hold my breath though.

    --
    The first thing we do, let's kill all the lawyers. Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part 2, Act 4, Scene 2
    1. Re:let me see by 13013dobbs · · Score: 2
      A sworn statement, under oath, that uu.net does not allow pink contracts.
      You are going to have to contact their legal dept for that. Sales won't/shouldn't give a sworn statement.


      I don't have time to sit on hold for hours.
      So, you have obviously never called. Their abuse desk is staffed 24/7 and the wait is never longer than 3-4 rings. Give them a try: 1-800-900-0241 opt2 opt3 then opt1.


      I found complaining to sales got me removed from the lists.
      Sales would just forward it to abuse. They don't give a shit about your spam and don't have time to deal with it.

      Spamhaus used to list an executive (vp?) who apparently liked spam for its revenue. I see that link is gone now. Is the exec gone?
      I don't think he is there. And, to be honest, the guy at Spamhaus kinda blows things out of proportion sometimes. So, that quote may not be on the up-and-up, IMHO.

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  104. Wiltel was not acquired by Worldcom (or was it?) by ve2asm · · Score: 1

    Actually, AFAIL, Wiltel (aka Williams in the states) have been acquired by Telus

  105. Re:well said by Malcontent · · Score: 2

    " Then the problem is not with you, it is with her"

    Well of course it could never be a problem with her could it.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

  106. Re:Wiltel was not acquired by Worldcom (or was it? by photon317 · · Score: 2


    Recently yes, but back in the day, the Wiltel component of Williams was sold off to Worldcom, with a non-compete agreement from Williams for a few years. Once those few years were up, Williams basically started up Wiltel again, which is the new version you're talking about. Don't ask me why, that whole cycle seemed kinda pointless.

    --
    11*43+456^2
  107. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by strredwolf · · Score: 2

    I've called after sending a report on two occassions. They "closed" the ticket by forwarding it to the ISP responsible, and said they couldn't tell me who the ISP was. BULL! I was still getting spam from UU.NET customers.

    Now, I did apply to UU.NET for an abuse job (didn't get in, lack of transportation, I'm not bitter about it). I was called down to go down and visit UU.NET's abuse department. It's a full floor in an office building, relaxed clothing, and they handle all abuse (DOS attacks et al). However, when I interviewed, the manager(John St. Claire) said that it was a "three strikes rule" before they pull the plug.

    What? Now "three months before one last month?" No, secure your network now or get SPEWed.

    --

    --
    # Canmephians for a better Linux Kernel
    $Stalag99{"URL"}="http://stalag99.net";
  108. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by 13013dobbs · · Score: 2

    That was two years ago, nutball. Things have changed. And as far as SPEWS, what are you waiting for? Block them and be done with it, unless you just like bitching about WorldCom. If a network was causing me that much of a problem, I would just as their network to my blackhole router and be done with it.

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  109. Re:Bull Shit! - NO by ichibrown · · Score: 1

    He can't he's a customer most likely himself. Or a customer of a customer, and if he did who would he complain about.. the gypsy that turned him into a crack-fiend metro stalker? nah let him speak his mind he most likely didn't get the job because he was a complete dolt. I'm sure alot of things have changed in two years time.. Frankly I hate spam, but frankly I hate kooks who dont know things correctly more. I've spoken to UUNet/Worldcom abuse on multiple occasions, about spam, and DOS attacks, and every time they seem to bend over backwards, EXCEPT they wont give you information, that is fine, because if i wanted it they would give it to me, it would only take a subpeona. After all mr. werewolf-guy dont you think it would be poopy if i called ur ISP an said u spammed me, made up bogus headers, and such, and had them give me your homephone number or name? dont think you'd like that eh? Privacy is a wonderful thing.. Keep it coming.