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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?"

142 comments

  1. "I want to move midwest" by Drakon · · Score: 0

    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 :-)

    1. Re:"I want to move midwest" by jason_watkins · · Score: 2, Funny

      yeah, all I gotta say is if he wants to live in the midwest, thank god it means he won't come up here to the northwest and increase my competition :P.

    2. Re:"I want to move midwest" by xWeston · · Score: 1

      A lot of california is fairly conserivative.

      I've been hannitizing san diego by listening to loud talk radio in my car.

      DRAKON YOU SPIN!! (Oreilly)

    3. Re:"I want to move midwest" by eht · · Score: 0

      A Blest Liberal State is a good thing? It's one of the many reason's I moved out of Massachusetts and would never go to California or Canada.

    4. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Plus "earthquakes."

      I live in California. Earthquakes aren't bad. At least if something happens and your house is destroyed, it will all be in a nice neat little pile. (Well minus a fire, but there are precautions for that too).

      Let's see. Move Midwest, you have Tornados. Now everything you own is scattered over 2 miles.

      Gulf States and East Coast? Hurricanes and tsunamis.

      Northeast? Fucking crazy blizzards!
      Northwest? Volcanoes!

      Hell, anywhere on earth? Possibility of a meteor strikes or lighting strikes or any other series of natural disasters.

      While I could understand your reasons for wanting to get out of California, citing a natural disaster doesn't seem to be the most wise decision.

    5. Re:"I want to move midwest" by xWeston · · Score: 1

      I've lived in california for 18 years and never felt an earthquake.
      I live in san diego which is quite near the san andreas fault line. In fact, i dont know anybody that has sufferred earthquake damage (maybe some cement cracking from minor things, but nothing very destructive). I know it happens but it is just VERY uncommon

      I'd never want to experience a tornadoe!

    6. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I've lived in the midwest for 43 years, and I've never seen a tornado.

      As a matter of fact, my mother once saw a tornado about 10-20 miles from our house, and it never touched down, so it didn't cause any damage at all.

      That's been the entire experience of everyone I know with regards to tornados.

      I guess we all fear what we don't understand.

    7. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Cpt_Kirks · · Score: 2

      You forgot the New Madrid Fault (Southeast Missouri and surrounding areas). It rivals the San Adreas(sp). Plus tornados.

      However, we are hiring (in Memphis). You gotta know Progress, though. If you have to ask "Progress who", then just move along. And forget those left coast wages.

    8. Re:"I want to move midwest" by El+MariachI+III · · Score: 1

      Ok im a geology major and frankly you are correct. You will die soon simply by virtue of the fact you live in the most tectonically active region in the entire continental United States. However, you could move to the midwest, or north west (ie, Montana or Idaho) where the cost of living is cheap and very good. If you are that good at what you do, which is working with computers, you can always take a pay cut in exchange for the freedom to work where you want. You may even be able to retain your exact job. If you still do the work, then they will be happy to give you less money and let you live elsewhere. A happy worker is a good worker, wait we are not in Japan are we, we don't sing the corporate anthem since the zygote stage, but you can sing hyms of wide open spaces and purple mountain majesties in Montana. Even 50 or 60 g's goes a long way in the 'Last Best Place.' meanderings ElM

    9. Re:"I want to move midwest" by perljon · · Score: 2

      I used to live in a trailer park, and I saw one about once a week. I'm kind of a regular on the local news circuits.

      --
      This isn't the sig you are looking for... Carry on...
    10. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Never thought I would see Canada equated with California on the political spectrum, to the RIGHT of Massachusetts, no less. This means we're seriously fucked if those Alliance Nazis ever get in!

    11. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Black+Rabbit · · Score: 1

      I'll take a "fucking crazy blizzard" over a tornado or earthquake anyday. It's good for the ski resorts and I have four wheel drive anyway. Blizzards don't kill people in the direct sort of way as a tornado or earthquake.

      Right now, three days before Christmas, with a temperature of 2 degrees, increasingly larger green patches everywhere, there not being much snow to start with, I kinda wish a fucking crazy blizzard would happen, in a Bing Crosby sort of way.

    12. Re:"I want to move midwest" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd take my chances with a tornado rolling through town over an earthquake ANY DAY. The tornado will decimate a path, but the earthquake will mess up the town, the surrounding area for quite a while. An earthquake insurance is ridiculously expensive.

  2. Talk to Konstantinos by bitty · · Score: 2, Informative

    Hey Konstantinos, why don't you start up a software firm in Nebraska and give this guy a job?

    1. Re:Talk to Konstantinos by Konstantinos · · Score: 1

      That's a good idea, I might do that if I fail in Athens.
      What's more, I'll take you too as well. I'm sure that
      with such a witty spirit you could be perfect for
      the CEO in my company...

  3. Telecommuting? by Tuxinatorium · · Score: 2

    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.

  4. Kalifornia by kasper37 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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.

  5. You might be able to find a decent job... but by LWolenczak · · Score: 3, Informative

    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.

    1. Re:You might be able to find a decent job... but by Zeio · · Score: 2
      If you knew how to spell Nevada it might not be so hard to find work. [as well as existent, coming, and learn to use you're instead of your and use 'it's' correctly].

      I may be in the technology field. I may push bits instead of a pencil, but communication skills are essential.

      Now to address anyone with a job right now and what they should do. In my assessment my opinion is 'milk the cow until it dies' unless a guaranteed opportunity comes directly to you for more money in a less expensive location with a company with a very attractive balance sheet. California is difficult, but so is taking a regression in salary. I do believe California will have a severe problem with dealing with the twenty to thirty billion dollar state deficit without raising already alarmingly high state income and sales tax.

      I would also like to point out that the dot com bust is an all too convenient scapegoat for the current situation in America (rising unemployment, deflation in wages in certain markets, deficits in state and federal government due to massive capital gain revenue being lost coupled with increased spending in reaction to sudden new 'needs' in national security, etc). Surprisingly, the economy is still growing, just more slowly when compared to they was it was. Politics and the stock market somehow get coalesced in with 'the economy.' Oversimplification is a dangerous tool the masses use upon themselves. Your gloom and doom is a reflection of your confidence, and whatever the source of self deprecation, it tends to have a pronounced effect on nations as a whole, but it's not enough to snuff out entrepreneurial, scientific or philanthropic spirit (thank goodness).

      Failure can be a self fulfilling prophecy. The founder of Dunkin' Donuts made his first fortune in the great depression.

      (article linked to above blockquoted, slow link>

      Last updated at: (Beijing Time) Thursday, November 28, 2002
      Fed Report Says US Economy Growing Slowly The US economy is growing slowly but business conditions are patchy and the jobs market is soft, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) said in a report Wednesday.
      The US economy is growing slowly but business conditions are patchy and the jobs market is soft, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) said in a report Wednesday. "Economic activity grew slowly, on balance, in late October and early November," said the report known as the "Beige Book" for the color of its cover. It said that buying activity continued into mid-November with six of the Fed's regional bank districts reporting improvement in general merchandise sales despite the fact that auto sales were down across the country. "Service industry activity was generally sluggish," the report said. Manufacturing remained soft in most districts and business investment was limited. "Most Reserve banks reported nearly steady prices at both the consumer and producer levels, with the exception of shipping charges, which have risen in the wake of the West Coast port disruptions." The report will be used by Fed policy-makers when they meet on Dec. 10 to consider whether to cut interest rates again to spur the US economy. With a string of stronger-than-expected economic reports, many economists believe the US Fed will leave its target for overnight bank lending unchanged at a 41-year low of 1.25 percent. The Fed cut the federal funds rate by a half percentage point at its last meeting on Nov. 6.

      --
      Legalize the constitution. Think for yourself question authority.
    2. Re:You might be able to find a decent job... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I used to troll people who made spelling and grammatical errors. Now, thanks to Trolling University, I troll people who troll people at +2 who made spelling and grammatical errors." --unsolicited Trolling University testimonial

      Now to address anyone with a job right now and what they should do.

      You are missing a comma after "Now". It would also be much more preferable to end the sentence with a colon.

      In my assessment my opinion is 'milk the cow until it dies' unless a guaranteed opportunity comes directly to you for more money in a less expensive location with a company with a very attractive balance sheet.

      "In my assessment my opinion," doesn't make any sense. Isn't an assessment an opinion? If you want to continue with this, you should at least put in a comma after, "my opinion is," "until it dies," and it's bad form to use single quotation marks where double quotation marks should be placed. I would also suggest shortening this run-on sentence for the sake of clarity.

      California is difficult, but so is taking a regression in salary.

      Perhaps living in California is difficult, but California itself is not difficult. I'm not entirely pleased with the use of the word regression in this sentence, but I'll let it pass.

      I do believe California will have a severe problem with dealing with the twenty to thirty billion dollar state deficit without raising already alarmingly high state income and sales tax.

      Replace, "problem with dealing with," with, "problem in dealing with."

      I would also like to point out that the dot com bust is an all too convenient scapegoat for the current situation in America (rising unemployment, deflation in wages in certain markets, deficits in state and federal government due to massive capital gain revenue being lost coupled with increased spending in reaction to sudden new 'needs' in national security, etc).

      I would strongly suggest putting, "the dot com bust," in quotation marks (a style choice). Replace, "deflation in wages in," with, "wage deflation in," to make the sentence a little less wordy. Add a comma between, "revenue being lost," and, "coupled with increased spending." Again, the use of single quotes are a poor style choice, replace them with double quotes around the word, "needs."

      Surprisingly, the economy is still growing, just more slowly when compared to they was it was.

      The grammar in the above sentence is atrocious! I expect better from a +2 troll. Replace, "when compared to they was it was," with, "when compared to the way it was."

      Politics and the stock market somehow get coalesced in with 'the economy.'

      Improper usage or improper conjugation of the word, "coalesce." What exactly are you trying to say with this sentence?

      Oversimplification is a dangerous tool the masses use upon themselves.

      There's nothing wrong with this sentence grammatically, I just think you're oversimplifying oversimplification by "the masses."

      Your gloom and doom is a reflection of your confidence, and whatever the source of self deprecation, it tends to have a pronounced effect on nations as a whole, but it's not enough to snuff out entrepreneurial, scientific or philanthropic spirit (thank goodness).

      Is "doom and gloom" really self-deprecation? Note that I have hyphenated self-deprecation, as you should have done in the above sentence.

      I fear that my flame-thrower is running out of gas, fortunately you're almost out of words. I will leave the last sentence of your content as a homework assignment. Can you guess what's wrong with it?

      Mod me down and I shall become more trollish than you can possibly imagine!

    3. Re:You might be able to find a decent job... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This being done as AC doesn't count. What also makes me enjoy this even more is that I started by pointing out there seemed to be rather large problems with the original poster's ability to communicate. You have seemingly taken up my cause to point out picayune minutiae. Word order, punctuation and choice omissions of articles of speech which can be implied by context (smart people can often fill in the blanks) do not make for an embarrassing piece of writing. Misspelling things in ways third graders couldn't dream up is rather egregious, especially when one is seeking employment. Anyway, the preamble to the post was a brief tease. The crap that the parent troll poster pasted up here is in and of itself useless, you have no message. There is no 1-UP, there no victory. Just a sniveling fool curled up like a rape victim grasping at straws in a feeble, ineffective attempt to tarnish me.

      There are a few clarity errors, but the idea is conveyed rather clearly. Even with colloquial shortcuts, at least taking the time not to spell things improperly is not nearly as glaring as misspelling state names.

      Now, to address and 'now to address' have been found in the wild in both forms. Because I don't live in a cave and don't mind understanding adaptations in language, it's unnecessary to add extraneous punctuation to make things clear. Ancient Hebrew, for example, doesn't have vowels. I'm sure they added them for simpletons such as yourself. The colon is purely optional.

      Assessments being opinions is fine. My assessment of this situations rendered into a opinion. I would not be so bold as to state things as facts without proper research. Actually, I used assessment incorrectly by definition, as it means appraisal and has its roots in fiscal issues. Most people can pick up on the meaning. I would not like to represent my appraisal of the situation as fact. Your request to use double quotations is denied. And the sentence is rather clear. While following trains of thought that aren't broken down into baby sized bites may be hard for you, most literates have no problems parsing that sentence.

      Living, working, everything, it's an implied meaning. There is a theme that you chose to break to troll. You see, you have nothing to say so now you look for me to clarify things implied by theme. It's unfortunate there are those who are incapable of deriving the proper meaning of things. About regression, it used correctly, your fucking retard. [regression - 4: returning to a former state]

      Your complaint about the multibillion dollar tax usage sentence does not add clarity or change meaning. Your complaint is denied.

      Dot com bust will not be put into quotes. Your stylistic suggestions are rejected due to the fact that in implementing your proposed changes the sentence meaning and clarity do not change and possibly gets worse. Double quotes are best used in my estimation to show what people have said. I think using single quotes where possible helps to clean up. Quotes in general are usually extraneous.

      Grammar? I have heard that sentence used verbatim in conversation. There was a misplaced they , should be the. And the flow of ideas is clear: 1 - surprise!. 2 - The economy is still growing. 3 - It's just growing more slowly. Now, Gerber baby boy, these bite sized ideas may be easier to read. I content that the glue and junctions in English never make it clear or provide a singular approach to transitioning thoughts or to separating thoughts. I do find your post amusing.

      Also, the sentence is a clear statement of the following - political and stock market analyst agendas tend to drag the perception of the economy down with it. Ability to recognize meanings in context and critical thinking skills required, sorry.

      Should I replace the masses with plebian, perhaps proletariat? I know people such as yourself that identify themselves as such like to be labeled with more pleasant sounding terms than masses or mediocritomatons.

      Gloom and doom is coming from those without confidence. Having no confidence is probably a side effect of self-deprecation, something wildly popular in the western world right now.

      Now as far as that flame thrower goes I rather much enjoy the attention I'm getting. Care to take up any more space on Slashdot's server's acting like a cretin?

  6. Move North. by Trusty+Penfold · · Score: 2, Informative


    There's loads of software jobs in the Seattle area.

    1. Re:Move North. by itwerx · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yeah, and even bigger loads of unemployed programmers trampling down the door to get at them!
      Friend of mine just got hired for a position which received over 800 applicants in less than a month! (They threw up their hands at the deluge and went the word-of-mouth route).
      Another position I know of recently was very low paying kind of boring crappy little job at a non-profit org. and it got over a hundred resumes before it was even officially available! (At least they saved their advertising $. :)
      Not to mention, if you actually bother to read the business section of the news, Seattle has the highest unemployment rate for the tech sector in the whole damn country!
      So if you have a job you specifically want to offer the guy, go for it, but don't be leading him on...

    2. Re:Move North. by Eagle7 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      There are huge fucking spiders in Seattle. That sucks.

      --
      _sig_ is away
  7. Oh, that reminds me.... by LWolenczak · · Score: 2

    Could somebody put up the sign on the state lines with CA that say "There is no Escape... Turn back Now". tehehehehe

    1. Re:Oh, that reminds me.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you look closely, at the border there is a cardboard box so you can turn in your sunglasses for recycling.

  8. No! by wdr1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    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
    1. Re:No! by toast0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I think that would actually be a large hidden benefit of telecomuting with software engineering.

      Since you can't glean info from the coworkers in the hall, you'll probably get it from them in writing, and if its in writing, it can be in the documentation, and if you put it in the documentation, then everybody knows.

    2. Re:No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *LOL* You are funny! Do you think Software Engineers want to *SHARE* knowledge? HELL NO! they want to hoarde it to themselves to create job security!

    3. Re:No! by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      That's a plausible theory. If writing documentation were as easy as talking to the guy at the next desk, your theory would even be true.

      Alas, when writing, you have to guess every question anybody would ask, and then guess at what their experience and knowledge is, so that you can then guess at the right answer. And even if you guess right three times in a row, writing good docs takes much longer than chatting in the hall.

      Human conversation has massive bandwidth and low latency. Really good documentation can be a close second. But most people write shitty documentation.

      (Note to lame programmers: the fact that documentation sucks isn't a reason to write crappy code. As Martin Fowler says, "Any fool can write code that a computer can understand. Good programmers write code that a human can understand.")

    4. Re:No! by aminorex · · Score: 2

      I've been telecommuting for 14 years, and with the
      exception of my stint at Sun Microsystems, I found
      it a much superior arrangement. It works best when
      everyone is telecommuting. I can't understand how
      anyone can do useful work in a cube. It takes me
      30 minutes to get started on a substantial piece
      of code, old or new, and if my train of thought is
      interrupted during that time, I have to restart
      the clock.

      In a 100% telecommuting environment, the result is
      superior documentation, superior process and
      coordination, and superior individual productivity.
      Of course you have to cull the dead weight much
      more quickly, but it also becomes very obvious
      much more quickly who is contributing and who is
      not.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    5. Re:No! by aminorex · · Score: 2

      You can get almost all of that bandwidth in a phone
      call. "Tele"-commuting means "tele"-communications.
      Whiteboarding is good too.

      If someone is not producing good documentation, they
      are a long-term drain on the organization and should
      be dumped. Just a rule of thumb, of course, but
      an important one.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:No! by dubl-u · · Score: 2

      You can get almost all of that bandwidth in a phone call. "Tele"-commuting means tele"-communications. Whiteboarding is good too.

      Some, perhaps. But nothing close to all.

      I work in the style of various Agile methods, including the unfortunately named Extreme Programming. This involves close team development.

      One great benefit is intentional communication. Turning to the guy at the next desk to ask a question is still an order of magnitude easier than even the shiniest phone. And the bandwidth is still a lot higher; on the phone you lose expression and posture, to say nothing of the ability to hand you something.

      But just as important is the unintentional communication. If the pair next to me is having trouble with something that I know about, then I can just pipe up. If I'm making a decision that affects them, they can put their two cents in without me having to call a meeting.

      Sitting in the same room with my team gives me a great deal of information about the state of the project for free. Getting the same info by telephone or email is much, much harder.

      If someone is not producing good documentation, they are a long-term drain on the organization and should be dumped. Just a rule of thumb, of course, but an important one.

      Alternatively, perhaps it's the organization that develops in a way that requires a lot of paperwork that is a long-term drain and should be dumped.

      Documentation is a method of communication. We communicate so we can develop with speed and accuracy. But documentation isn't the only way to do that, or even the best one.

      When documentation is necessary, I use it. (And as a published writer, I even think it's fun.) But it's never my first choice.

    7. Re:No! by swillden · · Score: 2

      Sitting in the same room with my team gives me a great deal of information about the state of the project for free. Getting the same info by telephone or email is much, much harder.

      It's not that bad, and I speak as someone who develops software with a distributed team (all of us work from home).

      Some things we do: Heavy use of instant messaging and the telephone. As far as IM goes, we generally have a full-team chat open all day long, every day (right now the project I'm working on is a two-man job, so "full-team chat" is the same as "conversation"). Phones with headsets allow us to have constant voice communication when we want as well. It's not unheard of to set up a dedicated conference call number which everyone is dialed into all day long, mostly just transmitting keyclicks. More normal, though, is to use IM unless higher bandwidth is required.

      We don't use netmeeting stuff, really, although we probably should look into it. And as far as being able to hand someone something, well, the goal is to make sure everybody has all of the equipment they need and everything else is just bits on the wire.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    8. Re:No! by dubl-u · · Score: 2
      Sitting in the same room with my team gives me a great deal of information about the state of the project for free. Getting the same info by telephone or email is much, much harder.
      It's not that bad, and I speak as someone who develops software with a distributed team (all of us work from home).

      I've done both, and I agree it's possible to develop in a distributed way. But working apart, you only get information on what people choose to say.

      In person, you get a lot of valuable information that people don't say. An IM that says "Sure, I'll meet the delivery date," is one thing; being able to watch their eyes when they say it is another. To say nothing of being able to tell whether the guy who hasn't said anything in a while is working hard or just in a panic.

      well, the goal is to make sure everybody has all of the equipment they need and everything else is just bits on the wire.

      It's a good goal, but converting to bits is hard. And until we all get jacks in the backs of our skulls; some things just won't convert. For example, having a bunch of people doing joint design by moving around CRC cards has a compelling presence that a screen and a mouse just can't match.

      So again, I agree that you can develop that way when you have to. But physical presence (and its incrased bandwidth) makes it possible to go faster.
    9. Re:No! by swillden · · Score: 2

      So again, I agree that you can develop that way when you have to. But physical presence (and its incrased bandwidth) makes it possible to go faster.

      I think it depends on the team more than anything. We don't have any problems with what people choose not to say; but that comes from trust built by experience, which may not always be the case. It also comes about because I'm the project manager but I'm also a very good developer, which means that it's very difficult to BS me.

      To say nothing of being able to tell whether the guy who hasn't said anything in a while is working hard or just in a panic.

      This is a good example: We tend to verbalize every minor success or obstacle, so there's no question -- the guy who's silent isn't working.

      For example, having a bunch of people doing joint design by moving around CRC cards has a compelling presence that a screen and a mouse just can't match.

      True. There are downsides. But not having to spend two hours a day commuting and being able to live wherever you want makes most of us willing to go the extra mile and find ways around them. I work more hours when telecommuting than I would otherwise, in part to overcome some of the obstacles you mention, but my quality of life is better for it.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
  9. Try Provo by T-Ranger · · Score: 3, Informative

    novell is looking for an experienced software engineer.

    1. Re:Try Provo by LWATCDR · · Score: 2

      Provo is NOT a Cheap place to live.
      Also it is about 90% LDS. That is both good and bad. I am LDS but I just do not want to live anywhere that is 90% one religion. Even if it is my own.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  10. Stay away by Wonko42 · · Score: 4, Funny

    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.

    1. Re:Stay away by SmashPDX · · Score: 1
      This got modded as "funny?" HE WASN'T KIDDING. The job market here is flatter than a two-by-four. Hell, it's concave. There is NOTHING here. A whopping five-and-a-half columns in the want ads on Sunday. *Nothing* on Monster. It is DEAD here and it is NOT funny. It's downright pitiful. And if you find a job, count on having your salary slashed to entry-level wages or as close to it as they can shove you. Folks are really getting desperate up here.

      And god forbid you work(ed) as a Network Engineer... I've given up... so sick of it I bought these domain names last night... itisdead.com... nojobsinoregon.com... notechinoregon.com... oregonhasnojobs.com... theeconomysucks.com. I figured folks stuck here
      needed a vent. Maybe someone in this state might even take the problem seriously (ya right).

      Oregon is getting hit hard... but Oregon IT is getting outright slammed. I don't want to know what the industry unemployment rate is in this state. Too depressing.

      /End laid-off-too-many-times-to-count, yeah-I-know-how-to-use-Windows-after-13-years-in-t he-biz, no-senior-engineers-don't-have-to-be-certified-to- fix-printer-jams rant-rant-rant :(

  11. Tornado... by *xpenguin* · · Score: 2, Funny

    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.

    1. Re:Tornado... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

      At least he can go to Oz.

      --
      Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
  12. DC Metro Area by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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!

    1. Re:DC Metro Area by xWeston · · Score: 2, Informative

      Are you joking? i went to the east coast (specifically maryland) for the first time ever and the houses were MUCH cheaper than they are where i live. The houses being built around mine (i live in a 1000 sqft condo/duplex that is worth $300k) are averaging in price at about $800k with the low end starting at about $600k.
      The high end TRACK HOUSING goes for about $1.5million. I live in north county san diego, it isnt cheap.

      In maryland i saw houses as large as these 1.5million dollar ones for around $500k or less.

    2. Re:DC Metro Area by MacAndrew · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Houses here in No. VA are outrageous by normal-world standards. A modest house in Arlington costs what a farm would ten miles out, and a palace in the South or Midwest. Meanwhile, prices in No. CA are other-worldly. I mean, using California housing prices as a basis of comparison would be like starting with Hitler as your standard of compassion.

      Median prices in Arlington have risen roughly 50% in 5 years -- a bit of sticker shock.

      To the poster: There are many many mini Silicon-Whatevers around the country, including here. Things have slowed down with the economy, of course.

      I grew up in California, N and S, and think it's a great state. But I have no question my standard of living (except weather) is better here. Anyway I like snow, damn it, and my mentality is much more East Coast than West.

    3. Re:DC Metro Area by unitron · · Score: 2

      That's tract housing, not track housing (unless you live in a private rail car like James West and Artemus Gordon :-)

      --

      I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.

    4. Re:DC Metro Area by xWeston · · Score: 1

      Yea thats how it is instead of buying a new house people just roll them around. It's really nice but it takes forever to go anywhere. The traffic is so bad especially with the big homes nowadays

  13. Send me a resume! by Llama+Keeper · · Score: 3, Informative

    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
  14. Read this... by burnsy · · Score: 5, Informative
    According to this study, Movin' Out: Domestic Migration to and from California in the 1990s, California has had a net outflow every year in the 1990s.

    The top states for Californians to move to were:

    Washington - 534,000
    Texas - 523,000
    Arizona - 449,000
    Oregon - 374,000
    Neveda - 320,000

    1. Re:Read this... by anthony_dipierro · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I was gonna say, lots of techs in Texas, if you can deal with the po lice.

    2. Re:Read this... by ByteHog · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Damn californians!! stay out of washington!! no more room for you all!! :) (joking!!!!!)

      seriously though, a lot of seattlites moving to spokane/northeast WA to get away from the californians coming to seattleish area...

      --
      - This isn't the sig you're looking for. Move along, move along..
    3. Re:Read this... by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 1
      Damn californians!! stay out of washington!! no more room for you all!! :) (joking!!!!!)

      Heh, fine by us in Oregon. We really are full. 8:o)

      Seriously, if you want to to hear a 20 minute speech on every last bit of unilaterlally Californian politics that Oregon's taken splash-damage for, spend most of your time in the rain, get bitched at for driving instead of taking TriMet, and rust in traffic waiting for dozens of weekly protests and advocacy parties, and spend it unemployed, then move to Oregon.

      For the rest of you, there's Seattle, though they'll bitch about yet another Californian moving there, too.

      If you don't want to get bitched at for moving in from California, move to anywhere but the Pacific Northwest. California's not been a good neighbor to us, and it'll save yourself the trouble and the earful to go someplace else. Native northwesterners tend to get hiring priority anyway.

      --
      Help us build a better map!
    4. Re:Read this... by AIXadmin · · Score: 2

      My only problem with this is if everyone was leaving in 90's. Then who is moving into all those damn houses paid for by Cisco stock options?

    5. Re:Read this... by shemnon · · Score: 3, Funny

      Urban legend speaks of a sign on the California/Oregon Border on a major interstate. The sign is one of those "Welcome to our state" signs that read "Oregon, a great place to visit."

      On the back of the sign was a hand written addendum: "Don't forget to leave"

      --
      --Shemnon
    6. Re:Read this... by ecampbel · · Score: 2

      If you add in the number of new foreign immigrants over the past decade, California has had a net inflow or at least its population has stayed consistent. Furthermore, the results of the latest census gave California more representation in the House, which means that the state has larger percentage of the U.S's population than it had in 1990. Finally, if you look at the paper, it shows that the people leaving California are among the least educated, and those moving in are among the most. As a Californian, I say good riddance.

      From the study:

      Estimates of the net outflow vary substantially (see the text box, "Measuring Domestic Migration" on page 4). Despite the outflow of domestic migrants, California's population continued to grow during the 1990s through international immigration and natural increase. Although growth rates were substantially lower than in the 1980s, between 1990 and 1999 the state's population increased by 3.3 million people according to the Census Bureau and by 4.2 million people according to the California Department of Finance. According to the Census Bureau, the net inflow of 2.2 million international immigrants was offset by the net outflow of 2.2 million domestic migrants. Estimates by the California Department of Finance imply a much lower net outflow of about 1.2 million domestic migrants.

      --

      Sig goes here
  15. Re:In Soviet Russia... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Soviet Russia... dead horse beats you.

  16. I'd trade with ya by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  17. Thats funny... by tolldog · · Score: 2

    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?
  18. Portland to Idaho by Will_Malverson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:Portland to Idaho by Naikrovek · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Finally, if you're unhappy, move. You only live once.

      Oh, dude I so agree with that statement. I grew up in Illinois, did short work stints in San Antonio, Texas, and Denver, Colorado. Then I moved again to Anchorage, Alaska, then Kansas City, then back to Anchorage, then small towns in Missouri, and now I'm in Sydney, Australia.

      Man, life is far too short to just dream of other places, you have to take the initiative and go there.

      I'm also trying to get a job in the US, but when I've had my fill of that place, I'm going to Scotland. That's highest right now on my places-i -want-to-go list, and there is no way in hell I'm not going.

      My advice is to move where you want to be, then find a job there. Or, find a job where you want to move, then move there. But don't find a job you like then move to wherever it is, you'll never like where you go because you were made to go there.

      Do what you love, live where you want, do what you like, and the money will come to you, that's my experience, anyway.

      -Naikrovek

  19. duuude!!! by Polo · · Score: 2
    Or you could...

    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...

  20. Utah by flikx · · Score: 4, Informative

    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.
    1. Re:Utah by mithras+the+prophet · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but Utah is like 99.9998% white people.

      After living in New York City and southern California, being around all white people makes me feel uncomfortable.

      And yes, I'm white.

      --
      four nine eighteen twenty-7 thirty-nine forty-7 fiftyeight sixty-nine seventy-9 eighty-8 one-hundred-and-nine one-twenty
    2. Re:Utah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Then go back there. What makes it uncomfortable? I find it refreshing to go to a place where the schools expect the students to perform and don't water it down so all the different ethnic groups have the same graduation rate. That and the fast food places are actually fast.

    3. Re:Utah by kzeddy · · Score: 1

      Trent Lott is that you !!!!!

    4. Re:Utah by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2

      Yeah, I know what you mean. Every time I've upgraded my housing, the neighborhood I moved to was more white. I like white professional people just fine (I am one), but I really enjoyed the (age, national-origin, career) diversity in the apartments I lived in 10-15 years ago.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    5. Re:Utah by swillden · · Score: 2
      Unfortunately, Utah is getting to be so popular as a place to live, that it's less and less of a great place to live. The influx of Californians, in particular, has driven up housing prices, caused lots of open spaces to be filled in with ever-expanding suburbia and overcrowded our highways (I-15 is mostly okay right now, what with all the pre-Olympics expansion work, but all of that work *only* made it okay again, and more people are coming).

      Not that I have anything against the Californians (and others) coming here; it's a free country (more or less) and I can certainly understand the attraction.

      Still, that's why Utahns like me are eyeing Idaho, Wyoming and Montana. And this time I'm not getting anything smaller than 40 acres -- not gonna have my view cluttered up with houses again. Bonus points for any place where my kids can shoot their .22s in the back yard.

      No doubt there are going to be some Idahoans complaining about the influx of Utahns...

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    6. Re:Utah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, not only are they white. They're squeaky-clean religious white. It can be a bit eerie.

  21. What's wrong with this man??? by chunkwhite86 · · Score: 1, Troll

    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.
    1. Re:What's wrong with this man??? by mhesseltine · · Score: 2

      Have you been to any modestly large cities in the Midwest? I'm not talking about Chicago, IL, Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN, or Indianpolis,IN. I'm talking about cities like Madison, WI, Rockford, IL, or Des Moines, IA.

      Most of these cities score reasonably high on quality of living surveys and are hardly "white-trash wastelands". Take a week and visit before going off on a stereotype.

      --
      Overrated / Underrated : Moderation :: Anonymous Coward : Posting
    2. Re:What's wrong with this man??? by dbCooper0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Ya well, I'm from Michigan, and I resent your rant.
      If you can find Soviet Russia, please go there or where it used to be, and take Rush Limbaugh with you, moron.

      --
      db
      Cig:
      ôô
      /`
    3. Re:What's wrong with this man??? by j-turkey · · Score: 2
      Most of these cities score reasonably high on quality of living surveys

      Yep -- they're pretty nice places to live. (Chicago is also a very livable city)...but have you ever tried living in a Madison, WI winter? Think about how it'll fly for a Californian. Far, far too cold.

      --Turkey
      --

      -Turkey

    4. Re:What's wrong with this man??? by Taos · · Score: 1

      As someone who has gone into debt just trying to get out of a moderately sized city in the midwest (Kansas City), I would rather take a bullet to the forehead than live in Des Moines.

      Rich

    5. Re:What's wrong with this man??? by sporktoast · · Score: 2

      Didn't Columbus, Ohio just top BET's list of best cities for African Americans? Several other midwestern cities made it in the top 20 as well.

      --
      In a related story, the IRS has recently ruled that the cost of Windows upgrades can NOT be deducted as a gambling loss.
  22. Are you sure about massive pay cuts? by nelsonal · · Score: 4, Interesting

    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.
  23. Amen brother... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm pretty much just waiting for the earthquake to hit and wipe it out.

  24. It's -not- what you do, it's -how-much- you pay... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >>>>>> Is there any escape from California?

    >> 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 /.ers from that part of the country...? ...unless you -like- living in a small, clean & aestetically pleasing city.

    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"?!?

  25. I came back down from Seattle for work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I did the rabbit up to Seattle in March 2001, 9/11 hit after I had myself a nice relaxing stint on the beach including a pleasure trip to NYC and that now famous observation deck.

    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.

  26. Michigan Job! by pheonix · · Score: 3, Funny

    If you are considering a move to the greater Detroit area in Michigan... I hear my job is opening up soon.

  27. Check this out... by xagon7 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    www.computerjobs.com

    Good place to start looking, seems Texas has a shit load of opportunity ;)

  28. Chicago. by frotty · · Score: 1

    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.
    1. Re:Chicago. by SmashPDX · · Score: 1
      I think "Your Mileage May Vary" applies, and with that said here's my two cents. Opinions will obviously vary-- this is just mine.

      Chicago is also one of the most unfriendly, anti-intellectual, angry, boorish places on the planet. I was plenty happy to leave my hometown (Chicago) and not look back six and a half years ago... and when I finally got around to visiting in July to pick up some good food (one of the place's few redeeming qualities) the people were as obnoxious and brusque as they ever had been.

      One improvement since I cleared out in '96 though: the term "web site" now can actually be uttered in casual conversation, say in a bar, without somebody walking up to you and telling you "I don't come here to talk about work so stop (expletive) talking about computers."

      You may find a job there, but don't expect your profession or your abilities to be even moderately respected, with the possible exception of working inside an IT-centric firm. This is the same city whose mayor, back in 1997 or 1998, said that they were going to prove that Chi could be a hi-tech center on par with Silicon Valley... by putting up an office building prewired for Internet access. Big brouhaha. Wow.

      Good luck. And stay away from Portland, OR. Great place but the job market is torched beyond recognition, which renders its niceness A-1 moot.

    2. Re:Chicago. by frotty · · Score: 1

      Woah!

      What neighborhood did you live in? The 'scenes' I frequent I'd deem overly intellectual (delving into the realm of pseudo-intellectual all too readily)... the opposite of angry: everyone has been everyone's best friend for the longest time... and uh, well, yeah, it is kinda boorish.

      I find Chicago to be tame, passive versus any other metropolises I've been to. Perhaps that's why certain people might seem extra obnoxious when contrasted by the 'distance'...

      Yeh, tho, I've had friends in full agreement of you. But if you back out and say you lived in a suburb (or the south or west sides) then tut tut on you, that's not 22nd Century Chicago.

      Anyway, the 'putting up an office building prewired for Internet Access' is, uh, a bit off - The company was Divine Interventures (RIP) and they were offered the internet-building at, like, a fraction of what a riverfront, totally hooked up building ought to cost. The plan essentially turned into the 'Schaumberg Boom' which pretty much nixed the property taxes and other city controlled sorta monies... check the radar and you'll find a spike in the amount of HQs sprouting up in the Chicagoland area.

      The Silicon Prairie is what it is - cheaper than the 'coasts', our No Coast boasts pseudo-urban styles, a little bit of everything.

      PS . . . I'm not a tech person and I want to get out, it's not the most social of cities that's for sure.

      --
      -- The truth is the only thing that nobody will believe.
    3. Re:Chicago. by SmashPDX · · Score: 1
      Howdy frotty!

      Let me first say that you absolutely have a brain, unlike a whole lot of the Chicagoans I left behind. :)

      I'm a native south-sider and spent a good deal of time living in the Lakeview area (about 4 miles north of downtown) in my adulthood. "Ah ain't one o' dem suburban-people!" :) I also spent a fair amount of time *outside* Chicago on the East Coast, and I currently live on the West Coast. I've got a taste for some different professional and intellectual climates.

      I don't count the south/west sides-- different dynamic altogether, as you alluded to-- my comments were actually based on my experiences as a member of the labor pool, as a Northsider, and (six years later) as a visitor. Blue collar town stuck with white collar jobs, still acting like a bunch of (sterotypical) steel and millworkers in terms of how they treat those around them. Pretty sad to see, actually, very sad. :(

      Up on the North side, I found thinking to be more... advanced (cough) but there was still a distinct marriage to the status quo that puts a whammy on any real intellectual movement. When I finally started asking around, before leaving, people in a *number* of professions all told me the same thing: East Coast, smart but a bit uptight and conservative. West Coast, smart and laid back. Midwest, freaked out by anything new and by the time they finally accepted something "new" it was passe in the rest of the US. Chi was no exception.

      IT is about innovation. Chicago is about things that are already there, and they hate innovation (enjoy the link). So I left.

      And strangely enough, I found plenty of (Chicago-food-missing) ex-Chicagoans saying the same thing. I'm clearly not alone in my observations.

      The item I mentioned about the prewired building was actually from some rather ridiculous speech that Daley gave... it's so far back that I haven't been able to Google it, but at the time it was so obnoxious that I showed it to quite a few of my hi-tech associates out here (Portland OR). They all just shook their heads in shame. I figured I had to let some other people read it to be sure I wasn't losing my mind and mistranslating...!

      I'll concede that there are areas where the people are nastier than in Chicago. But note that I never said Chicago was *the* nastiest, just that it's one of the top nasties (heh). It definitely has some good company, and some places just might devour Chitown outright.

      Anyway, I'm glad to hear that there's more going in IT space there than before... maybe they can civilize the place. :)

    4. Re:Chicago. by frotty · · Score: 1

      Yeh, it's all too obvious a bleached blue collar ethic here for the most part.

      Any good out of post-industrial leftovers (cheap big lofts, closely knit undercurrent) have been trampled on by the post-state-school "now i'm in the big city" land rush. I'd swear that someone is implementing an inflatable condo here.

      Lived in lakeview m'whole life, it's funny how you can wander around here and rarely see or hear people. Def' a wastelandish nightmare at times.

      Anyway, well met

      --
      -- The truth is the only thing that nobody will believe.
  29. I left California... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    ..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.

  30. I found the problem by DasBub · · Score: 1

    "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 >:-)

  31. Crack Whore Nevada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

    1. Re:Crack Whore Nevada by xWeston · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Actually tijauna is supposedly the meth capital of the world with san diego and El centro coming in for a close second

    2. Re:Crack Whore Nevada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Provide some links, you fucking lying goat!

  32. India by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's your solution: many IT firms are outsourcing their programming and parts of their operations to India. What could be better?

  33. Remote software dev by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    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.

  34. Portland is full by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 2, Funny

    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!
    1. Re:Portland is full by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I lived for years in Portland, wielding an umbrella...

      I think your problem is with unthinking people rather than umbrellas or anything else.

      And gawds are there tons of unthinking people in CA... They seem to come from the east, though.

      So they say, anyhow.

      I miss Portland.

    2. Re:Portland is full by Baloo+Ursidae · · Score: 1
      Not really. Umbrellas really are a nuisance in Portland. More than half the state's population lives within a 17 mile radius of the Burnside Bridge, there's no room for someone to be a dick carrying around a 3 to 6 foot wide umbrella around, especially in downtown. Fortunately, the natives realise this and get real raingear instead.

      This year has been pretty good, though: I've only seen three umbrellas. One being the bronze tourist statue on Pioneer Courthouse Square, another was someone with a small umbrella and jabbed someone in the eye near Fifth and Yamhill with one of the points, and another was someone getting off the MAX at Pioneer Place, who opened a huge golf umbrella the moment he cleared the doors (never mind it's a covered, almost indoor platform) and hit two people in the face doing so.

      So, out of three umbrellas this season, the only one not mishandling the damn thing was a bronze statue...

      --
      Help us build a better map!
  35. Not a bad way to find workers by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Not a bad way to find workers by Random+Hamster · · Score: 1

      But would you want Slashdot readers working for you?

    2. Re:Not a bad way to find workers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe, if you can get 'em to really work instead of reading Slashdot all day.

  36. Telecommuting can work by Trane+Francks · · Score: 2

    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.

    --
    ...a FreeDOS contributor: http://www.freedos.org/
  37. Can be done by AlecC · · Score: 2

    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.
  38. The view from here is pretty... by iq+in+binary · · Score: 1

    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 ;)
  39. In Soviet Russia... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

    ...jobs get YOU.

    --
    Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
  40. Midwest by moc.tfosorcimgllib · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Midwest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just to mention how Kansas is:

      Lawrence is basically a college town. If you can't work
      at the college, don't bother. However, it is close to
      Kansas City and seems like a better place to live.

      Kansas City appears to be the best place. Hopefully
      I will work there when I graduate.

      Wichita I really don't know about. However, there's a lot
      of manufacturers there (Boeing). Guess it can be decent.

      Topeka forget it unless you're an MCSE. Half the Sun boxes
      that exist in Topeka are located at my house (and that might
      be an understatement).

  41. Austin, TX by extra88 · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Austin, TX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Austin is now a digital dust bowl. Unemployment is rampant and techies are leaving in droves. Intel started a skyscraper downtown and then abandoned the project. Austin is returning to what it once was. A corrupt political town full of aging hippies.

      I used to live there but had to leave because the economy is that bad.

    2. Re:Austin, TX by Thu+Anon+Coward · · Score: 1

      I live in Austin. Please don't move here. We have enough damn people and like our quality of life.

      Besides, Dell just laid off another 3000 people. Nobody is hiring and nobody is quitting their jobs. Because of all you Californicators moving out here and outbidding all the locals when buying property ("Sure, I'll raise my bid $20,000-30,000") because of the excessive equity in your California home, the local taxing district has raised property values the maximum they can. And guess what? There is no maximum rate! (unless if you've declared Homestead and then it's 10%) So my $175,000 2500sqft home has gone up 10%/yr for the last 5 yrs due to the strong economy to now be worth $257,000! My annual property taxes are now $5200...and I'm not even being taxed at the maximum rate!

      AMD has laid off, IBM has laid off, Dell has laid off, Applied Materials has laid off, even the state agencies have been asked by the governor to find a way to trim 10% from the annual budget.

      So, once again, please stay away. We have enough homeless people begging for handouts on the street corners.

      --



      I'm good with numbers - .45, 7.62, 9.....
  42. Dont come to Toronto by mnmn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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
    1. Re:Dont come to Toronto by LordNimon · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I saw a chart in a magazine recently that showed that people without degrees are 4 times as likely to be unemployed than those with Master's degrees. I think it was something like 1.6% for having an MS, and like 6.something percent for those with only a highschool diploma.

      So yes, the lack of a degree is a big part of your problem.

      I have an MS and I'd like to live in Toronto. Maybe I can get your job?

      --
      And the men who hold high places must be the ones who start
      To mold a new reality... closer to the heart
    2. Re:Dont come to Toronto by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm employed here in Toronto and doing quite well .. mind you, I'm working for the gubm'int ... But when we're hiring you HAVE to have post secondary usually. No postsecondary, you're screened out at the first cut of candidates without a second look.

  43. Atlanta by DevilM · · Score: 2

    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.

    1. Re:Atlanta by med+dev · · Score: 1

      Nooooo. Don't do it!

      Two years here and my wife and I are heading back to Los Angeles. Here, if you lose your job, you can spend six months finding another one. In LA the headhunters are still cold-calling.

      Add in the fact that Atlanta is still living in the 1980s and there are almost no good sushi joints...

      --
      "Don't expel your beverage through your nostrils when the really rich demand the impossible. There's a fortune there for
    2. Re:Atlanta by Spock+the+Baptist · · Score: 2

      "Add in the fact that Atlanta is still living in the 1980s and there are almost no good sushi joints..."

      Atlanta--
      Don't just watch That 80's Show, live it!

      Sushi?
      What you don't like catfish?

      --
      "Oh drat these computers, they're so naughty and so complex, I could pinch them." --Marvin the Martian
    3. Re:Atlanta by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you consider good? California/Americanized style or traditional Japanese? You pretty much have to go to Japanese steakhouses for Sushi in Atlanta. I'd highly recommend Sushi Yoko, right near Tomato's Japanese grocer.

  44. In Scientology.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    curch joins you.

  45. i switched! by panker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    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 .sig here.
  46. consider Northern Virginia by peteshaw · · Score: 4, Informative

    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
    1. Re:consider Northern Virginia by DAldredge · · Score: 2

      Don't forget the DC area also has one of the highest crime rates in the USA.

  47. That other coast by fizbin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    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.

    1. Re:That other coast by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      Just to butress the above poster...the big hair went out in the 1980s and with the exception of the far northeastern corner next to NYC, no one has a squawky accent. Most of state's land is farms and forests.

    2. Re:That other coast by LazyBoy · · Score: 1
      Well have you considered New Jersey?
      Are you insane ?

      New Jersey is positively flooded with laid-off and bought-out telecom geeks looking for jobs. I know several people that have been out of work for over a year. People with experience and local contacts are lined up for any potential opening. I heard a story about 300 applications to teach an economics course at a local community college (because it's sort of technical).

      Also, parts of it are toxic hellholes and most of it is very expensive compared to most of the country.

      --

      If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.

  48. Does it have to be US? by Konstantinos · · Score: 1

    Why don't you try Europe? Italy, Spain, France are beautiful, and I bet you could find something to satisfy you.

    1. Re:Does it have to be US? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We already have enuff unemployed techie fellas round here in Europe mate, try china or korea instead :)
      Plus, come see house prices *anywhere* civilized in main EU countries and go back RUNNING to the US and stop complaining. You living cheap.

  49. I did what you're trying to do by gregwbrooks · · Score: 3, Informative
    Born and raised in CA, and managed to finally end up in the midwest (first Chicago, then Kansas City). Sold my rat-trap of a house for $145k (paid $180k, dammit -- AND it's now worth $310k!) in 1996, moved to Chicago, and never regretted it for an instant. By way of housing-price contrasts, I now live in a restored, painted-lady Victorian that I paid $144k for; if I wanted a similarly old/large/cool house in downtown Kansas City, I could have gotten it for about $250k -- both prices are (ahem) quite a bit less than the going CA rates.

    A few pointers:

    • Set your sights on the bigger metro areas. Sure, everyone wants to telecommute, but management's not going to put up with it for the most part. The big difference is that there is oh-so-cheap housing within driving/train distance in most of the Midwestern markets. On the other hand, if you go to a smaller, more-rural market, you're basically screwed when your job dries up. I'd stick to Chicago, Kansas City, Milwaukee and (maybe) Indianapolis if your heart is set on the midwest.
    • Going to Chicago? Live just over the state line in Indiana. Better tax situation, commuting options via car or train, and the housing is MUCH cheaper.
    • Check out the business journals. Most major cities (and certainly the ones I mentioned) have weekly business journals. Most of these, in turn, do an annual "book of lists" that ticks off contact info for things like "largest employers," "largest software developers," largest web design firms," etc. Very helpful.
    • Check in with the local user groups. Depending on what your field is, you can get a lot of info via e-mail by chatting up with local user groups.
    --


    "It was a summer's tale: Just a boy, his Linux, and a head full of dreams..."
  50. BUt can you get a decent beer??!? by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 2

    YEs, that is one of my more important criteria.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  51. Where to come to: East Coast by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 2
    Places of interest:
    • Washington DC Metro Area - Where I am. Lots of tech jobs, although some businesses are on the way out there is still low unemployment. We get a lot of government work out here. ^_^ w00t! Home of UUNET. Warning, half the jobs you want require a clearence, hope you kept your nose clean!!! Also the traffic is nearly as bad as Cali.
    • Central Jersey (Princeton, Somerset, Middlesex Counties) - A recently developed suburban area between Philly and NYC. There are a lot of pharmaceutical outfits there, newspapers, etc. There are a good number of tech jobs to be had. Housing prices are decent.
    • Atlanta - Don't know much about it except its cheaper there, and there's a number of technical jobs available.
    • Boston - Same thing goes as for Atlanta. More specifically, look into the area near Williamstown and North Adams. I understand is like a little Silicon Valley.
    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
    1. Re:Where to come to: East Coast by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      # Central Jersey (Princeton, Somerset, Middlesex Counties) - ... Housing prices are decent. And if you don't mind a bit of a commute, housing prices are excellent. An hour south of Princeton you can buy a nice house for $100k. Theres a lot of tech / bio jobs in the Princeton area, so its a great place to find a job, but its a bit expensive to live in the immediate area.

  52. Of course there is. by Dannon · · Score: 2

    Just ask Snake Plissken.

    --
    Good judgment comes from experience.
    Experience comes from bad judgment.
  53. If your self motivated... by MrIcee · · Score: 2
    If you are self motivated might I suggest you begin your own company. Base the company around internet communications as the primary means of finding / working with clients.

    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

  54. Re: Portland to other countries? by phamlen · · Score: 2

    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.

  55. Not so Bad by perljon · · Score: 2

    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...
  56. hahahaha by josepha48 · · Score: 2
    Yeah, I live in ca too.

    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!

  57. Look on local job sites by Shemp · · Score: 1

    www.careerlink.org
    Thousands of jobs in Eastern Nebraska, Western Iowa.
    Move here, we'd love to have you.

  58. Re:Dont come to Toronto... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unless you can speak Chinese... Or enjoy being surrounded by a multitude of non-English speaking immigrants.

  59. in Wyoming by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  60. Re:Move Further North. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's still tons of tech jobs up in Canada, Nortel, SAlcatel and JDS Uniphase notwithstanding.

  61. Re:Move Much Further North. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    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.

  62. OT: You're living my dream... by Sir+Network · · Score: 1

    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
  63. Re: Portland to other countries? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2

    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"