Escape from California?
An anonymous reader asks: "Is there any escape from California? I'm a very experienced software engineer (7+ years) with a MSEE and lots of great work experience. Even in this market, jobs in CA are easy to grab if I want them. Trouble is, I don't want to live here anymore. Six figures in Northern CA gets mostly pissed away on a mortgage for a house that isn't worth half that anywhere else, and I'm pretty much just waiting for the earthquake to hit and wipe it out. I'd love to move to the midwest, but decent software jobs seem to not exist. I'm more than willing to take a huge paycut to get a job there, but where to even start looking?"
You're a damn fool. But hey, if there are people who want to move out of the Blest Liberal State, I'll be glad to displace you. :-)
Good Luck
Buttsex.
Hey Konstantinos, why don't you start up a software firm in Nebraska and give this guy a job?
Isn't software engineering, etc. the kind of thing that could be done well online whether you were in San Fransisco or Antarctica? For instance Ambrosia Software employs one guy in kansas and several guys in tasmania and other places working out of their basements, but the central office is in Rochester, NY.
Repeal the DMCA!
I for one am getting out of california and moving to Nevada. No state tax and it is also not raping the second amendment. As far as jobs go I pretty much plan on getting out of the computer industry as my permanent job. There is always freelance, and frankly I'm getting bored with it.
You may find a cool, sweet job in another state, but be aware, your most likely not going to really find what you want, or where you want it. Sure, some engineering firms are hiring developers again, but things are just downright slow, and nearly non existant. A lot of things have contributed to this economic downfall... and Its not going to fix its self till many things happen..... I'm not going to go into a list, but the .com economy is a good cause of our current economic state in the rest of the country.
I'm comming up on being out of work for three months.... with little end in sight. I have hope, but when you have bills to pay, hope does not spring eternal. I say, stay where you are, or maybe commute from Navada. Yes, I'm serious.
There's loads of software jobs in the Seattle area.
Could somebody put up the sign on the state lines with CA that say "There is no Escape... Turn back Now". tehehehehe
Software engineering involving multiple people is the kind of thing that requires teamwork and good communication. Have all the documentation you want, even use a development process like XP, but you're sure to find there is still a tremendous benifit in having the team work in close proximity.
I suppose it's just the way the world works, but it's hard to get the match the random hallway converstations. They often result in avoiding massive problems or substantial enhancements. It's also very benificial for your engineers to be able to stroll over and ask another developer a quick question (ideally with a whiteboard in near proximity).
My two cents.
-Bill
SlashSig Karma: Excellent (mostly affected by moderatio
novell is looking for an experienced software engineer.
Whatever you do, don't come to Portland. I barely managed to grab a job as it is; I don't need any qualified techies snapping things out from under me. That said, I love it here. But stay away. I'm warning you.
and I'm pretty much just waiting for the earthquake to hit and wipe it out.
I'd love to move to the midwest
Oh great, then a tornado will destroy your house.
Depending on where you want to work, you might find something of interest in this region. Besides government work, there are many businesses in Northern Virgnia, and lots of stuff in suburban Maryland. And, hey, housing prices are outrageous in this area too!
Seriously, I'm looking for some good Software Engineers. We outsource most of our development and are looking to move it in-house. Drop me a resume justin@_NOSPAM_Llamakeeper.com.
JUSTIN
Rule of Life Number 2: Remember, it can all go to hell at any minute. --Jimmy Buffet
The top states for Californians to move to were:
Washington - 534,000
Texas - 523,000
Arizona - 449,000
Oregon - 374,000
Neveda - 320,000
In Soviet Russia... dead horse beats you.
Dude. You have no clue. I am living back East for family reasons and hating it. It RAINS here. It SNOWS here. Half the people are *&^% Bible thumpers or other not-my-types. I had a lot more work in California. Yeah, there's traffic, and the family court system is fucked, and other things, yet there are glimmers of sanity you won't find even in the cloudy, friendly Pacific Northwest (besides they will find out you are a Californian and hunt you down and kill you). The houses are expensive for a fucking reason. There are lots of other places in California besides Silicone Valley where I presume you live, find one. You could even move to Vegas which is almost California (except in a few years you will look like a lizard). I would really like to know what other things you value that you think would be better elsewhere other than where you are. The grass sure ain't greener.
I was looking at heading the other direction.
There are jobs in the midwest. I would look in Chicago (and suburbs), Columbus, Indianapolis or Detroit.
All of my work experience is with CG/Animation, so to stay in the industry I pretty much have to leave the midwest. The midwest is really a good place to live and work.
If you are used to the hour long commute, that opens you up to plenty of afordable housing in the midwest.
-Tim
-I just work here... how am I supposed to know?
Until the beginning of this year, I was working for a large corporation near Portland, Oregon. When they started downsizing, they offered me a generous severance package to leave. I took it and moved to Boise, Idaho, where I'm originally from.
I used the package to buy a house, and started living off of my savings while looking for a job. It took me about three months to find one. I've moved from being a software engineer at $62k per year to being a hardware tester at $15 per hour. But I absolutely don't regret it. I'm very happy here and don't miss Portland at all.
Though my pay has dropped from >5k / month to 2.5k / month, my actual take-home has only dropped to about 60% of what it was because I'm in a lower tax bracket. Further, my mortgage is now $500 / month less than it was, from $1110 to $609.
Start looking in all of the places you'd like to move to. If you've never been there, take some time off and go there, or talk to someone who has. There are relatively few jobs away from the coast, but they are out here. Check the local newspapers, and see what you can find. Find out who the big employers are in the towns you're interested in, and start trying to contact people within them.
Finally, if you're unhappy, move. You only live once.
get a street bike
get a dirt bike
get a jetski
get a surfboard (and a wetsuit)
get a snowboard or skiis
forget bug repellant
get some sunblock
get some hiking boots
go to Fry's...etc...
I'm not kidding, it worked fine for me. Strong tech sector, affordable housing, good wages for engineers, friendly people, world class recreation (biking, skiing, hiking, climbing, etc.) I was glad to escape California, it didn't even take much adjusting: considering the fact that most of the people living in my neighborhood are from California.
One future, two choices. Oppose them or let them destroy us.
California IS a crappy state, but the midwest??? Give me a break... I'd rather live in Soviet Russia than in the great white-trash wastelands of the US midwest.
I'd rather be a conservative nutjob than a liberal with no nuts and no job.
While were doubtless not the only govenrment hiring, I know Montana's state government is hiring and would love to get smart experienced techs. We're about as different as you can get from California (you will have to enter state of montana in the job type field, I can't seem to find a way to get the URL to recognise any search terms). Understand that your pay will stink, but you can pick up a nice house for 150,000 or so, your commute will be 20 min tops, and I live both down town and a five minute walk from a place that you can see one house far on the horizon. If you do decide to move here, either don't admit you are from California, don't comment on the deal you are getting for your house, and don't tell anyone I told you to come up here. If you wanted more money try Boise, ID or one of the university towns in the west. If the example job is well below your skill level, as it sorta looks, I am sorry, no insults were intended, and a single guy will live like a king here on that salary range.
Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
I'm pretty much just waiting for the earthquake to hit and wipe it out.
>>>>>> Is there any escape from California?
/.ers from that part of the country...? ...unless you -like- living in a small, clean & aestetically pleasing city.
:-)
;-)
:-)
>> Of course there is! It's good to think that you've got in mind to search for your -now-
>> Cf "The Three Boxes of Life & How to Get Out of Them" (book)
> I'm a very experienced software engineer (7+ yrs)
> with a MSEE & lots of great work experience.
> Even in this market, jobs in CA are easy to grab
> if I want them. Trouble is, I don't want to live here anymore.
That's not trouble; it's actually a good sign!!!
You're decidedly prepared to avoid the mortgage
rut... & move on to greener pastures. You've some-
how kept your humanity alive, my friend.........
> Six figures in Northern CA gets mostly pissed away on a mortgage
> for a house that isn't worth half that anywhere else
I've been developing a theory that:
It doesn't matter what you [can] do... at work...
It matters only that you're "paying your dues"
- ie, contributing to your local non-tech economy.
> I'm pretty much just waiting for the earthquake to hit and wipe it out.
Hmmm... now, that's just a bit extreme (& rather unnecessary, in my view...)
> I'd love to move to the midwest, but decent software jobs seem to not exist.
This only adds weight to my theory, since - in today's world -
you should be able to live where you like, & telecommute, provided that you're efficient &
effective in your work productivity.
> I'm more than willing to take a huge paycut to get a job there, but where to start looking?"
Depends on what you like, how big a paycut you're willing to take, etc.
I'd suggest Adelaide (S Australia), ie if you'd like to experience
a "slow & easy" place to "take time out" to think (oh, you'd have
no problem finding work here, & there are nice enough geek homes
around for around US$ 100,000 or so...)
If you don't have that kind of equity in your place & excess [115 VAC] gear
after over 7 years in high-tech'y... well, all I can say is
you've made the -right- decision, fella...
Actually, Perth is likely a -better- destination than Adelaide...
any
Perth, W Aust) is -clearly- the -better- choice
for healthy living; its CBD is more "modern"
- traditional architechtures are in Fremantle.
Mybe a tour of Europe would do you some good...
ie if you like really old architectures, in mostly cramped & crowded cities...
You'd come back (or go on to your next venue) -appreciating- the space
that you'd have in places like here - in a -smaller- city of Australia.
For folk music, aim for Victoria... although Perth is improving...
For climate (including warm, moist air that's good for your skin...), Queensland might work for you.
Don't worry about the stories of the
Detainees (political asylum seekers)
- known as "queue jumpers" by gov't -
who are treated to isolated concen-
tration camps, far from most cities...
If you've got high-tech skills, lucky you! You can become a -legal- queue-jumper...
in the line of would-be immigrants to "Big Oz"
I'm sure you'd move straight to the top of the list (even before doctors & nurses, maybe)!!!
Wait a minute, you didn't tell us whether you're white, anglo-saxon & (for SA) Xian (in SA,
I've actually seen some religious schools' -real-
position announcements for IT techies, (note: NOT teachers, tech supports) with insists that the
incumbant be a Christian, who attends church regularly)...
Welcome to Adelaide - the SaltLakeCity of Australia.
If not, a British or Irish background might help, in lieu...
Tip: Bring your own American SO, & -don't- try
to get by on local TV media - too bland,
repetitive & British (esp. the humor)
Oh, let us know where you move to in
this wide world... & how you end up.
I CAN'T BELIEVE THAT MY "COMMENT HAD TOO FEW COMMENTS PER LINE" & THAT I ACTUALLY CHANGED
THE TEXT, TO INCREASE THIS ATTRIBUTE'S VALUE!!!
HOW MANY BLOODY CHARACTERS DO COMMENT LINES HAVE TO HAVE, ON AVERAGE, BEFORE THEY'RE KOSHER FOR ANONYMOUS POSTS?!?
THIS, AFTER "YOU CAN'T POST TO THIS PAGE"?!?
Your fooling yourself if you think there is work there. It's nice but lacking in jobs. and if you do UNIX/Linux forget it. Your an outcast there.
Working for yourself is better in the long term but it's looking like Texas is the place now. Like the saying says Beers, Steers and ....., so just get yourself a beer and some horns boy.
If you are considering a move to the greater Detroit area in Michigan... I hear my job is opening up soon.
www.computerjobs.com
;)
Good place to start looking, seems Texas has a shit load of opportunity
My friend is a 'software guy' and confusing Chicago with "the midwest" is a joke. There are people from the suburbs that say they're from Chicago, and, truth be told, a lot of the Corp. HQs in Illinois are in the burbs of Chicago (Shaumburg, mostly) but we're definitely in a big "fish sucking up all the little jobs just to stay alive phase" here. You've got massive firms here as well as some more specialized and user centered design firms.
Chicago is more expensive than, say, Pittsburgh, and yeah it's a bit cutthroat right now where corps are hiring straight out of school robots at low wages who are no threat to their job security but the difference between some of the big firms here and elsewhere is *gasp* they'd encourage a digital resume being sent in, will fly you out and meet with you, and etc.
-- The truth is the only thing that nobody will believe.
..three times: Nevada, Amsterdam and NYC. I've also lived in Boston and SF, among other places.
:-)
Not that I pretend that Nevada is the place for anyone (for goodness' sakes, I live 52 miles from the nearest town, and it has one shitty bookstore). On the other hand, I just bought a house (with 3 buildings) on an acre for $40K. I do what I want, I run an online business. I signed up to teach classes at the local college and I just picked up a non-profit web programming job that they'll let me do from home -- they're paying me the full salary they allocated for the position and I only have to work 20 hours a week. I used to make > $200K/year, and I couldn't imagine feeling secure enough to have a child. Now I can't wait for the benefits to kick in again so we can crank out a kid.
The one thing I did differently this time was I picked the place and then looked for my setup. I've moved to many cities for jobs -- this time I picked the place I wanted to live in and figured if I committed myself to a place for a while, things might start happening differently for me. People in a small town get excited when someone with skills (of any kind) show up, and I've met some people with whom I honestly think I'll end up starting other businesses/efforts with.
I don't really measure my happiness in $$ anymore -- hell, tonight I felt guilty blowing $20 on dinner.
On the other hand -- I have a high profile job interview back in SoCal in January. Not sure I'll go, but I don't imagine that I'd really take it. I might even just give the plane ticket back.
Now, if only my garden would blook and solar panels would magically show up on my roof, I could wear an "off the grid" t-shirt....
Oh, and to contribute something that's a little more on topic: I vet the Utah suggestion; strangely enough, a friend from NYC/SoCal is really happy in Kansas City. I've always wanted to move to Portland (my best friend lives there) but I think the weather would depress me. That's the one thing leaving either LA or SF: the weather there is so much nicer than anywhere else. It's hard to compete in that regard.
Good luck, anyway.
"I'm a very experienced software engineer (7+ years) with a MSEE and lots of great work experience."
You messed up. If you had gotten an MCSE you'd be set.
- DasBub >:-)
Nevada, where there are more meth farms then people is made, whores are legal, the water is subsidized, and the culture is absolutely non-existant.
Yeah, sounds like you made a great move there, cowboy.
Here's your solution: many IT firms are outsourcing their programming and parts of their operations to India. What could be better?
I've found that face to face time really is valuable -- especially for hashing out new ideas. If you're deciding on architecture, even a phone conference really isn't all that great. I also really think that periodic meetings (weekly?) face to face are a better idea than trying to do things electronically.
I think that a lot of this stems from two main reasons:
a) if you're throwing out ideas very quickly, the higher bandwidth of speech than typing can be helpful (even phones are, at least for me, much more difficult to understand than right-here spoken words).
b) There are some major impediments to the equivalent of quick diagram sketches or showing things visually. First, the computer has piss-poor input devices for producing a quick sketch -- mice are really, really slow compared to a pen. Second, there isn't a overwhelmingly popular, universal, cross-platform system for collaborating and sharing sketches and bits of information, though there have been a lot of stabs at it. Third, the bandwidth used in sketching can be a bit of an issue if one of your users is on a low bandwidth connection like a modem. I've seen some research work done at Bell Labs and Carnegie Mellon University on software to rapidly develop rough 3d models. It's nice, but it's nowhere near what you can accomplish with a pen, a piece of paper for 2d or clay for 3d.
OTOH, while this varies from project to project, during the actual coding or debugging process, I've seen no problems with simply using text and working remotely. As a matter of fact, it's often easier to share information, since you're copy-pasting errors or other information back and forth. It's a bit disappointing that the most popular messaging protocols suck (Jabber's the most popular one I know of that's actually well-designed), but IM client + shared network filesystem + available phone works pretty well, in practice.
After all, take a look at Linux...
Also, a minor benefit of increasing the cost of communication between developers is that it tends to improve modularity -- each developer goes more out of his way to ensure that his code is robust in handling errors in the other developers' code.
May we never see th
Don't move to Portland. Oregon is full. Unemployment is sky-high and for Californians, if the weather doesn't get you, the locals attitude towards you will. That being said, if you do move to Oregon, keep to yourself, claim you're from Arizona and never carry an umbrella (doing so marks you an outsider and people get pissed about the eye-level hazard. Get real raingear like a trenchcoat or poncho instead).
Help us build a better map!
Given the number of Slashdot readers constantly complaining about being out of work, I expect that a pretty good way to generate a hell of a lot of resume submissions is to mention a job opening on Slashdot.
May we never see th
I'm a telecommuter. Admittedly, I tend to work on small, one-man projects, but multi-person projects can work just fine, IME, as long as everyone involved understands the need for face time.
We're living in a broadband era, so things such as Netmeeting and the like are marvelous for exchanging ideas. Real-time video conferencing is possible for next to no expense when using such software. Real-time code walk-throughs, specification reviews, prototype demos....it's all possible with such software packages.
Since I develop for NT and Win2k, we use Netmeeting. The shared whiteboard, shared apps and video/audio/text capabilities are invaluable for fleshing out ideas and being sure of everyone's intentions. So, no, you don't need to guess every possible question that might be asked, you just have to make sure that the tools available to communicate are well and truly used.
The risk is that we telecommuters tend to really enjoy the isolation and may lean toward maintaining that isolation rather than reach out on a regular basis to make sure that we're all (project-wide) marching to the same drummer. To minimize this risk, therefore, it's incumbent upon project management to ensure that these tools are used and used well. Doing so will ensure that there are no unwanted surprises brought about due to the development process being distributed.
MySQL seems to work as a "virtual company". They are scattered all over the world - though with heavy bias to Europe, which keeps the timezones together.
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
Shitty. Do not come to Colorado, there are almost literally NO jobs here. For a 17 year old who's best area is getting in trouble with bosses, anyway.
Aside from that, check hospitals. They LOVE software engineers. I believe many of the ones that would be interested, however, are in your area. Go figure.
Another good bet would be colleges and other schools, all the vocational schools pay very well to be able to say that their students are "working with the professionals". A friend of mine is making about 400k a year working at DeVry, all he teaches is Software Management (Whatever that is, I mean c'mon, "Software Management?").
Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last
...jobs get YOU.
Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
What are you looking for in the midwest? Large cheap houses? Check out Omaha, Kearney, Grand Island in nebraska (I know Cabellas is always hiring tech people, but they are truly in the middle of nowhere). Topeka, Wichita, Lawrence are very good in Kansas. For larger cities where you have luxuries check out Kansas City (Overland Park), Oklahoma City, Chicago.
Avoid Denver, the houses are overpriced, and the market is very tight even for people with experience and education.
The midwest doesn't offer as many tech/geek opportunities, but they do offer very cheap land and houses.
I was in Austin, TX in the mid-90s when there was something like 40,000 people a year moving in and the majority of them were from California. I really haven't paid attention to the city since I left in '96 but at the time there was a lot of high tech there. It was a lot of hardware, chip fab and whatnot, but where there's hardware, there's software. At the time, Californians were moving in and were building McMansions in the hills with the proceeds of the sale of their modest homes in California.
Culturally, Austin has a lot going on, particularly its music scene. Pretty much all the state's liberals are corralled there but it is the state capital so virtually every political bent is well represented.
Anyhow, it should be on your list of places to check out.
The fact that you CAN find a six figure job there is a hint you should stay.
I'm not in your shoes but: 5 years exp, no college degree but MCSE, LCA, CCNA, LPI and now RHCE, and the market in Toronto sucks. I am working in a small company helping with the database, and the IT guys are practically fighting over the position. My 6-month long search in various sectors has received abysmal replies. (maybe its just the lack of degree)
I'm looking for an excuse to move to California.
"Give orange me give eat orange me eat orange give me eat orange give me you." -Nim Chimpsky
I recently moved from San Francisco to Atlanta. Atlanta is one of the few places in the country that actually has a growing technology sector. Further, the cost of living is very low. I can't give you a difference in salary for myself as I run my own company and thus didn't change my salary. However, my fiancée had an entry-level data mining job in San Francisco for 45k and now has a similar job in Atlanta for 43k. While that is a 2k pay cut for her, it feels more like a 40k pay raise.
curch joins you.
Last year I saw my company flailing, and I decided to bail. I left Santa Cruz, CA with no job, a dog, and my girlfriend. We moved to Pennsylvania, but I could not find a job due to 911. Fortunately I was able to land a job near Baltimore, and now we are looking at buying a row home in the city. I lost 40 pounds and never felt better, so my suggestion is to just pick up and leave, it worked out for me. One thing that I did was take a pay cut, but I am finding out that I didn't have to do that, or at least not as much. I have a BSEE with 5 years exp and that is worth money anywhere.
move along, nothing to
the Northern Virginia/DC area, is pretty cool. While not, say, California cool, it has:
3% unemployment.
While telecom has been nuked, the government sector is growing and defense contractors are hiring. (Can you say homeland security?)
You are halfway between the chesapeake bay and the Shenandoah mountains, so most people can find something (sailing, hiking, lazing at the beach, hanging out downtown) to do.
And, when bored, you can always go to the whitehouse and watch people protesting all manners of things.
I don't know, its okay down here. Housing is expensive by most standards, but still maybe half of NoCal standards.
good luck to you--peace and joy
--Pete
www.avacal.com -- the home page of pete shaw
Well have you considered New Jersey?
Don't believe the common image of the state as a toxic hellhole - that's just the view from NYC (from NYC, you look out onto Newark and Jersey City, so I can understand the confusion). Most of the state is gorgeous, and the real estate prices, while not nearly the deal that they are in some parts of the midwest, are sane.
There's plenty of work as you get closer to New York, especially if you're at all inclined to work in financial or biotech places. (The New Brunswick-Princeton corridor is good too)
As you get closer to Philadelphia, the places that are hiring techs tend more towards regional offices of large corporations. (It's also my impression that there's a good deal of embedded stuff that people aren't allowed to talk about going on in Burlington and Atlantic counties) If you don't mind suburbia, I keep hearing that the Rt. 202 corridor NW from Philadelphia is a reasonably warm tech spot. (And I suppose I should point you at the local job website that found me my job)
If you head further south, into Delaware, you get companies that are all feeding off of subsidiary businesses surrounding the great DuPont, (or weasel businesses playing shell games with Delaware's loose corporate laws) and sales-tax-free shopping too.
I understand that there's tech. stuff both further north and further south, but what I've heard about both the NC (Research Triangle) and Boston area job markets is not encouraging.
Why don't you try Europe? Italy, Spain, France are beautiful, and I bet you could find something to satisfy you.
A few pointers:
"It was a summer's tale: Just a boy, his Linux, and a head full of dreams..."
YEs, that is one of my more important criteria.
All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
Just ask Snake Plissken.
Good judgment comes from experience.
Experience comes from bad judgment.
Once you do this, and build the base and generate income than start to look at where you would most like to live, regardless of where it is (assuming it has the minimum telecommunications requirements you want).
If you want to live in a paradise, follow your heart. If the big city is what you want... go for it. The bottom line is become self motivated and innovate. Develop serious goals and follow through until you achieve them.
Becomming dependent on yourself gives you the ability to be independent and free to follow your dreams.
Aloha Nui Loa
Very interesting and tempting!
How do you get work visas in other countries such as Scotland and Australia?
I always thought that was a substantial issue in moving outside the US.
You really have to know someone to get into a job these days, so I'd suggest searching your midwest contacts.
Beyond that, Columbus, Ohio is a great place to work/live. Ohio State University is a great place to work, and they are always hiring. Besides that Naitionwide Insurance, Bank One, Verizon, and AEP are good places to start in Columbus. In Cincinnati, there are a couple of book places. GE is big in Cleveland. Better yet, find someone in CA that will let you telecommute. Nothing like a CA income and an Ohio cost of living.
This isn't the sig you are looking for... Carry on...
Well I have been to Kansas, which is in the midwest. You can get a really big house for 150-250k. Problem is you'll be lucky to make 30k, unless you work for a company in another state and telecommute.
I have lived in DC and Virginia. Your salary there would be better. Probably 60-90k depending on your skill level. Problem is that housing is more expensive than Kansas, and the commute is as bad as here.
I have lived in Florida, Boston, Lousiana, and several other places. There is always a tradoff no matter where you live. Truth is that the salary that you are making now, probably wont be what you would make somewhere else. It would probably be lower. So well housing would be lower, so would your salary and it all kinda balances it self out.
So what do you prefer? Earthquakes, stay in CA (Oh and they have earthquakes in Kentucky too, as well as NY, just not as often. [we are all waiting for the 'big one']). Floods, live near the Mississippi, or Texas, AZ, New Mexico, etc. Tornados, try the midwest like Kansas, Oaklahoma, 'tornado alley'. Snow? Then anywhere in the north.
After living in several different climates and visiting several different US climates, I find that I am happy'er here in CA. We have better restaurants IMHO then elsewhere and I like the climate. Yeah we have earthquakes, but look at the USGS and you'll find so do other parts of the country. When I was in New Hampshire, we had 2 small ones that shook the bed.
Only 'flamers' flame!
www.careerlink.org
Thousands of jobs in Eastern Nebraska, Western Iowa.
Move here, we'd love to have you.
Unless you can speak Chinese... Or enjoy being surrounded by a multitude of non-English speaking immigrants.
n/t
There's still tons of tech jobs up in Canada, Nortel, SAlcatel and JDS Uniphase notwithstanding.
I own a small computer shop in Cambridge Bay, NWT, (or is it Nunavut now...) and I'm hiring!
Extensive knowledge of DOS 3.1 and Commodore Basic required. Must be able to supply your own 5.25" floppies.
I know you're posting as an AC, but I have questions to ask. Please message me.
Life is tough. It's tougher if you're stupid. --John Wayne
The visa process usually requires that you be sponsored by a company already there. The best place to start would be the embassy for whichever country you are looking at.
"We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"