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Techies Working for Peanuts

The San Francisco Chronicle has a story about laid-off techies getting desperate and going to work for, well, nothing. No offense to these people, if you're up against the wall you do whatever you can, but I hope they're aware that most of them are not going to get even the slightest compensation for their time.

616 comments

  1. I live in one of the major comm hubs of the midwes by Rooked_One · · Score: 2, Informative

    t, and i've been unemployed for a year. Not fun.

  2. Working for Peanuts by CatWrangler · · Score: 5, Funny
    Working for Peanuts is ok. If I get to work with Marcie and Peppermint Patty... Can you say threesome?

    I don't know what these guys are complaining about anyways.

    --

    ---
    When you come to a fork in the road, take it! --Yogi Berra--

    1. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moderation: -1 Pedophelia

    2. Re:Working for Peanuts by daeley · · Score: 2

      Speaking as someone with a Snoopy tattoo on his forearm, I take great offense at this 'joke.'

      Everyone knows Lucy and Peppermint Patty is where it's at! ;-D

      --
      I watched C-beams glitter in the dark near the Tannhauser gate.
    3. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's 'pedophilia'. If you're going to troll, at least do it right.

      GO GOATSE UNITED!

    4. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Working for Peanuts is ok. If I get to work with Marcie and Peppermint Patty... Can you say threesome?
      Sounds like a great idea... until they figure out you're not another girl.
    5. Re:working for peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until you have to pay the rent and bills. :-)

    6. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought Patty was a guy, or at least a pretty manly bull dyke.

    7. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is slashdot; it's more in character for anything "official" like an article header or moderation type to be misspelled.

    8. Re:Working for Peanuts by dipipanone · · Score: 1

      Working for Peanuts is ok. If I get to work with Marcie and Peppermint Patty... Can you say threesome?

      And given that this is Slashdot, would we be right in assuming you look more like Pigpen than Charlie Brown?

    9. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      > Working for Peanuts is ok. If I get to work with Marcie and Peppermint Patty... Can you say threesome?

      You might be in for a surprise. I can just imagine the look on your face if Patty talks you into the handcuffs and it turns out Marcie was right in calling her "Sir" all along.

    10. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>If I get to work with Marcie and Peppermint Patty... Can you say threesome?

      I thought everyone knew Marcie and Peppermint Patty were lesbians.

    11. Re:Working for Peanuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you're saying you wanna make it with a couple Lesbians?

    12. Re:Working for Peanuts by tg_schlacht · · Score: 1

      Probably more like a tween of Pigpen and Fat Albert.

  3. In Junis-Run Afghanistan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    The PEANUTS work for TECHIES. After you've planted and grown them around all the Commodore-64s in the ground.

  4. SLASHDOT NEEDS TO READ THIS!! URGENT!!! by 403Forbidden · · Score: 1, Funny

    For only 10,000 shares of a Slashdot IPO i'll be a full time meta mod for free.

    (yes that was a joke)

    1. Re:SLASHDOT NEEDS TO READ THIS!! URGENT!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but if they issue 10bil shares?

  5. poor guys by aelfgar · · Score: 1

    I hope these poor guys find work. This doesnt seem like a bad idea though. If they manage to put together something decent, Im sure some companies will hire them.

    1. Re:poor guys by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      More likely enjoy the fruits of their labour and give them nothing in return. And ask their in-house programmers why they should still have jobs, when guys will do it for nothing.

    2. Re:poor guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't. I hope they fade away fast.

      These "poor" guys asked for their "fair share" and the money train in the job market at the height of the bubble. Now they are quick to point in blame or stick it to the job holders; how long do you think before salaries start to drop because others are willing to work for nothing?

      They capitalized on someone else's coattails in the past and they want to do so now; they "believe". I find it ridiculous that those of us who do work have to pay their freakin unemployment benefits while they putz around half-assed working for a company when they should be looking for a job. Reminds me of the health insurance situation re the medicaid versus lower middle income worker these days; someone else who does nothing or little has it better or can capitalize better than someone else.

      I hope the various states crack down on this damn hard.

    3. Re:poor guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have too worry. The states will crack down quick. They can't tax anything with people working for equity.

      Or perhaps you think they are looking out for YOUR interest?

    4. Re:poor guys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OH PLEASE. I'm unemployed and for the first time in 40 years I'm one of those dead beats you think shouldn't get unemployment. Well I've been activity looking for work for over 6 months and the only thing I've found is volunteer work at the State Funded Workforce center for people looking for jobs. I'm telling you right now. No one is hiring. The requirements for the job are way to selective and the HR people have now clue that if you know Unix you might be able to work on a Sun machine or an HP machine. Believe me I don't want to be taking money away from you workers. I hope to be one someday. So whay don't you convince your boss to hire me so I can stop stealing money from you. But until that happens or until my unemployment runs out. Thanks for helping me put food in my mouth and a roof over my head.

    5. Re:poor guys by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 2

      An AC wrote:

      > OH PLEASE. I'm unemployed and for the first time
      > in 40 years I'm one of those dead beats you think
      > shouldn't get unemployment. Well I've been
      > activity looking for work for over 6 months and
      > the only thing I've found is volunteer work at the
      > State Funded Workforce center for people looking
      > for jobs.

      Actually, the story was about people who (IMHO) are getting scammed into working for free on false promises (and thereby possibly devaluing programming work in general), not about good people who volunteer their time to help others during a bad time. You should be commended for your generousity. I'm afraid the people in the story are going to find that those stock options are mostly worthless and their "employers", if they give them a job, will just pay them more worthless paper. But then, maybe I just too cynical because my boss didn't fulfill any of his promises when he hired me. At least I still have a job.

      > Believe me I don't want to be taking money away
      > from you workers. I hope to be one someday. So
      > whay don't you convince your boss to hire me so
      > I can stop stealing money from you. But until
      > that happens or until my unemployment runs out.
      > Thanks for helping me put food in my mouth and a
      > roof over my head.

      Unemployment benefits were paid for by your previous employer, not by Slashdotters. If they hadn't been, you would have found out when you applied and your previous employer would have been in very hot water with your state. Extensions probably come from the taxpayers, but in times like these they are badly needed (I know, I benefitted from an extension back around 1991). I'd far rather see it go to helping folks like you than go for bombs and big brother programs.

      I hope you get a good job soon, and I wish you peace, prosperity, and happiness for the coming new year. :)

      "No one's going to die, mister. Mothra's going to come and save us."
      Taiki Goto, "Rebirth of Mothra"

  6. Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Could it be more depressing to be about to graduate with a computer science degree?

    If experienced people are having to work for nothing, what hope is there for a recent grad? Any advice?

    1. Re:Depressing... by Basehart · · Score: 1

      yeah - study health care or go into government

    2. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Could it be more depressing to be about to graduate with a computer science degree?
      If experienced people are having to work for nothing, what hope is there for a recent grad? Any advice?

      Practice in front of a mirror:

      "Do you want fries with that?"

    3. Re:Depressing... by bpalmer · · Score: 2, Funny

      Take up landscaping.

    4. Re:Depressing... by Raiford · · Score: 4, Informative
      If you are getting a B.S. in CS or CE and find yourself having a hard time finding a job then check out getting a teaching position at a local technical college. Places that offer associates degrees in IT often hire bachelor's grad and are happy to get folks with honest computer science degrees or engineering degrees. You might even find the work rewarding which will make up for the lower pay. Hey it's better than being unemployed.

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
    5. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it can be more depressing when you have to pay off student loans and you are framing for $8/hour to pay for the degree that you can't use.

    6. Re:Depressing... by DeadMoose · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That being said, please make sure you have at least some form of a clue before you start teaching others.

      Back in high school, I took some CS classes at my local community college to start building up credits to transfer later. There's nothing more disgusting than watching a teacher giving wrong information in a technical class. I'd regularly get into arguments with him in class for up to 10 minutes about how "No, see the little ampersand? You're making a pointer to a POINTER, and reading something COMPLETELY DIFFERENT INTO IT!"

      Hopefully someone who actually has gotten a degree in CS would do a little better, but after dealing with most of my classmates, I can't say I have too much faith.

    7. Re:Depressing... by Kilmor · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, whats depressing is having already gotten a BS in Computer Science and after finding no work for 6 months, doing dsl tech support. Oh joy.

      "what version of windows are you using?"
      "its a dell."

    8. Re:Depressing... by bacs · · Score: 1

      I second that.

      I once had a community college instructor that didn't know what a binary search was.

    9. Re:Depressing... by wolfgang_spangler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      whats even more depressing is losing jobs to people with a BS but with little or no experience. I don't have a BS but I have 8 years of experience.

    10. Re:Depressing... by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      shit happens, happened to me, and 10 years later I don't even remember how bad it was. If you have skills, you will be able to get a job.

    11. Re:Depressing... by MrChuck · · Score: 2, Funny
      There are 10 kinds of people...
      Those who think in binary, and those who don't.

      -


      Thank you,...I'll be here all week. Try the veal

    12. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ha ha good one. Experienced people losing jobs to new college graduates ... ha ha. In my dreams.

    13. Re:Depressing... by SCHecklerX · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Any advice?

      Yeah. How about remembering that you aren't going to college to be trained for a job. You are going there to learn something and perhaps broaden your knowledge in many subject areas, hopefully making you a bit of a better person.

      I never could figure out people who go to college expecting to be trained for a certain job. If you want that, go to a trade school.

      I graduated with a degree in Aerospace just as the Clinton administration took over. Military cuts == bye bye aerospace (although, in hindsight, if I'd focused on rockets and satellites instead of aircraft, the communications industry today really kept aerospace jobs around). But IT jobs are easy to come by, less stressful, and pay much better than anything an entry level engineer could hope for, so it's all good.

      Programming is something you should do to support your real job. Get over it.

    14. Re:Depressing... by wolfgang_spangler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It happens all of the time. When a company looks at a pile of 50-100 resumes for one position they weed out people based on certain things. Usually one of those is a degree.

      I know a ton more about IT and business than MOST CS grads with less experience (and some that have more experience). However, no degree and 8 yrs experience won't get a fair shake against a degree and 3 years of exp.

    15. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yeah. How about remembering that you aren't going to college to be trained for a job. You are going there to learn something and perhaps broaden your knowledge in many subject areas, hopefully making you a bit of a better person.

      Yeah, right... thats the ideal but in practice we all know thats not the way things go down. i graduated with a B.S. in biomedical engineering... after all the engineering courses (fluids, thermo, mechanics, etc) all the required math courses (one class shy of a minor!!!), all the required technical electives and required, non-substitutable "core" classes (which were a joke), I ended up with 4 free elective classes. (How do you expect to broaden your knowledge in many subject areas in 12 credit hours worth of work?)

      And really, thats the way engineering is. If you had a different experience then you probably didn't get as thorough education in engineering as I did.

      I never could figure out people who go to college expecting to be trained for a certain job. If you want that, go to a trade school.

      for all intents and purposes, the college of engineering IS a trade school.

      But IT jobs are easy to come by, less stressful, and pay much better than anything an entry level engineer could hope for, so it's all good.

      IT jobs Less Stressful? Obviously you've never worked one. I've worked as a Mechanical Engineer and also as a C programmer. I'll consider that comment of yours as pure Flamebait.


      Programming is something you should do to support your real job. Get over it.


      Quality software is what drives the economy of the world, from banking to travel to communications and beyond. You sound so bitter because maybe you went in to the wrong field perhaps?

    16. Re:Depressing... by snarfer · · Score: 2

      Not in Silicon Valley you can't. Approx 80,000 unemployed in Santa Clara county alone. Then there's San Mateo country, and over in Fremont...

    17. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      IT jobs are easy to come by


      How's that for a blanket (and mostly untrue) statement. I don't know where you live, perhaps IT jobs are easy to come by there. In the mid-west/plains states, computer tech related jobs are an increasingly rare commodity. In the 11+ months that I've been laid off, I've seen less than twenty jobs offerings for IT (support, development & testing) work within a hundred fifty mile radius of where I live, and managed to get an interview with only one company.

      I'm certainly open to working in another part of the country and have applied for almost two hundred different jobs. The catch is that every company I've managed to get a response from just says they're hiring locals only.
    18. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it sounds like your lack of formal education has finally caught up to you.

    19. Re:Depressing... by limekiller4 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Kilmor writes:
      "what version of windows are you using?"
      "its a dell."


      My all-time fave is:

      "Ok, you're gonna have to get out your Windows CD."
      "Where would I find that?"
      [long pause] "...you're asking me where you'd find your Windows CD?"
      [No hint of anger or sarcasm] "Yes."

      --
      My .02,
      Limekiller
    20. Re:Depressing... by billybob · · Score: 1

      IT jobs are easy to come by

      Maybe 3-4 years ago, but today? Fuck no, are you joking???

      --
      Joseph?
    21. Re:Depressing... by Malicious · · Score: 2

      what's cute, is that i'm in the exact same position, reading this story on /. on company time... what a world, what a world....

      --
      01101001001000000110000101101101001000000110001001 10000101110100011011010110000101101110
    22. Re:Depressing... by thelexx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Programming is something you should do to support your real job. Get over it."

      Right, and we all know how much world class software has been written by accountants, HR and marketing people. And how many VB jockeys even know who Donald Knuth is. Spare me.

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    23. Re:Depressing... by bluGill · · Score: 2

      True, but don't fool yourself into thinking a degree is a sure ticket to a job. I have a BSCS, and I've been out of comptuer work for 6 months so far. It is likely to be longer because I had to take a construction job to pay bills.

    24. Re:Depressing... by peripatetic_bum · · Score: 3, Interesting


      Actually, Initially I agreed with your comment but then I realized that actually may be the direction we are heading, in that programming will become a part of what you but all you do.
      Especially if you are programming to do things, then just like in the academic field where physics, biologists, chemists are expected to know how to program because that is where a lot of research is being done, I think likewise in the healthfield you are getting more doctors how are designing the medical software because they know what is needed to get things done and not have it mediated by a programming team that has not a clue on the real intent of the product code.

      Anyway, thanks for the interesting post and hope to hear some replies

      --

      Sigs are dangerous coy things

    25. Re:Depressing... by wolfgang_spangler · · Score: 2

      I don't think it's a sure ticket, but with my experience AND a degree I think my chances would be improved about a billion-fold.

      And yes, I am going to school to finish it, but supporting wife and 2 kids and working it makes progress slow at best.

    26. Re:Depressing... by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      Interesting, had a company move me to san jose 6 months ago, live in santa clara now. So, there is still work out there if you look. And from where I moved from, 8k is nothing..... good luck.

    27. Re:Depressing... by snarfer · · Score: 1

      That's 80,000 not 8,000. And that's just in the one county.

      What do you do, and how much are they paying you?

    28. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thats just fucking cold....
      very funny but still fucking cold.

    29. Re:Depressing... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 2

      Well, if you have a job, and no degree. Don't complain. I'm without a degree AND a job, and things aren't looking too good.

      At this point, I may just start delivering Pizza. It's not exactly a job in my area of expertise, but at least it agrees with my tastes.

      Mmmm. Pizza.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    30. Re:Depressing... by MattW · · Score: 2

      Back at Netcom, in my first job (and only TS job, thank god!), one customer:

      "Where are the booby gifs?! YOU CANNOT HIDE THEM FROM ME!"

      Netcruiser had a newsreader, but it couldn't reassemble multi-part uuencodes. Actually, it couldn't even uudecode a single post on its own, so we go a lot of 'how do I see the pictures?' calls.

      It's been 7+ years, and those of us who are still friends still joke over that one.

      And Wil Wheaton called on my shift once! Although I didn't talk to him. I just got to supply all the TS knowledge while some girl got to do all the chatting.

    31. Re:Depressing... by cduffy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think likewise in the healthfield you are getting more doctors how are designing the medical software because they know what is needed to get things done and not have it mediated by a programming team that has not a clue on the real intent of the product code.

      Well, that's why we work reeeal close with the doctors -- keep one down the hall who can tell us when he wants something done different, and several more elsewhere on staff. The programming team doesn't do all that much "mediating" when our customer is right there providing instant feedback on how we propose to implement the features (and UI) he requests.

      Having a team of competant programmers who act at a doctor's direction is much more effective than trying to expect reliable, scalable, secure software to be created by someone whose years of training and experience have been in a completely different field. I'd no sooner take over my CEO's place as an emergency room physician or our CMO's former job as a GP than see either of them try to write code. Large-scale software design, like medicine, requires specialisation and experience; trying to write or design software without the programmers is every bit as bad an idea as trying to perform surgery without the surgeons.

    32. Re:Depressing... by los+furtive · · Score: 2

      I once spent thirty minutes helping a user drag the start bar to the bottom of the screen after he accidentaly dragged it to the right side of the screen. He wasn't able to figure it out, so after 30 min I shouted at him: "This isn't an issue, this is a matter of cosmetics, the damn start bar works just as well on the right side of the screen as on the bottom so enjoy your new layout!"

      --

      I'm a writer, a poet, a genius, I know it. I don't buy software, I grow it.

    33. Re:Depressing... by BitHive · · Score: 2

      Yes, I remember taking AP computer science in high school, taught by a college grad who seemed to know his shit. Not much real-world experience, but he laid a lot of groundwork that later proved to be helpful. Towards the end of the year, an english teacher started sitting in on our classes. I found out that he intended to take over the course the following year. All I can say is I felt really sorry for next years' kids...

    34. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Opinion
      Teaching for an engineer or tech type is very underrated. Even if you don't like it that much ( I thought it was very demanding), it was unbelievable training for technical sales, ya I know sales, but i'm still working, and not too hard.

    35. Re:Depressing... by ZenHarbinger · · Score: 1

      Hmmm.. I looked into that. Most comm. colleges in my area (Northern VA) are on a hiring freeze (thanks to the brilliance of the government). Thus, no luck finding a job there. I could have gone to teach at a high school, but after teaching in a college, that's the last thing I wanted to do. It took me 5 months with a Masters Degree to land a job. And I still don't get a chance to get out of the house (I telecommute).

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    36. Re:Depressing... by JohnnyBigodes · · Score: 1

      Yeah. How about remembering that you aren't going to college to be trained for a job. You are going there to learn something and perhaps broaden your knowledge in many subject areas, hopefully making you a bit of a better person.

      Having said that, then you wouldn't mind telling me why is it that when companies look for potencial workers, they take the ones with degrees first instead of the ones who came from trade schools?

    37. Re:Depressing... by DigitalDragon · · Score: 1

      Right on, man. Good post. I wish I had some points to mod you up. Programming is a full-time job, you either do it or you don't. You can't go into management or any other profession and do some programming on the side. Well, you can, if you expect the program to be used only by yourself. Even experienced programmers lose the quality after a long period of no coding.

      --
      http://dtum.livejournal.com
    38. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you can't get a job in an oversaturated market try moving. If you can't move, try switching careers. If you can't do either, just lay down and whimper like the dog you are.

      Stop complaining about how you can't find a job in one damn area of one state.

    39. Re:Depressing... by jonadab · · Score: 2

      > (How do you expect to broaden your knowledge in many subject
      > areas in 12 credit hours worth of work?)

      It does depend very much on your major. My advise is to take a major
      that leaves room for some electives, so that you _can_ supplement the
      curriculum with stuff that got left out of the requirements. I chose
      Math (not Math Ed, just Math, the kind that involves modern algebra)
      and had plenty of room for electives. I minored in computer science,
      but I had room in my schedule to take extra computer courses, so that
      I ended up with as many credits toward my minor than toward my major,
      _plus_ still had room to supplement my education with two semesters
      of Koine Greek, a drawing class from the art department, an elective
      from the theology department, and a semester of astronomy. I could
      have chosen other electives instead -- extra history, for example --
      but felt that the ones I chose did a good job of ballancing out the
      otherwise-lopsided gen-ed core, which was lacking in these areas.
      My point is, I was _able_ to do that ballancing, plus boost my minor
      a notch up, because my major left me room for some electives. If
      I'd majored in Math Ed, for example, I would have been stuck with
      a scheduled loaded with classes in my major and little flexibility.

      It also helps to select a college where the core gen-ed classes are
      not a joke. I had a small handful of joke classes (College Life
      being the worst), but most of the gen-ed core at my school was good
      stuff, or at least pretty decent. (Of course, at _any_ school
      you get out what you put in to a large extent; slack off and shoot
      for a C- average, and NO school can give you the education that a
      motivated student extracts from an average school.)

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    40. Re:Depressing... by FTL · · Score: 2
      > "what version of windows are you using?"
      > "its a dell."

      They're not so bad. It's the Windows 97 users who drive me up the wall. Every single person I've met who uses Windows 97 is a total moron. How'd that happen?

      --
      Slashdot monitor for your Mozilla sidebar or Active Desktop.
    41. Re:Depressing... by jonadab · · Score: 2

      > Right, and we all know how much world class software has been
      > written by accountants, HR and marketing people. And how many VB
      > jockeys even know who Donald Knuth is. Spare me.

      Accounting and HR are bad examples, because those jobs appeal to a
      completely different personality type than programming. Mixing a
      marketing job with programming might work out better, or some other
      field that actually interests you. If your education is sufficiently
      general, quite a few fields are open. Some are not; teaching pretty
      much requires either a degree in education (for primary or secondary)
      or in the field you want to teach (for post-secondary), for example.
      But there are many fields that are not so closed.

      IT appeals to people, because it's fun work; it used to be that it
      paid very well anyway, because it was highly skilled; as the level
      of knowledge required to operate a computer and the level of computer
      knowledge possessed by people in other fields get closer together,
      it may be that IT work, being something that appeals to a lot of
      people, will not end up paying all that well. In ten years, it may
      be that plumbers make more than systems administrators. *shrug*.
      If that happens, you make your own decision about whether you'd
      rather follow the money or do IT work because you enjoy it.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    42. Re:Depressing... by Raiford · · Score: 2
      There are faculty positions open here in northern California. Mostly part-time or adjunct but you will still find a number of full-time openings. A lot of the un-employed technorati are applying for them. What they are finding though is that many don't meet the qualifications to teach. Seems a lot of folks that were riding the high-tech boom were light in the credentials department.

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
    43. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Having said that, then you wouldn't mind telling me why is it that when companies look for potencial workers, they take the ones with degrees first instead of the ones who came from trade schools?"

      Three forms of thought on that.

      They like their own. If I have to choose a stranger, statistically I am likely to pick someone who is similar in whatever way to myself.

      Trade schools teach important skills necesary for the job while higher learning teaches skills that while not necessarily geared to a job help create a more rounded individual who will do better with others.

      That is much of the conventional wisdom on the topic, but really in my mind it should come down to who can do the best work and fit in. Unfortunately we do not have the tests and resources to figure out who these people are out of the stack of applications and supporting materials. People are lazy so in general they either delegate to other lazy individuals or farm it off to specialists. The end result is the general area we are in now.

    44. Re:Depressing... by IHateUniqueNicks · · Score: 1

      As a recent Comp Sci grad I can say:
      "been there, done that"

      I've moved on. I'm now doing temp labour for light industrial (mostly sweeping/heavy lifting). Can't say it pays well, but it's better than flipping burgers was.

      Yeah, the tech sector really sucks right now.

    45. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Practice in front of a mirror:

      >"Do you want fries with that?"

      You can easily double your career possibilities by just remembering the phrase "Welcome to Walmart!"

    46. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Worse then that, looking for a job and finding out that tech companies have to many morons working for nothing to be hiring in skilled workers who want to get paid.

      Listen here techies working for free: go home. You are taking up valuable job space. Without you, companies have to start paying for technical work. You benefit from this in that they will probably start paying you if you quit working for free.

    47. Re:Depressing... by humblecoder · · Score: 1

      > Accounting and HR are bad examples, because those jobs appeal to a
      > completely different personality type than programming. Mixing a
      > marketing job with programming might work out better,

      I agree with most of what you are saying, but actually I think you are a little off here. I would argue that accounting and programming appeal to similar personality types (detail oriented, logical, likes to work with numbers), while marketing and programming would appear to different personality types (marketing = people person, emotional rather than logical).

    48. Re:Depressing... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2

      This is just so fundamentally untrue. People *do* go to college to enhance their employability, not to become "a better person". Let's be honest, quite a few go to college because they don't want to have to get a job yet. I believe liberal education to be a largely bankrupt concept. I didn't go to college to learn a little bit about a lot of things, I went to college to become really good at one specific thing. Universities and colleges are becoming what you call trade schools because they have to serve the needs of those who pay their bills. Neither I nor almost anyone else is going to sacrifice 4 years of income and pay handsomely for the priviledge for so idealistic a goal as pure learning. That's a luxury few of us will ever have. If and when I'm financially independent, maybe. Until then, it's just not an option.

    49. Re:Depressing... by JabberWokky · · Score: 2
      Heh... I was chatting with someone in our tech support department about this just yesterday. Windows 97 isn't that bad - that means they have Office 97, and remember seeing the splash screens all the time. Thus they can relate what is on the screen (even if you have to be careful that they are reading the right thing, they will read).

      It's those Windows 96 users you've got to watch out for.

      --
      Evan "Tech Support uses 'Alt-F2, type 'kppp'...' to install dialup for Linux. Three or four calls a week, and it always works like a charm. Datapoint? :)"

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    50. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I repeat:

      If you had a different experience then you probably didn't get as thorough education in engineering as I did.

    51. Re:Depressing... by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      That's the boat that I'm in right now (teaching at tech schools), but that's getting tougher too... there are less and less people who are going into IT, so one of my teaching jobs already went under (not enough people to make a class), and another only has 3 months worth of job security.

      It's fun, but far from meeting even the basic financial needs.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    52. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      No computer I've ever purchased came with a Windows CD. One came with an emergency recovery cd, but all the data it needed was on the hard drive that went belly up.

      Yes, I would like you to tell me where to find my Windows CD...

    53. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      "what version of windows are you using?"
      "its a dell."


      Hey, not to stand in the back of the room and nitpick or anything, but you made an error:

      That should be:

      "DUDE, it's a dell."

    54. Re:Depressing... by Felinoid · · Score: 2

      I agree.
      In high school I took a total of three technical classes.
      First one was 'required' for some bs reasons. 'Data Entry' a glorified typing class by someone who dosen't know how to type.
      The other two actually knew the subject matter.

      --
      I don't actually exist.
    55. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a Computer Science degree and from day one I hated people like you who like to sit in class and wait until the teacher makes a mistake. There is nothing that would make me more angry than seeing the gleam in some idiot's eye as soon as the teacher mis-spoke or inverted some numbers on the board. Ahhhhgg...I get upset just thinking about it. I always wanted to take those little punks out back except they would probably point out how I wasn't punching them or kicking them in the most efficient manner...

    56. Re:Depressing... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2

      Yeah, right... thats the ideal but in practice we all know thats not the way things go down. i graduated with a B.S. in biomedical engineering... after all the engineering courses (fluids, thermo, mechanics, etc) all the required math courses (one class shy of a minor!!!), all the required technical electives and required, non-substitutable "core" classes (which were a joke), I ended up with 4 free elective classes. (How do you expect to broaden your knowledge in many subject areas in 12 credit hours worth of work?)

      And really, thats the way engineering is. If you had a different experience then you probably didn't get as thorough education in engineering as I did.

      You make the assumption that you should only take the minimum required elective load, when nothing is preventing you from taking more to get a broader education. If you truly wanted to learn more, you'd find a way. And please don't tell me how tough it is getting a BS in Engineering; I've been there, done that, got the sheepskin to prove it, all while taking at least one class per quarter above the what I need to graduate in 4 years.

      For example, you mentioned 1 more class was need to get a math minor - why didn't you do that? That's more impressive to an interviewer (yes, I've done that) tahn answering the questioon "why no math minor since you took all those math classes?" with "I didn't have time."

      It's like people who say "I've always wanted to [sydive,drive a raececar,visit XYZ,etc.]" - if you really wanted to, you'd find a way to do it.

      for all intents and purposes, the college of engineering IS a trade school.

      That's because most engineering students make it one, failing to see the big picture and realizing for many of them, working as an engineer is something they'll only do for 5, maybe 10 years before they move on to either management or some otehr field. As a result, they miss an opportunity to develop skills (writing, sales, general business knowledge such as how to real a balance sheet & cash flow statement, etc.) in college where they can make big mistakes without penalty.

      Most engineering studenst are their own worst enemy.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    57. Re:Depressing... by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 2

      I believe liberal education to be a largely bankrupt concept. I didn't go to college to learn a little bit about a lot of things, I went to college to become really good at one specific thing.

      The problem with that is:

      1. You don't know if the one thing you do well will be valuable 5 years from now or if some new tech will displace it;

      2. It's ofetn cheaper to hire a new grad to replace you; and,

      3. I can train someone with a broad skill set on specific tasks, and hope they will bring new insights to problems, but am less sure I can broaden a specialist beyond their narrow functional skill.

      I wouldn't bet my future on being able to chose tommorrow's skill based on today's hot topic.

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    58. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You make the assumption that you should only take the minimum required elective load

      no such assumption is made; I'm saying that after being loaded with 18 credit hours per semester of required courses, there really is no room for anything else!!!

      For example, you mentioned 1 more class was need to get a math minor - why didn't you do that

      I did get the minor. I was simply pointing out how many requirements there were. And by the way, that math minor does not mean ANYTHING to ANYBODY... especially recruiters. That minor plus $1.25 will get me a cup of coffee.

      Most engineering studenst are their own worst enemy

      okay umm, like, no. after a normal load of 18 challenging credit hours per semester over all 4 years, there is precious little room for anything else. The curriculum is designed that way. Saying that engineering students create the environment of a trade school is like saying the inmates create the environment of a prison.

    59. Re:Depressing... by antirename · · Score: 2

      If you're trying to say that the ability to program is part of or becoming a part of other jobs, I would tend to agree. I'm a mechanical engineer, but I wind up doing some programming and admin work because it makes my life easier (say I need a little program to try to reduce errors in repetitive calculations, to sort data, etc, or I need a server on the LAN and would rather use open source software because that's what I'm used to and the MIS department is all A++ or MCSE). I would rather do something myself if a) I know how to do it, and b) doing it myself gets the project finished faster and/or cheaper than letting someone else do it (and likely teaching them how to do it), or hiring someone to do it. I went to school for the engineering, I picked up the programming and linux knowledge on my own for my own use and found ways to apply them to my job to make my life easier. For me they are tools, and I don't claim to be an expert at either, but for what I do day to day I can usually get the job done. Programming should be a basic course in mechanical engineer's studies in this day and age. You'll be amazed at how many old pascal, fortran and VB programs you find out there that were developed by another engineer (who of course is usually no longer with the company) and that need tweaks or error checking. Small custom programs that do a specific task are common, and if you can't read the code you don't know WHY the numbers are right or wrong, and where it needs tweaking for your new product or process or whatever.

    60. Re:Depressing... by antirename · · Score: 2

      Only used by yourself? This rarely happens. In the real world either you comment the hell out of it and hope that someone else can figure it out if you get hit by a bus, or you dumb it way down and make a REALLY BIG Excel spreadsheet with lots of macros (supervisors seem to think that Excel is Excel, and some will want you to use it thinking that if you get hit by a bus, any secretary that can add up a column and figure out what the macros are doing). Either way, it's NOT usually maintainable except by the guy that did the work in the first place. I know, it should be, but my job description is research and development, not programming, and I "wear a lot of hats". This is more common than you would think. You just document things as best you can, and redo what the last guy did if he didn't document well. Sucks, I know, but to do it any differently engineering would have to have a programmer on call and that's not going to happen.

    61. Re:Depressing... by bpalmer · · Score: 1

      I'd have thought my comment would get a +1 Informative.

    62. Re:Depressing... by anarchima · · Score: 1

      Man, you sound elitist as HELL!

    63. Re:Depressing... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think people realize how much plumbers (or people in blue-collar trades in general)make.

      I worked at the IRS, and the plumbers, electricians, welders, etc. did as well as or better than the people in the computer fields. Their jobs also can't be sent to India or China. While we usually hear that they suffer the most in recessions, none of my friends in the construction trades has ever gone as long without work as I have had to with my CS degree. Plus, they get paid overtime, which I'm sure a lot of us would like to get.

    64. Re:Depressing... by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      missed this one, I am an networking engineer, and they are paying me about 120k.

    65. Re:Depressing... by SecurityGuy · · Score: 2
      You'd be correct if your assumption that I sit on my college education and don't continually expand my skills was correct. It isn't. New grads don't know what I know because I have the same degree they do plus n years of education since I graduated. If the problem can be handled by a new grad, give it to them. I know, as does anyone who isn't a new grad, that there is the way they tell you it works in college, and there's the way it actually happens.


      In short, I tune my skills to what appears to be tomorrow's "hot topic". It is not the case that skills in demand come without warning.

    66. Re:Depressing... by jonadab · · Score: 2

      > I would argue that accounting and programming appeal to similar
      > personality types (detail oriented, logical, likes to work with
      > numbers)

      No. Accountants love routine; programmers hate routine. Accountants
      love working with numbers; programmers _don't_ work with numbers;
      they work with concepts. If a programmer has some numbers that need
      to be worked with, he'll write a program to do it. Programmers are
      (have to be) creative and like to think up original ways to do stuff;
      accountants like to have a formula that always works and use it every
      time they run into the same situation. Accountants memorise a whole
      bunch of formulas; programmer types don't learn formulas; they just
      understand the principle behind the thing and create the formula
      from scratch on the fly if they ever need it.

      As far as "logical", you're talking about entirely different meanings
      of the word "logical". When we say programmers are logical thinkers,
      we mean that they can hold boolean expressions in their heads with
      five levels of nested parentheses, break a complex problem down
      into its basic components, or reason deductively. You seem to be
      under the impression that "logical" is antithetical to "emotional",
      but I would say it's orthogonal.

      > while marketing and programming would appear to different
      > personality types (marketing = people person

      Some programmers are people persons, and others are not. As for
      me, I'm a borderline reclusive type, the extreme sort who can spend
      twenty hours a day in an unlit basement room with a computer and
      emerge only to eat and use the restroom, the sort who considers
      parties and banquets to be torture, but even at that I'd _much_
      rather give a public presentation than mess with a bunch of debit
      and credit arithmetic. I understand computers far better than I
      understand people, but people are at least interesting some of the
      time; marketing sound like a challenge, but not an impossible one,
      and programmers like challenges. It wouldn't be easy, but it
      could maybe be fun, at least for a while. Accounting just sounds
      painfully boring and tediously difficult. I'd rather chew tinfoil
      for a living than be an accountant.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
  7. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Peanuts get off laying techies!

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IN SOVIET RUSSIA Techies have jobs!

      Yeah, jobs that *used to* be in the U.S.

      Fuck Globalization!!! Poverty is the pits. The ideals of globalization are not keeping me from living in the streets, using my diploma to stay warm, so I no longer beleive them.

    2. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soviet Sad Man is sad peanuts get off laying techies.

    3. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Soviet Sad Man is sad techies have jobs.

    4. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahah the spoiled american workers just now realize this! Now that the class war being secretly waged on you has become succesful and you are feeling the crush you decide "oh wait maybe this capitalism isn't the best". Well gee exploited workers over the whole world already knew this but you just laughed and said "work harder" until the exploited worker was you!

  8. Who cares.... Marketing Directors are NOT techies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe if Renae Perry had done a better job as Head Marketing Director she would not have gotten laid off !

  9. Working for stock options? by LordOfYourPants · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd rather ask for $100 a week and blow it all at the race track. Your odds are better and at least you know whether or not you've flown the coop within the span of minutes as opposed to excruciating months or years.

    The value of stocks seem to have no logical basis anymore. Remember the big IPOs when most rational people were thinking "How can a company that gives away its product make money?" while watching stock values rise to $280 a share? Add to that so many daytraders that the fluctuating prices mean absolutely nothing.

    On top of that you have well-paid economists that can only explain the past and not the future and you have a self-feeding network of greed.

    There's an episode of The Nature of Things about statistics. Someone from the Toronto Star did an experiment a few years back where she threw darts at a stock listing in order to choose investments. She outperformed a pool of 10 investors 2 years in a row. Obviously you'd have to do it over a longer time, but I think it's amusing how little a difference there is between chance and skill in the world of investing.

    1. Re:Working for stock options? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better use of $100

      1) Buy Darts $11.99

      2) Buy Newspaper ($.50 or even yesterday's for free would work(all you need is the biz section))

      3) Throw darts at stock section

      4) Invest remainder of original $100 in stock market

      5) Profit!

    2. Re:Working for stock options? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember the big IPOs when most rational people were thinking "How can a company that gives away its product make money?" while watching stock values rise to $280 a share?

      Are you calling Eric S. Raymond IRRATIONAL?? How dare you!

    3. Re:Working for stock options? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

      I don't think it's quite as random as you make out. The fundamental problem is simply that most of those investing -- including those who work for big city firms and have huge bonuses -- are dumb, incompetent or both.

      A guy I used to work with (who'll know who he is if he's reading this...) learned how finances work fairly young, and now seems to beat the markets by a few percent most of the time. He had many pearls of wisdom that I dutifully memorised, but basically, everything he did was common sense. He wasn't absurdly greedy, so didn't buy heavily overvalued stocks, didn't stick in rising markets until they crashed, and so on.

      There's nothing magical or particularly clever about financial markets, just a whole load of dumb people skewing the outputs. Common sense and a willingness to spend a little time learning how it works will get you ahead of those guys most of the time.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    4. Re:Working for stock options? by evilviper · · Score: 2
      Someone from the Toronto Star did an experiment a few years back where she threw darts at a stock listing in order to choose investments. She outperformed a pool of 10 investors 2 years in a row.

      Darts don't get bribed for endorsing a certain company's stock. Of course, the only companies that want to artificially inflate their stocks are the ones that have no successful products other than stock.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  10. Java programming for $5.75/hour by SHEENmaster · · Score: 2

    was sub-par for a first job. I hope neither myself nor any of you are forced to do such a thing again.

    As for working for free, I've been doing it as the lead programmer for this company that I started with my friends four years ago. I do it because its fun, not because I think that the stock will ever be worth anything. We are too kind hearted to charge for our software.

    --
    You can't judge a book by the way it wears its hair.
    1. Re:Java programming for $5.75/hour by mgt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is when you don't live with your parents anymore and have your own bills to pay. You can't ONLY work for free then. Alot of us programmers have always had one or more hobby projects where we work for free. At least i've been doing it since back in the early eighties. Then i could afford it, now i couldn't.

    2. Re:Java programming for $5.75/hour by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2
      Thanks to foreign labor from India expect even that to be over-valued!

    3. Re:Java programming for $5.75/hour by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I knew is was the immigrants.. even when it was the bears i knew it was them.

      dumbass

  11. Product Managers ARE NOT TECHIES !!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Same story different source, most of the people in these situations are either a) product/project managers or b) marketers/sales people. Talented engineers and programmers can always find work, if they are willing to relocate.

  12. Re: America by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    we produce the worst ACs

  13. Where do I sign up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I am now facing the choice of working for minimum wage in a warehouse or McD's because *nobody* wants programmers. I even tried to pass myself off as an East Indian programmer, but even India companies didn't want my services. It is sad state of things for us programmers.

    I would much rather program for min wage than flip burgers for min wages. Any offers?

    1. Re:Where do I sign up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but even India companies didn't want my services.

      Correction: should be "Indian outsourcing companies". I have no intention on actually moving to India. My immune system probably could not handle it partly do to the poor sanitation that one has to grow up around to build up immunities.

    2. Re:Where do I sign up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so glad i went for the biochemistry degree.
      Genome projects are booming, and keeping programming as a hobby has made me all the more valuable.

    3. Re:Where do I sign up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Plenty of "fly-by-night" companies are hiring... and to be avoided... never again will I work for a company where the boss spends his day passed out drunk on a couch! Ha! I'm still waiting for that last paycheck.

  14. Techies???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A product marketing director is a techie? Sounds more like a bean counter/BB stacker?

  15. foot in the door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    a jobless friend of mine volunteered to work for free at a company that he desired employement with.

    about 3 months later they hired him.

    his work ethic got noticed, and a several people figured out he was too valuable to let go.

    My opinion? I know a lot of techs with good work ethics...and I think that some of the managers now had a name and a face and they only had good things to say about him.

    when a slot came open....instead of interviewing hundreds of hungry techs...they hired him.

    1. Re:foot in the door by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 2

      Yes, I hear Wal-mart and Nike look for the same qualities in thier employees.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    2. Re:foot in the door by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      a jobless friend of mine volunteered to work for free at a company that he desired employement with.

      about 3 months later they hired him.

      his work ethic got noticed, and a several people figured out he was too valuable to let go.


      And how, exactly, did he pay for food and housing for those three months? Trust fund? Welfare? Lived at home?

      I swear, the only thing modern North America is preparing everyone for is indentured servitude.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    3. Re:foot in the door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this is entirely illegal, for good reason. Your friend was an employee, and per US law is entitled to at least the minimum wage in his state for that period.

      Without enforcable labor law, everybody will be working for free. Bad companies will exploit the desperate (of which there are many) and good companies will go under trying to compete.

    4. Re:foot in the door by andcal · · Score: 1

      Well, some people (believe it or not) didn't live paycheck to paycheck during the "good times" when the money was rolling in. Some people actually put some money away in savings.

      I should probably clarify that I am not one of these people :(

      --
      --something witty
    5. Re:foot in the door by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Some people actually put some money away in savings.

      As I was coming up the stairs from the laundry room to check for replies, this occured to me.

      There's still a degree of privilege in being able to spend time making no money while still being able to buy groceries and pay the bills. Many, many people simply aren't making enough to save money for anything else--school, volunteering, retirement.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    6. Re:foot in the door by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      He should be arrested. He's just as bad as Microsoft. By working for free (which is illegal for the company to have accepted) he has locked out all of the competitors for that job who aren't able to undercut free.

      Minimum wage. It's not just a good idea. It's the law.

    7. Re:foot in the door by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So all interns are illegal? I think not.

    8. Re:foot in the door by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Interns:
      1. Are getting credit from a credible academic institution.
      2. Rarely work a full 40 hour work week, afterall, they're in school and likely have classes to attend too. (If they are working a 40 hour work week, it's the summer so point 3 becomes even more acute.)
      3. Work only for a limited short ammount of time. When the internship is over with, they either have to offer to pay the kid, or start over with a new intern who doesn't know the place yet.

    9. Re:foot in the door by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ummmmmmm. No.

      It is perfectly legal to provide your services for free, be it to an individual or to a company. It is illegal for a company to pay you less than minimum wage if you are employeed by them, but you are free to give them help just because you want to.

      Check the law books.

    10. Re:foot in the door by CynicTheHedgehog · · Score: 2

      No, this is nothing like the Microsoft case. To be like Microsoft he would first have to have a monopoly on, say, plumbing labor, and then tell the company that he could unclog their toilets for $50 but they had to also hire him as a programmer for free, but that if they refused to hire him as a programmer then it would cost them $5000 to unclog their toilets. And because he has a monopoly on plumbing labor (via unionization or whatever) they would basically have to agree to keep their bottom line.

      If Microsoft went around and offered Windows for free, no strings attached, I'm sure no one would have a problem with it (save perhaps the FSF, etc). This would be a more appropriate analogy to the working-for-free example cited above. After all, I worked in tech support for a small DSL startup and ended up a programmer after 3 months because I wrote software in my spare time, on a tech support salary. That's about the same thing, isn't it?

    11. Re:foot in the door by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Helping, yes. You can be a contractor who gets paid less than minimum wage or even zero. However, if you act like an employee (Work at times of their choosing, not your own, use mostly their equipment instead of mostly your equipment, create IP that they own rather than IP that you own and let them borrow, etc.) then you are an employee. No agreement can change that.

  16. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Techies have jobs!

  17. Why is this legal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is insane. If anything, the dot.com bomb should teach the insanity of working for stock options. This is gambling, not working for a living. And why, oh, why, in gawd's green America, is it legal?

    1. Re:Why is this legal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is insane. If anything, the dot.com bomb should teach the insanity of working for stock options. This is gambling, not working for a living.

      What are their options? At least working keeps you busy and the stock options give you some hope so that you don't go insane trying to figure out why the world is punishing you for picking computers as a career.

  18. Screw the government by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Miles Locker, attorney for the California labor commissioner, said it's against the state labor code for employers to offer stock options as compensation if they're not paying workers at least the minimum wage. All workers in California must be paid at least $6.75 an hour, plus any applicable overtime. He said it doesn't matter if the worker has agreed to work for less.

    This is why I hate government interference in the economy. I once worked for a company and developed their product for free, in exchange for future consideration. This was probably illegal in California, but OH MY GOD I did it anyway. It eventually turned into a full-time employment and a really sweet royalty agreement.

    If I had followed my oh-so-compassionate government and not allowed myself to be "exploited", I wouldn't have earned a pretty good pile of money.

    Obviously that's not the norm and not what the minimum wage is intended for, but "unintended consequences" are what happen when the government screws with things. Of course, let's not even get into how many poor people are locked out of any job at all because of minimum wage...

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    1. Re:Screw the government by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 5, Insightful
      This is why I hate government interference in the economy.
      Like, say, minting money, issuing articles of incorporation, insuring bank accounts, creating and enforcing laws against fraud ...

      All governments regulate the economy to some degree. The only question is how much. "Free market" vs. "government interference" is a false dichotomy, a Randoid fantasy.

      Obviously that's not the norm and not what the minimum wage is intended for
      Exactly. Minimum wage laws exist for a reason. Read some history and see what working conditions were like before we had minimum wage and other labor laws. You may disagree with exactly how those laws operate, but we need them or something very like them to prevent some truly horrible abuses.

      but "unintended consequences" are what happen when the government screws with things
      Been paying attention to the news lately? What happens when the government doesn't screw with things isn't so hot either. Private industry's track record in foreseeing unintended consequences is just as lousy as government's, perhaps more so.

      Of course, let's not even get into how many poor people are locked out of any job at all because of minimum wage...
      I've heard this before, and given how low minimum wage is (much, much lower in real dollars than when the law was first enacted) I have to say I'm skeptical. Evidence, please.
      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    2. Re:Screw the government by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've heard this before, and given how low minimum wage is (much, much lower in real dollars than when the law was first enacted) I have to say I'm skeptical. Evidence, please.

      Example? Guess why there are no ushers in movie theatres anymore, nor anyone washing your windows at gas stations. Teenagers used to do those jobs for low wages. But who is going to hire people for those jobs for minimum wage, plus unemployment insurance, plus matched social security?

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    3. Re:Screw the government by StarTux · · Score: 4, Funny

      You do need some government lookout on the labor market...Otherwise we might have geek workhouses pop up (instead of getting paid with money you get to live in a dry, dark room room and be fed pizza and Mountain Dew...Hey wait, geeks do this already!).

      Maybe you're right :). Having work houses for the unemployed techies would give them a free roof over their heads and they can continue doing what they do and eating what they eat. They wouldn't notice would they?

      StarTux

    4. Re:Screw the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People are too cheap to pay for these "luxuries". Even if the teenager earned $1 an hour washing your windshield, consumers would choose the gas pump/station without the window washing at a savings of pennies on the gallon. Not to mention people are in a rush these days. As for movie theatres, why do you need an usher when the theatres are so gigantic that there are always seats leftover. And last time there weren't any seats, low and behold there was an usher (manager, or other position just temporarily filling in) to accomodate this requirement. Business has long been smart to avoid these "redundant" tasks for the middle class who are not willing to pay for it. If you want these luxuries you will pay an arm and a leg for them and they will still turn around and pay the workers who provide these services to you at tremendous cost, minimum wage. Go figure...

    5. Re:Screw the government by nathanh · · Score: 2
      This is why I hate government interference in the economy. I once worked for a company and developed their product for free, in exchange for future consideration. This was probably illegal in California, but OH MY GOD I did it anyway. It eventually turned into a full-time employment and a really sweet royalty agreement.

      Ok, sure, this worked for you. But for every single example where this works there would be (and I'm just guessing) hundreds of people who got screwed by the employer and didn't see a red nickel.

      The government is in possession of the actual numbers so they know how many people get screwed. They do their best to stop this practise because they know that the few people who benefit are outnumbered by the many people who get screwed.

      Don't assume that the legal-type-person is stupid. They just might have more facts than you do.

    6. Re:Screw the government by JonToycrafter · · Score: 1

      This is an excellent point, but possibly for the wrong reasons. The minimum wage laws may "oppress" teenagers who could use some pocket money, and it means that when I take in one of the MPAA members' fine films, there is no usher.

      If these are the greatest social ills inflicted on us by the minimum wage, well, it's not enough for me to turn in my anti-authoritarian membership card, but I think that it's enough that I'll worry about real issues, instead of trying to repeal the minimum wage.

      If you calculate the amount of money required to survive, and you calculate how much the minimum wage pays, you'll find that you're going to come up short making the minimum wage at 40 hours/week. If you could pay for food, shelter, transportation, and healthcare at $5.15/hour less taxes, the argument that the minimum wage is wrong would have more weight.

      Real quick: $5.15*40*52 = $10,712 less FICA, Social Security, etc. Let's hope one never gets sick, injured, or have to care for a dependent parent...

    7. Re:Screw the government by MarcQuadra · · Score: 2

      Woah! If it weren't for the minimum wage there would be companies paying folks WAY less than it costs to live. I think overall the minimum wage does a lot more good for us than harm. There are a few instances, like yours, where it can interfere; but overall it's very important that workers have some basic rights to get paid enough to eat and rent shelter.
      As for the hoardes of people kept out of jobs by the minimum wage, that's bullshit. Unemployment is 6%, and the economy is 'bad' right now. The vast majority of those 6% are either in between jobs temporarily or WAY too stupid/deformed to hold jobs for long (you know what I'm talking about), or mentally disabled. Saying that the minimum wage is cutting so far in to the bottom line of companies that they cannot hire more people is ridiculous considering that in those pay ranges most of the corporation's expenses are not on front-line labor. If Dinky Donuts down the street makes $1200 in sales today (which is normal according to the employees there) and labor costs are $315 for the day (3 employees, 15 hours) then the majority of the money goes elsewhere and front-line labor costs aren't that much of a problem compared to back-end costs.

      --
      "Sometimes, I think Trent just needs a cup of hot chocolate and a blankie." -Tori Amos on Nine Inch Nails
    8. Re:Screw the government by thelexx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      All governments regulate the economy to some degree. The only question is how much. "Free market" vs. "government interference" is a false dichotomy, a Randoid fantasy.

      You are overstating it. Before the advent of the Federal Reserve, eventual move to a baseless currency and the adoption of a debt-based economy, things were pretty good. Jefferson had this shit nailed two hundred years ago:

      "...we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt...If we run into such debts as that we must be taxed in our meat and in our drink, in our necessities and comforts, in our labors and in our amusements, for our callings and our creeds...our people...must come to labor 16 hours in the 24, give the earnings of 15 of these to the government for their debts and daily expenses; and the 16th being insufficient to afford us bread,...We have no time to think, no means of calling the mis-managers to account; but be glad to obtain subsistence by hiring ourselves, to rivet their chains on the necks of our fellow sufferers. Our land holders, too...retaining indeed the title and stewardship of estates called theirs, but held really in trust for the treasury...this is the tendency of all human governments."

      "A departure from principle becomes a precedent for a second; that second for a third; and so on, till the bulk of society is reduced to mere automatons of misery, to have no sensibilities left but for sinning and suffering...And the fore horse of this frightful team is public debt. Taxation follows that, and in it's train, wretchedness and oppression."

      "The bold efforts that the present bank has made to control the government and the distress it has wantonly caused, are but premonitions of the fate which awaits the American people should they be deluded into a perpetuation of this institution or the establishment of another like it...If the people only understood the rank injustice of our money and banking system there would be a revolution before morning."

      But what did our founders know? Society was different then. Bullshit. Human nature, especially as concerns power and greed, is ever the same.

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    9. Re:Screw the government by Platinum+Dragon · · Score: 1

      Of course, let's not even get into how many poor people are locked out of any job at all because of minimum wage...

      Yeah, God and Milton Friedman forbid people be able to actually pay for food and housing at the same time.

      Tell you what. Go find one of those sweet piecework jobs in the "export processing zones" of Indonesia, Sri Lanka, or even China, then come back and tell me how good a lack of living wage rules is.

      Thing is, governments tend to aid and abet the abuse of employees by corporations. I don't know how to say this without sounding like a parlour pink, but there has already been a time when there weren't rules about minimum wages or working conditions, when capitalism was relatively unfettered. Organized labour brought an end to that era, with good reason. Concepts of socialism and anarchism came out of this time. Do you really want to see the abuses of those times back again? You'd be correct in saying people wouldn't stand for it, but the correction wouldn't be pretty and clean, like a simple stock transaction or purchasing boycott. Indeed, the "market correction" would likely take place in the form of the mass uprising governments and corporations have worried about since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution.

      --

      Someday, you're going to die. Get over it.
    10. Re:Screw the government by reflector · · Score: 2

      You may disagree with exactly how those laws operate, but we need them or something very like them to prevent some truly horrible abuses.

      no. what we need are people to stand up for themselves and not allow themselves be abused.

      for a govenment to tell me that i am not allowed to sell my labor for less than some $X which they arbitrarily choose, is an abuse of power, and infringes on my freedom.

    11. Re:Screw the government by Enry · · Score: 2
      what we need are people to stand up for themselves and not allow themselves be abused.

      ...you mean like the people now working for peanuts?

    12. Re:Screw the government by blank_coil · · Score: 1, Redundant

      One of the most insighful and thoughtful posts I've read in a while. If I had mod points I would mod you up.

      My favorite part:

      A departure from principle becomes a precedent for a second; that second for a third; and so on...

      This can apply to the "if i have to give up some privacy to fight terrorism it's worth it" argument that I hear all too often. Don't people realise that there can never exist a compromise when it comes to our rights? We either have them all, or we have none, because once you take away one, it sets a precedent for taking away more.

      And what about this one:

      ...we must not let our rulers load us with perpetual debt...

      What's the national dept right now? Man, we're already there.

      Good post.

      --
      No sig for you.
    13. Re:Screw the government by Copid · · Score: 3, Insightful
      You are overstating it. Before the advent of the Federal Reserve, eventual move to a baseless currency and the adoption of a debt-based economy, things were pretty good.

      Yeah, the gold standard combined with no way of controlling the monetary base was pretty swell. Deflation, depression, and massive unemployment in the 1890s comes to mind when thinking of problems that a baseless currency and a strong federal reserve would have mitigated. To be fair, the Great Depression of the 20th century is an example of regulation gone wrong, but just about everything we do now in terms of regulation is done to correct mistakes of the past.

      People may complain about the minimum wage and government regulation of the banking systems, but these regulations don't come out of nowhere. Large scale exploitation of workers, runs on banks, bad-debt banking crises...all of these things happen with unregulated financial systems. It just takes a quick look at our history or the current state of other economies to tell us that.

      But what did our founders know? Society was different then. Bullshit. Human nature, especially as concerns power and greed, is ever the same.

      Bullshit to that. Human nature and greed are certainly the same as they were when Jefferson wrote those words (God knows he was right about just about everything else), but our economy and industries are far different. Complex international lending institutions, insurance companies, securities exchange, and manufacturing were all in their infancy (at best) 200 years ago. Society was different back then. It is because, as you point out, of the fact that human nature hasn't changed that modern economies need government oversight to prevent dangerous system-wide failures.

      As for a debt-based economy, there are some good arguments in favor of a constantly balanced budget, but the ability to run deficits and surpluses depending on the state of the economy would do a lot for California and several other states right now. Perpetual debt is bad, but without the option of temporary debt, I would argue that any large economy would grind to a halt.

      --
      An interesting anagram of "BANACH TARSKI" is "BANACH TARSKI BANACH TARSKI"
    14. Re:Screw the government by evilviper · · Score: 3, Insightful
      But who is going to hire people for those jobs for minimum wage, plus unemployment insurance, plus matched social security?

      Can you say "part-time job"? Apparently not.

      You don't see ushers because there has been a change in attitude where companies no longer give a damn about their customers... If having one less usher will improve the bottom line, then he's gone.

      Hey, it would be trivial for theatres to clean up between shows, but that would cost $1 more per hour so that's out of the question... Meanwhile companies wonder why they are loosing so much business, and respond to that lost business by making the situation even worse.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    15. Re:Screw the government by Zebbers · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      hahaha thats the dumbest thing ive heard

    16. Re:Screw the government by Trekologer · · Score: 2

      If I had followed my oh-so-compassionate government and not allowed myself to be "exploited", I wouldn't have earned a pretty good pile of money.

      Look at the flip-side of that argument. What if you put your time and energy into that company and it either folded or took your work and didn't give you anything in return. You would be pretty pissed off. You would be wondering why there weren't any laws to prevent something like that from happening.

      Of course, let's not even get into how many poor people are locked out of any job at all because of minimum wage...

      Take, for instance, the current Federal minimum wage of $5.15/hour. A 40-hour work week would net you $10,712 a year. California's $6.75/hour yields $14,040 a year. Its pretty hard to make a living on minimum wage at all.

    17. Re:Screw the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Get married. 10,712 * 2 = 21,424. Assuming both of you only make minimum wage. Let's say one of you has some skills and gets a job as a carpenter or a welder or something that pays "only" 25,000. Well, now you have 35,712. No, you won't be living in luxery and I'd hate to have to raise a family on it, but it is doable.

      If you people with college degrees are out of work, become a teacher. Sure, you have to put up with a lot, but the pay is at least better than minimum wage, and you get summers off to do whatever.

    18. Re:Screw the government by tjb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Of course, because all that gold served Spain so well.

      What's that? Over 30 state bankruptcies in 200 years? Having half the world granted to them by papal decree and then having to surrender it due to lack of funds? Hey, if we can't pay our bills, the only thing to do is get more gold... /sarcasm

      The gold standard suffers from the exact same inflationary problems as fiat money. If the government needs more gold, they'll just dig it up, like Spain did. And remember, gold-extraction technology is much more advanced now. Besides which, gold is completely unregulatable - if gold is money people are gonna dig it up on their own accord (unless you plan on shooting prospectors).

      The US, and most of the world, was officially or not, off the gold standard by the 1930's. In the US, the myth of a gold standard applied until 1972, at which point there wasn't enough available gold in the world to properly represent the US economy, so the fiction was dropped.

      Since 1935 or so (when the gold standard was mostly dropped), the world economy has grown more than it did in the preceding 1000 years. Having the money supply being restricted artificially by the availability of a particualr metal is like trying to swim wearing cement shoes.

      Tim

    19. Re:Screw the government by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      And if it wasn't for that government interfearance Americans would have to compete for jobs with people (usually imagrants) who would be PERFECTLY WILLING to work for less than a living wage. We'd have another pweiod like the industial revolution. No thank you.

    20. Re:Screw the government by sheldon · · Score: 2

      Before the advent of the Federal Reserve, eventual move to a baseless currency and the adoption of a debt-based economy, things were pretty good.

      Well yeah, sure, if you were rich.

      But we wouldn't have the middle class we have today.

    21. Re:Screw the government by Eponymous+Mallard · · Score: 1

      Well of course Thomas Jefferson would have been against a minimum wage! He owned slaves, you moron!

      A minmum wage kind of puts a crimp in the whole plantation business - so inconvenient to actually pay someone when you can whip them.

      And, no, slaves don't get stock options.

      But, hey, don't let me interrupt your libertarian onanism with actual thought.

      Eponymous Mallard

    22. Re:Screw the government by t · · Score: 1
      If you had RTFA you would have found that the gov't imposes no penalties on the people who are working for free. With that in mind you should rewrite your statement: "for a govenment to tell me that i am not allowed to pay my labor for less than some $X which they arbitrarily choose, is an abuse of power, and infringes on my freedom."

      Still feel the same? If so, are you a renter? Care to know what laws stop your landlord from fucking you over?

    23. Re:Screw the government by t · · Score: 1

      I think you are confusing the percentage of people who are unemployed with the "unemployment rate" which could go to zero while many many people would still be unemployed. In fact since congress did not extend UI you can expect the rate to decrease artificially.

    24. Re:Screw the government by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      You don't see ushers because there has been a change in attitude where companies no longer give a damn about their customers... If having one less usher will improve the bottom line, then he's gone.

      I'd say it's because consumers have chosen to value price over service. They feel that that additional usher isn't worth paying for. And as long as the masses of customers feel that way, it doesn't matter whether *you* are willing to pay an extra dollar on each movie ticket to have ushers.

      Companies (especially large ones) generally don't just randomly make movies like that. The public has voted with their wallet, and in general, they have voted for cheap products and services.

    25. Re:Screw the government by xtremex · · Score: 1

      I agree...with only my mortgage, electric bill, car payment and phone , I need a MINIMUM of $28,000 in Long Island, NY. This does not include food, medical (my wife is on disability) or clothes for the kid. It doesn't include the required $5,000 a year property tax I have to pay or car insurance ($1,200 a year in NY) I am willing to move anywhere else, but first I have to sell my house(Anyone in the market for a $300,000 cape on a 1/4 acre of property in Long Island , NY---it's a CHEAP starter house)
      After being out of work for a year, unemployment exhausted, we have 2 months left of savings WITHOUT paying phone or electric. According to my calculations, finding a mimimum wage job that DOESNT start you at part time is like trying to find a needle in a HayStack. Any suggestions?

      --
      If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
    26. Re:Screw the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Talk to the IRS, the phone company, and the utilities and ask if they have a program for financial hardship. Reduce your car insurance through an insurance bot (insweb.com). Sell your books on Amazon. Sell your stuff on Ebay. Move out, give your house to a rental agency, and rent the place. Give/throw away the rest. Pack your bags and move out.

      You should have moved out a long time ago.

    27. Re:Screw the government by evilviper · · Score: 2

      I disagree. I have seen people willing to pay far more for services if they are aware that the service is going to be better. Besides, the situation has pushed many people away from theatres (such as myself and several people I know) which I know can't be good for the bottom line.

      Besides, saying that companies make decisions based on consumers doesn't mean that it was fair and unbiased... nor that they made the correct decision.

      If you have an great service for years, then drop the service in order to improve the prices, people will assume that still includes the better service, and will not show the change for quite some time. That, IMHO, is the reason why many bad decisions are made.

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    28. Re:Screw the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Screw the Car Insurance company, drop it, car insurance is just another tax, if the government requires it there should be help with it for the destitute. Let's face it, driving really isn't a "privilage" anymore it's a necessity. I havent' had car insurance in about a year and I have an almost 2 hour commute by car.

    29. Re:Screw the government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Like, say, minting money, issuing articles of incorporation, insuring bank accounts, creating and enforcing laws against fraud... All governments regulate the economy to some degree. The only question is how much. "Free market" vs. "government interference" is a false dichotomy, a Randoid fantasy.

      Minting money? Insuring bank accounts? What about Hong Kong before China took over. There are other examples of this. Articles of Incorporation? An Article of Incorporation is nothing more than a contract. Legal enforcement? I'll give you that one for now.

      In any case, the original poster is not making a false dichotomy, you're the one who is. He said he hates the government interfering. That's not an absolute statement. You're the one who is turning it into an absolute statement. Interference can mean a number of things to a number of people. Sheeesh !

    30. Re:Screw the government by stephanruby · · Score: 2
      The minimum wage laws may "oppress" teenagers who could use some pocket money,

      Since when did you start quoting yourself to make a point? "oppress" -- please spare me your sarcasm. Oppression is not the right word. Oppression implies intent. The side-effect of the minimum wage is anything but intentional. Oppression implies that the group in question is put down. Low wage non-workers may stagnate as a result of the minimum wage, but they are not explicitly put down and they certainly have no idea that the minimum wage could be one of the cause for their misfortunes.

      There are plenty of people out there who can't read, write, count, follow procedures, or get along with people. Many of those people can't get jobs. Period. Because of the minimum wage.

      "pocket money"? Fuck the money! Working is about self-respect. Working is about growth. Working is about earning your keep. The human mind wasn't designed to stagnate. The human body wasn't designed simply to consume. We have to be working and producing for the very reason that we were made to produce and survive. For some, working at a very low wage may be the only opportunity for growth and it could be the only chance they have.

      For me, I was given that chance when I came to the United States I managed to finish three years of University but in France, my home country -- the cost of hiring/firing someone is so prohibitive -- few companies would hire college graduates, let alone college dropouts.

    31. Re:Screw the government by longsnowsm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While Jefferson made some good points regarding debt and the out of control government, things have happened since these enlightened comments were made. Jefferson was attempting to prevent government from spinning out of control. What does not get discussed is who was Jefferson fighting? Big money interests who wanted to push the US into debt as they had already done in Europe and the rest of the Western world. These money interests wanted us indebted to them to control governments. Today these same money interests pose as the IMF riding to the rescue of countries drowing in corruption and con-artists(which ultimately leads to disaster for those that take the loans). If anyone is interested in how the paper money system works(with the federal reserve) and how the world banks make money every time some more paper is printed there are several books that cover this topic. For the most part it is not roses and a lovely garden that we have with the Federal Reserve. Some reading on the topics of the Federal reserve, runs on banks, and the manipulation of the financial system(1890's) makes the situation clear that it was an intentional move by those who saw a way for larger profits and greater control(bankers and big money). The bottom line is the same, folks that were so rich with the old system were only going to get richer with the new system and they wanted it that way. The rich get richer and the poor get poorer. The middle class is a fable that is repeated by those that seek to keep increasing their wealth on the backs of labor... I have watched the so called middle class loose jobs and go from "middle class" to poorer than those classified as poor due to massive debt and lifestyles that cannot be sustained. Jeffersons ideas while full of merit do not fit today in a world that caved into the money mongers that have built systems on top of systems that tie and bind everything with layers of regulation and further control(guarantees to ensure that there is a method for repayment). This situation is not going to be reversed. So now we have to address the issues at hand today.

      Now back to the topic here about folks working for nothing, and the government getting involved. Let's pop into reality mode for a moment and consider cost of living. What does it cost the average US household in basic living expenses just to survive? I know costs vary depending on where you live, but for the sake of arguement let's say $600 rent, $400 groceries, $150 utilities, Insurance $100(single car), Gas $50, Phone $25... Just the basic essentials to live(at my location). We are talking
      say $1300 a month just getting by for a household of say 3 or 4 people. Now lets say your one of the "lucky" people who happen to have a full time minimum wage job(lots of folks cannot get full time work as employers have found that with part timers they don't have to pay benefits and other nice to have things that benefit employees). So lets say your working for $6.75 x 40 hours = $1080 before Uncle Sugar nails ya for Social Insecurity, Medicad, Medicare, taxes(state and federal). Now I am no rocket scientist, but before I even get started with any real number crunching I can see that one person making minimum wage isn't going to make the bills let alone optional things like health insurance coverage, or any kind of savings for a rainy day(car breaks down, kid gets sick) or god forbid retirement. Oh yeah money for daycare... Forget it. So now lets say we are talking about 2 people making full time minimum wage just to make the basic living expenses. The reason for the minimum wage laws should be quite clear. There are many people in this world that do not have the educational background that many on /. have, or a marketable skill such as code work, engineering, systems administration. These folks are working in sometimes unsanitary, and unsafe work environments. They have no voice, they have no representation, and they basically without a lawyer have no rights. That is why these laws became essential. Companies will pay so little that people cannot survive. The images of Scrooge come to mind and Tiny Tim's family(appropriate for this time of year). If your expecting some sort of morale conscience from corporate America you need to pinch yourself and wake up. The sad truth is that the minimum wage laws in the US need attention all right... The minimum wage needs to be increased so that people can at least survive. The same old story lives today... The rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

      While globalization seems to be the mantra these days I clearly don't see the benefit to the common working people in the US or any country for that matter. The big corporations are going to go where they can get a free or low cost ride. They don't care. Tell me how manufacturing jobs that leave your city or town(that pay a living wage) and are replaced by a minimum wage job(if you can find one) in the service industry is a net gain for you, your city/town, our economy? Or how about the code job that was just exported to India and replaced with 2 jobs at Micky D's? This madness seems to be repeated mindlessly by those that are told we are "isolationist" if we don't agree with this nonsense. There were very valid reasons for tariffs back in Jeffersons day and those tariffs today can help become the equalizer to offset cheap labor, weak labor laws, environmental laws, and human rights abuses in other countries. If we want to talk globalization lets talk about competition on a level playing field. That is not what today's global economy is about contrary to what we are told. It is about cheap labor, and big profits which does != competition and expanding markets. The government will have to be involved. The question is who's bidding will it be doing? For the rich, the corporate elite? Who's interests are they looking out for? Is there anyone out here on /. going to tell me that people are even getting by on minimum wage let alone get ahead? The so called "Free Market economy" has been dead for a very long time. The balance of power and the separation of powers embodied by our government has not kept up with the times and methods of those that would seek to usurp the power and authority of the governed. These money interests have the best government that loans and laws they bought can buy. Can government hurt? I think we all agree it can. But can government help? I believe the answer is yes. Unless we shift the power structure around so that the money interests have to work harder to screw you and me we are in trouble.

      If your a tech worker out there looking for work I can sympathize as the company I work for is cutting people by the 10's of thousands and don't expect to survive much longer myself at the rate we are cutting. For those that have the courage and will to work for nothing in the hopes that it works out for you I wish you the best of luck and I would consider doing something like this myself if the opportunity presents itself(of course while still looking for another full time gig). For those that find themselves unable to find work paying a living wage and are working for minimum wage or something resembling that it now makes sense that our government hears the plight of the working class. If you don't have a union where you work would it help? I have been asking myself this recently as the workers voice does not get heard today in my work place, but a union might help as tech workers have about the same value as a cow ready for slaughter. The choice is yours...

      For those that mindlessly repeat what we have been told for years about minimum wage eliminating jobs and ruining our economy I challenge you to do some basic math and ask yourself if minimum wage is fair, just, or how about livable. Ask yourself what would employers pay if there wasn't a minimum wage, or how many hours would you be working a day if not for basic standards required by law today. I could easily see companies paying waitress wages(2-3 bucks an hour) and still complaining about labor costs. Don't let anyone con you... If their business is in such sad shape that they cannot afford to pay somone $6.75 an hour then how are they staying in business? When a company can pay an engineer $40 an hour and bill $300 an hour for services that the $40 an hour employee provides I have to ask "Who's screwing who?"

    32. Re:Screw the government by reflector · · Score: 1

      everyone has their own idea as to what is peanuts, and what is a worthwhile wage. in a free society, we should each have the power to make our own choice, to live our lives by our own values, rather than have someone else choose for us.

    33. Re:Screw the government by reflector · · Score: 1

      If you had RTFA you would have found that the gov't imposes no penalties on the people who are working for free.

      who are you kidding? if there are substantial penalties imposed on companies who pay less than x, companies won't do it, and hence it DOES prevent me from selling my labor for less than x.

    34. Re:Screw the government by thelexx · · Score: 2

      "If the government needs more gold, they'll just dig it up, like Spain did. And remember, gold-extraction technology is much more advanced now. Besides which, gold is completely unregulatable - if gold is money people are gonna dig it up on their own accord (unless you plan on shooting prospectors)."

      There is less than one ounce of gold per person globally, or about 140,000 tons TOTAL above ground supply, with a global yearly production of about 3000. And production is dropping due to a manipulated market keeping it from being profitable. Go tell the geologists working for the mining companies about all this gold that's just laying around, they'd love to hear about it.

      Just keep thinking that gold isn't money. Explain it very carefully to all the Japanese folks fleeing to it as a _store of value_, who are experiencing first hand the effects of a total disconnect of monetary policy from reality. All the fucking voodoo, hand-waving, pseudo-intellectual bullshit the bankers over there can muster isn't doing ANY GOOD. And it's not just Japan. Ask someone from South America who has watched their paper assets get annihilated, or Russia. Gold as a store of value is unbeatable. It's the best performing asset class over the last year+ for that simple, yet very good reason. But no, gold is a 'barbarous relic'. I'll take yours then, thanks very much.

      Note that I'm not advocating a return to some by-gone 'gold standard'. Just sound monetary policy, of which the current Treasury, Fed, BIS, IMF, et al are the antithesis.

      --
      "Gold still represents the ultimate form of payment in the world." - Alan Greenspan, 1999
    35. Re:Screw the government by MarcQuadra · · Score: 1

      As far as I know people not interested in working, retired people, homeless bums not looking for jobs, and housewives are all not considered in the employment rate because they don't need or want jobs. The number of unemployed people will remain the same as people come off UI, but the number of people recieving benefits will decrease. The unemployment rate will not 'artificially decrease' in this case, as adds and drops from payrolls are reported to the federal government and used for such statistics.
      The actual percent of humans without jobs in America I would guess to be about 30%, whic is a random number off the top of my head, but no matter what it is it will decreas soon as more and more old people start dropping out of the work force and live much longer lives.

      --
      "Sometimes, I think Trent just needs a cup of hot chocolate and a blankie." -Tori Amos on Nine Inch Nails
    36. Re:Screw the government by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 2

      You would be wondering why there weren't any laws to prevent something like that from happening.

      This discussion is stale, but I have to answer this. HELL NO I wouldn't complain, and I sure as hell wouldn't complain to the government that I was "exploited". I went in with my eyes open, and I took a risk. Risk taking is the foundation of progress, and it irritates me that the government disincentives risk.

      The only time I would complain is if another party breaks a contract, and there are specific remedies that can be used in those cases.

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  19. Same old by murky.waters · · Score: 1

    I don't know, but I find the whole story about laid-off-tech-workers-struggling-to-find-a-job-any -job more annoying by the hour.

    Yes, being unemployed is one of the worst things around, but this is just one more variation of grounds that have been well traveled already.

    And as the article alludes to, most folks aren't really at the brink of destruction---they just think they're pulling off a reasonable gamble. So there.

    --
    Imagine the Creator as a stand up commedian - and at once the world becomes explicable. -Mencken
  20. Makes sense to me. by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you are unemployed but you can still pay your bills, this beats sitting at home in front of the telly.

    5 Years ago I helped start a small IT consultancy company. I learned tons of stuff, not just IT skills, but things about how companies work, what is actually involved in setting one up, legal issues, finance matters, marketing, etc. etc. Looking back, I would say that experience has been invaluable to me, so much that I'd say it may be worth quitting a paying job for, in some cases.

    Then again, do take a good hard look at those stock options and make sure you'll hit big if the company does take off. You are working for free to build a company, with part of the risk of things not working out falling on your shoulders. But... if it does work out, you should then reap part of the (substantial) rewards as well.

    --
    If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    1. Re:Makes sense to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If you are unemployed but you can still pay your bills, this beats sitting at home in front of the telly.

      I see you don't have cable.

    2. Re:Makes sense to me. by kootch · · Score: 1

      I always thought that when they asked you whether you had worked that week and had been compensated, that even if the compensation was non-monetary, it counted.

      So, receiving stock options (which ARE taxable income), that you are in effect being paid for your services.

  21. Learn to flip burgers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or hope you know somebody that knows somebody who can get you a job. Its funny to see phone tech jobs advertised and they need someone with a CS degree? Come on a monkey can read the answer tree from a book. Have a fallback plan. I work in the non destructive testing industry myself.

  22. Simple way to keep up to date by kowalski1971 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Whilst I couldn't see myself managing for long without regular compensation, if I was out of work I would definitely consider voluntary/low-paid work simply to keep up to date. There is no easier way of keeping up to date with standards and new technologies than working in your area of expertise (xml/xsl + related in my case). I realize this is only applicable to those who work with technologies that change (I guess most of us here ?) but is still valid for others as its a great way of keeping the brain ticking and looks pretty good on the CV/resume too. Gareth.

    1. Re:Simple way to keep up to date by evilviper · · Score: 2

      Yeah, all those sysadmins from 20-30 years ago that learned Unix are going to be obsolete any time now...

      soon...

      not yet...

      it's comming...

      shouldn't be long now...

      (at least that's what Microsoft has been saying since NT 3.1 came out, and it seems every edu is going along with it...)

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  23. This is pathetic. by NineNine · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I find it really, really pathetic that these "people" (yes, I meant the quotes) have no life outside of work. What most people call work ends for them (ie: performing a task for compensation), and they're lost. They have to do "something". And that "something" is work for free. There sure are a lot of empty, sad people out there. If my life was so empty that I'd rather work for free then do something on my own time, I'd probably shoot myself.

    1. Re:This is pathetic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      chill.. that's how people are raised: your work is your life.

      what's the first thing a person does when they meet you? they ask "what do you do". they don't mean for fun, or for your family, they mean "what task do you perform for compensation".

      the folks that can find something to do without "working" aren't the ones complaining anyway.

      and don't forget, many people LIKE to work. they like having something to do that's part of a bigger picture, they like a structured life. (and of course many people pretend they like it when they really don't but let's not get into that).

    2. Re:This is pathetic. by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      They're getting stock options, and when the company they're "volunteering" for starts hiring again, guess who gets first consideration?

      It's better than sitting on their asses collecting unemployment, isn't it?

    3. Re:This is pathetic. by NineNine · · Score: 2

      Well, I was unemployed for 6 months. I sure didn't sit on my ass. I got to read a ton of books I never had time to (no, not computer books... real books), I got to dive into my hobby (mountain biking) and got in great shape in the process, I took some cheap road trips, I spent a lot of time with my wife, I did a slew of things I wouldn't have done otherwise. I have a life outside of work. Unemployment was a great opportunity to live. Hell, I even decided to choose a new career while I was unemployed after a good bit of thought.

      My point is that if you can't think of something better to do than work, you have some serious problems that you should consider looking into.

    4. Re:This is pathetic. by NineNine · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hate to quote a movie, but, "You are not your job.". I firmly believe that.

      And I agree, people do ask, "What do you do?". I started truly hearing that when I was unemployed, and it finally started to click with me that for most people, their jobs are their lives, whether or not they like those jobs. That's truly, literally, sad.

    5. Re:This is pathetic. by t · · Score: 1

      If you had RTFA you would know that those people ARE collecting unemployment. The point of UI is to use that time to find a job that pays, that way they're not fucked when UI runs out.

  24. Crisis? What crisis? by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Wonder why my employer has only just now managed to fill its programmer vacancies despite having advertised them for about two years?

    In all honestly, these people - where they can, I recognise some have families with other major commitments etc - need to move to where there is work. Yes, salaries are five digits every where other than a few hot spots - but those hot spots (a) are effing expensive to live in and (b) don't have the jobs any more.

    IT remains a growing field. The adjustments in the last couple of years were specific and related to a crash in one, relatively small but high profile, area of the industry. If you're prepared to work for options, consider instead casting your job searching net over a wider area.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    1. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by StarTux · · Score: 2

      Yes and I noticed more jobs on the market. Seems liek most don't want to move due to other commitments (like the one interviewed had a small winery, obviously not a small investment in time and money).

      Willing to move? Hell yeah. Who wants to pay for an over priced piece of dirt?

      StarTux

    2. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by blair1q · · Score: 2

      I lived in the BA for a year, and came to an incontrovertible conclusion: the people there are dumb and insane.

      It's cold, ugly, overcrowded, and economically upside down. Yet they believe it's the only place to live.

      Worrying now about whether they are working for free is a pointless exercise. It was inevitable.

    3. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by /dev/trash · · Score: 2
      The adjustments in the last couple of years were specific and related to a crash in one, relatively small but high profile, area of the industry.

      And what area of the industry was this? I'd like to know, since I've been looking for 14+ months and haven't found anything. My search net is pretty wide. I'm single and have no real attachment to any area. So tell me, where is it that economy is booming?

    4. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by TheAntiCrust · · Score: 1

      Just a guess, but I think hes talking about the whole internet start up "OMG we are millionaires over night and now we cant afford to eat" thing.

    5. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by snarfer · · Score: 2

      You, uh, neglected to mention WHERE these jobs are!

      Last week the survey of classified ads in newspapers reported that we're seeing the fewest help wanted ads since the depression.

    6. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by bmetzler · · Score: 2
      In all honestly, these people need to move to where there is work.

      Ok, where's that? Where should I move to? I'd be willing to move to this utopia, but you forgot to tell me where it is.

      -Brent
    7. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by /dev/trash · · Score: 2

      While that seems to be everybody, it really isn't. I didn't work for a startup. It was an established company. Unfortunately, my skillset was not worth the expenses I was generating ( healthcare and salary). Those of us that were not part of the bubble are getting lost in the whole thing.

    8. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Where I live it is. Try Southern Maryland. Unemployment rate a little over three percent. A naval base that supports a booming tech industry. I'm a year out of college, graduated a semester early because I got a good offer, AND I just got a nice fat raise. If you're looking for internet garbage forget it, but real programming is in demand.

    9. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by SupaYoda · · Score: 2, Informative

      Alabama. The company I work for is currently hiring 150 new people, and good (read: must have some common sense and be willing to do more than surf the 'net) techs are hard to come by around here. Mercedes, Hyundai, Honda, and associates are looking for a few good men.

      Did I fail to mention that cost of living in Alabama is dirt cheap? A NICE 3br/3ba in a NICE neighborhood with a fireplace, big fenced-in back yard, screened in back porch with hot tub, two car garage, large attic, and hardwood/tile flooring will cost you anywhere from $85,000-120,000. These also happen to be practically down the road from large shopping centers and malls and zoned for the nicer public school systems. How do I know? I just bought one fitting that exact description for $103,000, and there were MANY more to choose from. Add in the factor that intrest rates are the lowest they've been in about 40 years, and there becomes a slight drool factor.

      Alabama also has Milos hamburgers, which is a divine gift all its own... (You just have to try one to know...)

      The trade-off? It's Alabama, and the rest of the world just thinks of you as "Bubbah" the IT.

    10. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by SupaYoda · · Score: 1

      I forgot to add (in the desperate hope of finding an able and competent coworker) that all of the afformentioned companies have excellent health care and other benefits.

      ...she said with a gleam in her eye, in hopes that someone would come and replace the guy next to her, who stinks and asks many question and can't speak above a mumble and inspires really bad run-on sentences.

    11. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look. All you "engineering" types are just self-glorified button-pushers.

      Try some *real* engineering sometime and get off the ego trip.

      Civil, mechanical, chemical engineers can function quite well without your involvement thankyouverymuch.

      BOFH indeed, losers.

    12. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by KevinDumpsCore · · Score: 1

      Could you post a URL for these job listings? Thanks.

      BTW, how's the rent for a 1 bedroom apartment (at least 500 sq. feet)? How's the public transportation system?

    13. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

      Amen. Move to the country, where, for example, you can buy a nice house with a mortgage payment that's likely to be less than your current rent.

      There are lots of small tech and non-tech businesses who'd love to have skilled people come and work for them. I make less than what some formerly employeed people made in Silicon Valley, but my cost of living is far more reasonable. Plus I don't have to put up with city traffic.

    14. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by erat · · Score: 2

      India...

    15. Re:Crisis? What crisis? by SupaYoda · · Score: 1

      Most of these local companies don't advertise online that I know. (I could be wrong.) You'll find all of them in the Birmingham News, though. The automobile companies I listed advertise heavily in the local newspapers, but you may have to check their websites. The fact that a lot have moved to Alabama and are looking for workers is no big secret. In fact, a lot of the assembly line workers, which are more in demand, are making more than some ITs around here. There's also an Alabama Job Line, which I'll post as soon as I can find it.

      Here are a couple of links:
      A few Alabama employers
      The JobBank

      To answer your question about rent... Most one bedrooms are hard to come by, but if you can find them for cheaper than a 2 bed, you won't pay more than about $450/month for a good one. In fact, I nearly got a riverside apartment (beautiful view) in a nice apartment community (lots of kids and a few state troopers) for $375/month. That one was a two bed/one bath, though. They're usually cheaper. One of the nicer apartment complexes (albeit more expensive) where my mother lives is $585/month for a 2 br/2ba, but it includes cable and water.

  25. A couple of my friends have done this by billstewart · · Score: 3, Insightful
    A couple of my friends have done this. One of them has been trying for years to start a startup to do something, anything (:-) A few of the projects have gotten up to 20%-likely-to-start phase, but not started, and while the latest project was no better than 5% likely, and probably more like 1%, it's still worth trying to do a business plan for until something better comes along, and it was too early in the fall to get a job at the mall.

    Another friend of mine worked on the project writing the technical side of the business plan. She didn't seriously expect it to turn into money, and she'd have dropped it in a minute if a paying job came along, but it gave her a 3-month job entry on her resume as well. I don't know if she called it a contract or a limited partnership or what.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:A couple of my friends have done this by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      If you're going to work for free for a startup, make it one you own outright.

      That's what I'm working on. A .com project that likely will never turn a profit... but I'm seriously working on it, and eventually I will have something web-visible to show for my effort. Fills in the black time hole in my resume, and if this is lucky enough to ever bring in money, that money will be mine, all mine.

  26. Bad idea - why not go it alone? by saphena · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Working on someone else's idea for nothing seems a particularly unproductive thing to do. Yes, you *might* get *some* future value (but probably not your fair share). You will almost certainly make yourself inelegible for unemployment benefits and you run the risk of getting caught up in the project without ever settling the question of proper remuneration.

    Employers will be reluctant to spend money on good staff when they can already get it for free.

    Why not simply develop your own idea? Maybe it'll work and maybe you'll get rich in the process. If not, what have you lost?

    You still have all the benefits of practising and improving your art, maybe learning new, more marketable skills in the process.

    1. Re:Bad idea - why not go it alone? by Gaccm · · Score: 2

      Simple, developing your own idea costs money. If you are already living off your savings you don't really want to take a big chunk out of it to start a high risk project. You're right in that there is little monitary benefits (however, you are wrong in that these people are still getting unemployment benefits), what they do get is some more items for their resume and the possiblity of large rewards (while not as large as if these people went alone, there is a higher probability).

      --

      Only dead fish swim with the stream...
    2. Re:Bad idea - why not go it alone? by Tim+Macinta · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Working on someone else's idea for nothing seems a particularly unproductive thing to do. Yes, you *might* get *some* future value (but probably not your fair share). You will almost certainly make yourself inelegible for unemployment benefits and you run the risk of getting caught up in the project without ever settling the question of proper remuneration.
      I've always looked at equity this way too - why work for somebody else for 1, 2, or even 5 percent equity when you can work for yourself for 100% equity? Especially if you aren't getting paid, I can't envision any situation where it would make sense to accept anything less than 20% equity as the bulk of your compensation (certainly, it's OK to accept less equity if you are being paid a reasonbale rate, though). I would even say 20% is too low in most cases because for the same amount of risk you can have 100% of your own company.

      Personally, my core competency is software design and development, so I do think there would be a benefit for me to join an existing company (for equity) where there are people with complementary skills, particularly in the business and sales areas. If I tried to do these other things myself, I probably wouldn't do as good of a job as others. The critical factor, however, is that even though I wouldn't do as good of a job at these other things, I would probably do a good enough job. The tradeoff is between having a small piece of a larger pie (when working with others who are better at selling, etc) or having the entirety of a smaller pie (when working alone). Say that a company were offering me 10% equity (which is unusually high from what I've seen) to work for them - do I really think that by working with others the product would be 900% more successful or that if I were to start my own company I would do 90% worse job at the non-technical aspects of things? The answer has always been "no" for me so far. Everybody should ask this question when considering equity as a substantial form of compensation and adjust the numbers accordingly.

    3. Re:Bad idea - why not go it alone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have to be smart enough to reconize what a good idea is. I have ideas all of the time, but only 50% would be possible with today's tech, the other 50% would take to much work and time to build and test(R&D). I am only one guy.

  27. Work for free and get screwed... by bkontr · · Score: 1

    If don't get paid for your (tech) work you would be better off flipping burgers or working in retail and so on. I almost got sucked into this lie of just wait a little longer and the money will come in.... I got only slightly burned. The only exception to this rule is when you start your own company...at least then you will be the one who determines your fate.

    --


    "You helped our nation celebrate its bicentennial in 17 -- 1976." --George W. Bush, to Queen Elizabeth, Wash
  28. Would someone please read the article? by mrsam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The sob story in the linked article is about someone who's supposed to be a "product marketing director." That doesn't sound like a techie to me.

    Certainly things are a bit tough out there, no doubt about that. Still, I think that if anyone's in a tight spot right now their time is better spent in hitting the classifieds and the help-wanted ads, instead of sitting around and feeling sorry for themselves.

    I've been doing contract programming for, oh, about ten years now. A little less than a year ago I went back "on the beach." Rather than wringing my hands out, and sharing my sad life's story to anyone who'd care to listen, I diligently looked for work, while at the same time I was studying up and brushing up my skills. I literally went to work each day: got up, went through all the job websites to see what came up overnight, then hitting the man pages, and studying until breaking for lunch. After lunch, another go at the job boards, to see what the pimps uploaded in the morning, then going back to the books until the significant-other finished work and came home.

    Because of that, I picked up a number of good skills before I found a new gig, in early fall; and the stuff that I learned by then is precisely why my current contract just got renewed this week.

    This may not be what people might want to hear, but if you have a good head on your shoulders, buck up, hang on, and don't settle for some cheap job that pays a half of what it should be paying. There's no doubt that companies these days are taking advantage of the soft economy, and using that to get geeks for pennies. I've witnessed this first hand, for almost a year now.

    See here: folks need to understand that companies won't stop abusing geeks as long as the geeks permit themselves to be abused. Fsck them. There were plenty of low paying gigs that I could've taken earlier this summer. But I waited until I found a reasonable gig, at a reasonable pay. And if I didn't? If I took the low-paying jobs that all the headhunters/pimps were calling me about, then now, at the end of the year, I'd end up with the same pile of cash, but instead of picking up new skills over the summer, I would've wasted it in another windowlesss office, for toiling away for chump chnage.

    Of course, a lot of advanced planning is required before you can afford to be on the beach for a prolonged period of time, without much of a lifestyle change. You have to be thinking ahead all the time; if when life was good you should still live a modest lifestyle, and hoard as much cash as you can, instead of blowing it away, living high on the hog. But that's another rant...

    1. Re:Would someone please read the article? by NewbieProgrammerMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm glad somebody pointed out that the article leads off with the plight of a "product marketing director." What the hell is that? I had to scan waaay down before I ran across any mention of anyone remotely "techie." Reminds me of a similar recent article (also posted on /.) about whiney MCSE's bummed out because they were too proud to take a job at Starbucks making "only" $10 or $20/hour.

      Where did this "I have a degree and/or a big salary history and therefore somebody owes me a nice job with a fat salary whether or not I can produce anything of value" attitude come from? Why are all these mis\H\H\Hdisplaced "IT workers" unable to get a job of any kind for 6+ months? Every pizza place I see needs delivery drivers - certainly even a geek can deliver pizzas. It's not IT, but damn, are you too proud to do something to get off unemployment? STOP WHINING!

      Maybe I don't have a right to judge and complain about whiners. I am a self-taught programmer - no degree or certification of any kind - and I had two concurrent software jobs and a third one on the horizon. I fired one of my employers because they took me for granted. I found my second job because of my spare-time/hobbyist programming activities and a trip to SIGGRAPH 2000. I might have a third job on the way because of my reputation at my first job. I don't think I'm special or extraordinarily talented; I just don't depend on somebody else to look out for my future.

      Maybe I'm just lucky, but I've never expected to find a decent job by sitting at home on my ass and mailing out resumes; I guess now I know why. If I could remember exactly how it goes or who said it, I'd post some eloquent quote about luck being the residue of hard work or something.

      --
      [b.belong('us') for b in bases if b.owner() == 'you']
    2. Re:Would someone please read the article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what a union is for. So companies can't take advantage of their tech workers, or get people to do stuff for free. You don't see many plumbers, electricians and other people working for nothing.

    3. Re:Would someone please read the article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Branch Rickey, I believe. said that luck is the residue of design.

      My favorite is what he told Ralph Kiner when Kiner demanded $100k for next season. He is reported to have said we finished last with you and we can finish last without you! ROFL

    4. Re:Would someone please read the article? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um ... "The harder I work, the luckier I get." Some former President ... Lincoln, I think.

    5. Re:Would someone please read the article? by SupaYoda · · Score: 1
      Reminds me of a similar recent article (also posted on /.) about whiney MCSE's bummed out because they were too proud to take a job at Starbucks making "only" $10 or $20/hour.


      Starbucks pays $10 or $20/hour?! Dude! I SO got jipped at McDonalds.
  29. I don't get it by sx10 · · Score: 1

    I keep hearing all these stories about there being "no jobs" but I just don't see any shortage. I live in the Portland area and I've had to turn down a few job offers this year. I have a few friends that recently graduated and couldn't find jobs, but all they do is put their resume (devoid of any experience) on monster.com and expect their phone to start ringing. All I can say is get off your ass and find a job. It sure isn't going to find you. Sorry if I sound harsh but this is what I'm seeing...

    1. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm I guess it's DIFFERENT WHERE YOU ARE. Do you think there are throngs of people lieing just so you can feel good that you have a job? One needs to simply look at the wall street journal to know that there are many layoffs + no/very few new tech jobs. That leads to a glut of people in IT looking for work which leads to unemployement. The world is NOT just where you live. You should feel awefull for being ignorant and then saying "get off your ass". I know 12 people who probably could do your job better than you and are out of work. How dare you?

    2. Re:I don't get it by sx10 · · Score: 1

      Okay then, IN MY AREA people should GET OFF THEIR ASS :-)
      My main point is that the media isn't always, or even most of the time, fully informed. Do you really think there should be some huge shortage of jobs in one of the fastest growing industries? How many millions more people/companies use computer products and services each year? I really see alot of companies going, "gee these computers really aren't working out, lets throw them all out and use typewriters and filing cabinets again!"

    3. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this is bullshit these are people who refuse to move away from there comfortable little place in life, they can't or won't leave friends or family to find work. there are plenty of jobs out there if you are willing to go anywhere it takes to get it if that means over seas ,accross the country or like me working for a textile company ( but still in a tech positoin with a good paycheck) if you know 10 people who could do his job better these are ten people that refuse to open there eyes get off there asses and go find a paycheck

    4. Re:I don't get it by snarfer · · Score: 2

      Portland has the highest unemployment in the country. I know engineers in Portland who have been looking for a year. Who are you kidding? All the tech companies in Portland dumped employees, and none are hiring!

    5. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should pull your head out of your ass. You might sound more intelligent. The computer market is a mature market. Most of the employment of the last few years was fueled by the assumption that it would continue to be a growth market. It's not. It's saturated. It's now primarily a replacement market. The only growth in the industry right now is for entry-level applications programmers, mostly Visual Basic hackers. Even if we wanted to do it and for the salaries they're offering, you won't find many employers willing to hire someone with 15-20 years experience in OS or compiler development for that position.

    6. Re:I don't get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd like to know what sorts of jobs you're turning down. The entire Employment section of this last Sunday's Oregonian was 7 pages (8 pages minus 1/2 page of articles and 1/2 page of indices). The "High Tech" category was 2 columns. Most of those weren't for jobs in the Portland area. Pretty pathetic for a metropolitan area with a population of 1.5 million people. I have a fairly extensive network of friends at IBM, Synopsis, Intel and other companies, as well as independant contractors that I use in addition to Dice.com, Monster and several headhunters. I've managed to work 6 months out of the last two years. I have a career with demonstrated accomplishments in compiler development, system administration, OS internals, even video games. But unless you're entry-level VB or web programmer (under 35 years old) or a sysadmin with SAP experience there are no jobs.

  30. HAHAHA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    That's the funniest thing I've read all day. I really hope someone mod's this up.

  31. hmm.. why not work for yourself? by ardiri · · Score: 1

    in today's times - you are better of setting up an 'at-home' development studio, and, write software for sale online. you may end up pulling in anything; doesn't really matter how much. first, you do something you like (maybe, program games)? and, you will own everything. you never know where you may end up in a few months.

    ps: i did this myself, targetting PalmOS devices - and, i have never looked back!

  32. We all work for peanuts by emptybody · · Score: 2

    figure your average weekly hours worked.
    (5dx9-10h) Be sure to include all office hours
    (.5 - 1.5h) plus commuting time
    (5dx1-3h off hours research time at home
    (~4-8h) weekend time on pet projects to keep skills sharp
    ~57.5-77.5 Total hours per week.

    expect about 48 work weeks (2wk vaca,1 wk sick, 1wk holidays)

    hours worked = 2760-3720 hours/yr
    Figure over your career you will go from 32K-120K
    A nice average of 76K/yr

    Leaves you in the hourly rate of $27.50 - $20.43

    Yup you are screwed.

    --
    comment directly in my journal
  33. another unpaid Internship by The+Tyro · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That has to be hard to swallow; going from a fully-paid, full-benefits employee to a minimally-paid stock-options-only person.

    Stock options only? Considering the life expectancy of some of the Dot-coms out there, you'd be better off working at Taco Bell. Yes, fast food is a job, but it's painful to do with a degree under your belt (I'd expect more liberal arts majors to be doing that). "Hello, tech support desk" becomes "you want any hot sauce with those burritos?" How awful.

    I'm not a tech for a living; strictly a hobbyist. My day job required me to work an slave-labor internship... 100+ hours per week... but even THAT was paid. You can't pay the rent with stock options.

    I don't see how the companies that are employing these folks are getting away with this kind of thing. Whether you agree with it or not, there is a minimum-wage.

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  34. Alternatives also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    (Yes, I understand that the person in the article is not technical, however there are valuable discussion points):

    I got laid a bit before Thanksgiving, the market is soft, etc, etc. While I get serious about the job hunt (and have rested enough to recover from just plain burnout on my part), I've done a bunch of "free" work for interesting places.

    It's not benefiting corporations, but helping wire up a community center, getting a box read as a firewall and one ready as a mailserver/file server/web server so that they can teach kids computers and how to build web pages is kinda rewarding.

    Do I expect another volunteer to mention me to their company when they have a need? I wouldn't turn it down, but it's not WHY I started.

    Am I learning new skills? Not from this, but I'm doing some stuff in that playground that I've wanted to learn (playing with AFS and LDAP and such).

    Fill your time as you want, gain new skills.
    I'm not too hyped about doing real work for no real compensation (I have plenty of single ply stock options and they chafe - I much prefer the two ply stock options).

    1. Re:Alternatives also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I got laid a bit before Thanksgiving

      Lucky boy! Only a bit though?

      :-)

    2. Re:Alternatives also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he explained why only a bit right after the comma:

      the market is soft

    3. Re:Alternatives also by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I get serious about the job hunt (and have rested enough to recover from just plain burnout on my part), I've done a bunch of "free" work for interesting places.

      So, you became a prostitute?

    4. Re:Alternatives also by .com+b4+.storm · · Score: 1

      I got laid a bit before Thanksgiving

      Jeez, all I got was turkey and mashed potatoes. I was happy with that until today... :\

      --
      "Wow, you're like some kind of superhero able to ward off happiness and success at every turn."
      -- Ryan Stiles
  35. Working for free is the cause of the problem by still_sick · · Score: 1, Redundant

    This is a huge pet peeve of mine.

    If you work unpaid overtime, or work for free, or whatever - you are devaluing yourself, you are devaluing your co-workers, you are devaluing every other computer worker in the world.

    It's SICK that we've come to a point where most people think it's expected that one has got to work unpaid overtime just to hold a job.

    With the rare exception of the people who love their job and would be doing the exact same thing whether there was pay or not - you WORK for MONEY. The company pays you X amount of money to do Y amount of work. When you start to agree to do more work for the same pay, you're devaluing the product (you, your work, your skillset).

    The problem we have now is because people for too long have been too willing to be too accomodating.

    Stop letting yourselves get taken advantage of or it'll just get worse. When companies are able to pay their tech employees NOTHING, why would they ever start offerring paying positions?

    --
    ...Also, I didn't know Buggalo could fly.
    1. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      funny, I think the opposite, in general. I think if a person is happy working for less or for very little they should go ahead and do it, nobody should blame them for "devaluing" themselves (what are they, an antique table or something?)

      part of the premise of a free market is that you work for as much or as little as you like, for some reason people who would be perfectly happy with less want to work harder and harder, so they can drive an SUV, have a cell phone or two, broadband, etc.

    2. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by still_sick · · Score: 2

      I don't know about where you work, or the people that you know, but I've never come in on a Monday morning, asked about a person's weekend, and received a happy "I worked all weekend!" as a response. I see people all around me working late, coming in early, working weekends and they're miserable. They don't work OT because they love doing it. They enjoy the work as professionals, but the only reason they work the OT, as opposed to going home to be with their families or friends, is because they're afraid of losing their jobs if they don't.

      I'd love to meet some of these people who are "happy" working for nothing. Something tells me their work consists mainly of networked Unreal Tournament or the like on the company computers, and not so much actual work.

      --
      ...Also, I didn't know Buggalo could fly.
    3. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by analog_line · · Score: 2

      Welcome to the real world, twerp.

      People don't "think" they need to work unpaid overtime just to hold a job. They DO need to, at least these days.

      There are tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people willing to do your job for half of what you make, because they're not making ANYTHING now. It just shows how brainless you are, telling people who can't feed their families or keep their homes heated should not take any less money than you believe they should for the good of the profession.

      The "product" is already devalued. Wake up and smell the coffee. If you don't want to work for nothing, well, go into carpentry or some other profession that society actually values.

    4. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better to work for free and ensure the software industry in the US survives, rather than have it collapse.

      If so many people are working for free, its cause they have no choice .. not because it's fun.

      The value of something is set by the price someone can get the same thing done at by others.

      So if people are ending up having to work for free its because there are others somewhere who will do it for nearly free.

      If computer programmers are working for dirt cheap that is because of the value of computer programming.

      Hey working at mcdonalds is pretty tough, but people get paid shit to do it because so many
      others are willing to do it at similar wages.

      Just because the work is "hard" doesnt mean its valuable.

    5. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by ipsuid · · Score: 2

      Absolutely not:

      I have personal experience with doing this... working 80+ hours a week to make sure my company stayed on target (getting paid for a salary figured on a nominal 40 hours). 6 months into it I renegotiated my salary and more then tripled it. If you work for a company which is small enough or organised enough to notice what you are doing, then putting your heart and soul into your work pays off. The real question is: "Are adding value to the company?" Are you? If you aren't, then your position is already worthless.

      If you are trying to make money; government intervention, the lack of jobs, unpleasant work, etc., etc. are all great excuses to make you think that you are doing everything that you can to get by... Instead, realize that things have radically changed; use your ubertech skills to find a new solution to the "making a living" problem.

      (Or were you really a fake "techie" who wasn't really that intelligent? Go ahead, I _dare_ you to think outside of that box you are in.)

      --
      It appears Ockham lost his razor and grew a beard.
    6. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it is a gamble. Yeah sure you could work 80 hours for 40 hours pay and maybe save the company, but on the other hand you could just go get another job and work normal hours. I guess it depends on what you think the company's chances of success are. In my case I quit a job because I knew the company was going out of business. I pity the schmucks who stayed on board because they believed what the management told them.

    7. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      part of the premise of a free market is that you work for as much or as little as you like, for some reason people who would be perfectly happy with less want to work harder and harder, so they can drive an SUV, have a cell phone or two, broadband, etc.

      Really? what free market fantasy land is this?

      I don't have a cell phone or cable tv and i take the subway so can i tell my boss i'll only be coming on tuesdays and thursdays now?

      Shea...

    8. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen, this is no joke this causes a devaluing effect. It is bad enough to work around incompetent people, but tack on losy pay or only stock options, no way in hell.

    9. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your entire comment except for this... "The company pays you X amount of money to do Y amount of work".

      Last time I checked, I never owed my employer a damn thing. They pay me for the work I have already done. I DO NOT work because they have paid me. See the difference?

    10. Re:Working for free is the cause of the problem by Eamon+C · · Score: 1

      Excellent point!

      If only there was some type of organization programmers/engineers/tech workers could form to protect each other from this. We could, I don't know, "collectively bargain" with tech employers, and make sure everyone is following the same basic rules (e.g., fellow engineers who work for free, employers who expect them to). It would be like some kind of "union" of engineers.

      Wouldn't that be neat?

  36. In other news... by Boss,+Pointy+Haired · · Score: 2, Funny

    With McDonalds facing up to a loss for the first time in its history, many servers are finding themselves out of work as the burger giant closes stores across the World.

    All is not lost though, as many of those who previously spent their day deep fryin' hash browns and pulling milk-shakes are having to instead make do finding work as computer programmers or systems administrator, earning as little as USD 100,000 per year.

    The BigMac(TM) bubble has burst, and Fast Food industry analysts predict a year of consolidation before a potential BigMac(TM) revival in 2004. Until then, workers highly trained in deep fat fryers and express lane tills will just have to live as best they can on the salaries of dot com techies.

  37. Business should make money from customers... by salesgeek · · Score: 3, Informative

    When I'm between jobs I sometimes will volunteer for a charity... It's a great way to network and do something good.

    They call a company that makes money off investors a scam. A company that makes money for investors by selling something to customers a business.

    I don't like the idea of working for a company that will pay me if they get funded... I'd rather work (especially if I'm not being paid) for a company that will pay if we get orders from customers. Businesses should seek to generate INCOME not INVESTMENT. Investors should put their money into companies that can MAKE MONEY. So what about R/D or new concepts? Sometimes they pay off... but most have a 10% chance of surviving the first year.

    --
    -- $G
  38. Just another sign of the times... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just another sign that the economy and the IT industry are in bad shape. Things will probably be this way for a long time unless someting big happens. I'm also a former IT worker who is currently underemployed. I make about 2x minimum wage but it's also about 1/2 my previous salary. It is miserable but it beats sitting around collecting unemployment, which the Gov doesn't seem to care if it even exist or not.

  39. Statistics? by Viking+Coder · · Score: 2

    Well, 86.4% of all statistics are made up on the spot by an idiot.

    --
    Education is the silver bullet.
  40. Brings the value down by xj9000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just like any industry when qualified workers work below their value it brings everyone down. If i freelance at a set price, someone (just as qualified) will under-cut me. Then it devalues EVERYONE's value making it harder for successful freelancers and employees to hold their value. Usually this works itself out because of professionalism and quality. I do alot of HTML and webapplications and when i give my price they are taken back and go look for a high school kid that will do it for peanuts. The difference between me and him is quality and professionalism, but there is no difference between me and a layed-off version of me.

  41. You get peanuts?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lucky git.

  42. Idiots by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do something constuctive like work on a gpl project that benifits everbody. Working for free for a priviate company is just lining the pockets of the owner(s). But if you are silly enough to do such a thing I guess you get what you deserve... broken promises most likely.

  43. I'd give my left nut to be making 76K right now... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just thought I'd let you know. $27.50 - $20.43 per hour is *NOT* being screwed unless maybe you live in NYC (I understand cost of living there is substantially higher than most places).

  44. Pet peeve by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, I was made redundant and know the story. I'm presently working freelance (again!)

    What I don't like is how easily people are willing to sell themselves out. Yes, a peanut is a peanut, but I do hope people realise that they're hurting the industry as much as they are themselves.

    I can't tell you how many times I've pitched a project only to find that someone will do it for "peanuts".

    What happens is that more often than not, the following question rears its ugly head, "Well, we had someone who said that they could do it for 'peanuts'. Why should we pay you more? (summing it up)"

    Vicious cycle, this. Listen, if you're happy working for 'peanuts', more power to you, but its not helping to justify the talents, skills and years of experience that people in the industry have.

    Not to be rude, but I hope that people realise, not everyone landed their first job straight out of college during the dot.com heyday. I only mention this because I have met a lot of people who fall into this category.

  45. Misread by knodi · · Score: 2

    "Working for peanuts." You don't hear that phrase very often. My first mental image was of a bunch of A.I. hobbyists resurrecting Charles M. Schultz as a computer program or something...

    --
    Austin is more fun than Dallas.
  46. Linus Van Pelt, and I pronounce Linux... by yerricde · · Score: 2, Funny

    Working for Peanuts is ok.

    Isn't Peanuts where they make that "Linux" kernel?

    Oh, that was a different Linus.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  47. Maybe it's just me but... by X-Nc · · Score: 2, Insightful
    From the article:
    Rather than wait for work that may never come, Perry is part of a small and apparently growing number of highly skilled workers who are accepting so- called equity-only jobs.
    A small number of independently wealthy people. Man, doesn't anyone else have a family to feed and people to take care of? Go flip burgers or drive a garbage truck. Anything you have to do survive.
    --
    --
    If I actually could spell I'd have spelled it right in the first place.
    1. Re:Maybe it's just me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No u.

    2. Re:Maybe it's just me but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perry owns a winery. Why am I not just grief stricken over her financial plight?

  48. Stock options only? by StarTux · · Score: 2

    No way, I'd rather work for Kinko's. For one, have too much pride in my own value (which I have lowered a bit), but I would *never* work just for stock options with no actual pay. Its like living for a dream

    If I was on benefits would I risk it? No...Not in my opinion. Most people will end up losing more than they gain and some companies will even be closed due to being sued out of existance...

    How do I keep up skills? Like everyone has always done, be a typical techie and play and learn technology.

    On another note, since when has a marketing type been considered a techie geek?

    StarTux

    1. Re:Stock options only? by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      If I was on benefits would I risk it? No...Not in my opinion. Most people will end up losing more than they gain and some companies will even be closed due to being sued out of existance...

      Such as when the first "volunteer" breaks rank and sues for his minimum wage payments for time worked. Sorry, agreements that involve breaking the law will not be recognized by the court.

      If a company can't afford the local minimum wage, it's not gonna last.

  49. Advantages of still working - pay or no pay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are a few advantages in keeping working without pay:

    1. add more working experience to the resume
    2. in the loop of things
    3. making new contacts
    4. options in getting out if new opportunities are found - i.e. no obligation to stay
    5. chance of getting hired
    6. keep daily routine and busy but have the option not to work

    Personally, I would rather keep working than sitting around

  50. Yea...but they still would rather ... by bubbha · · Score: 1

    ...network, update skills and build a company from the ground up. ...right?

    --
    I want to be alone with the sandwich
  51. If you want to know how to invest by BoomerSooner · · Score: 5, Informative

    All you need to do is take a real Financial Planning Course. Something real is taught by a CFA (Chartered Financial Analyst) not a CFP (Certified Financial Planner) since I could pass the CFP without studying (I have a degree in Finance). A CFA is like a CPA, you've really got to know your shit.

    Anyone that is investing solely in the Stock Market gets what they deserve. There are simple rules to becoming financially secure.

    1: Insurance is the most important purchase you make. (If you get lucky enough to make a few million and then a tragedy strikes all your work is for nothing.)

    2: Chose a good career. You can be a success in anything but some fields are easier than others.

    3: Save a % of your income always. Living below your means allows you to keep your head above water when the chips are down.

    4: Invest in a home (mortgage) before the market. It gives people without their own business one of the few tax write offs, and you're accruing equity instead of throwing money away on rent. (My house was purchased via FHA loan with $2000 down and I got lucky and bought from a buyer that was willing to accept paying closing costs to sell the house at their asking price, which saved $4000+)

    5: Don't trust others to invest your money, do your own research and diversify (not stock diversification but REAL diversification, stocks, bonds, T-Bills, CD's, Real-Estate, Tangable Assets (Gold), ...) to a percentage that gives you the return you desire at a risk level you're willing to take.

    If people took 1/2 the care in researching their investments as they do in buying a car, house, dvd player, ..., there would be a lot less problems in dealing with money. Remember you're smart enough to earn it, you are smart enough to invest it.

    6: Don't follow what the street says, if you did you were buying RHAT at 230 and Global Crossing at 180. When things seem crazy they probably are.

    7: Continue to learn through out your career. You never know where you might end up. You don't want to be the 50 year old that everyone at work is suggesting the book "Who moved my cheese" for light reading.

    8: Don't try to hit a home run with your investments. Sometimes several base hits gets you more runs. (Take the sure thing, instead of the high risk/high reward).

    Juste mon deux francs.

    1. Re:If you want to know how to invest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You don't want to be the 50 year old that everyone at work is suggesting the book "Who moved my cheese" for light reading.

      Definitely. If everybody around you is recommending trendy pop-culture self-help trash books, it's definitely time to get the hell out of there.

    2. Re:If you want to know how to invest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But I thought Amway was the key to success. :-)

    3. Re:If you want to know how to invest by DeanOh · · Score: 1

      On the insurance part: if you are young and single, or married and childless, life insurance is probably the last thing you need. It's a much different story if you have a family and are part of a multi-income pair of adults, and a totally different story of you are with family and the only wage earner. Live within your means..yes. Save some..yes (young people...check out the trite but true and widely "power of compounding charts. Convert your nextpay raise into additional savings....yes. Avoid credit card and installment debt like the plauge...yes. Insurance? "Whole life?? Eff that. Term life to prevent those you leave behind from ending up on the street for a while....go for it....if you have kids....

    4. Re:If you want to know how to invest by billanderson71 · · Score: 1

      On the insurance part: if you are young and single, or married and childless, life insurance is probably the last thing you need.

      While you don't need life insurance, you'd better have disability insurance.

    5. Re:If you want to know how to invest by BoomerSooner · · Score: 2

      There are several types of insurance:
      Disability (both long term and short term)
      Health
      Life
      Dismemberment/Accident (usually with disability)

      As to life insurance if you dont have a wife and children and never plan on having any then skip it. If you ever would like to have a family then get it. There are more types of insurance than just term (expires without any cash value). You could get whole life insurance which if you start young can be a good investment tool. For example, you start at 23 paying into a whole life policy for 250,000. You pay it off at 45~50 years old. The value if you cash it out would be in the 25 to 50K range. However as you get older you can sell it and get an annuity (monthly payments) based on the whole value securing a loan you never pay off (your death pays it off).

      If you're only looking 1-3 years into the future financial planning (and security for that matter) are not for you. So move along nothing to see here. I guess when you're 55 and thinking "I'd sure like to retire." you'll be kicking yourself for the opportunities you pissed away because you're too smart now. Just remember how you felt you knew everything at 18 years old? Bet you feel different now.

  52. Re:Who cares.... Marketing Directors are NOT techi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the key word here is "head", he he he

  53. 'highly skilled' is a highly subjective term by MattW · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now, I can't speak for everyone, but I've only met one product marketing manager who truly qualified for the term 'highly skilled'. The rest were a bunch of marketroid frauds. The one who WAS highly skilled quit the last company I worked at, started his own, and just sold it (in the midst of the horrible recession, no less) to a huge company for well over a hundred million dollars.

    If you're a programmer or other skilled person who can truly create something, do this if you find something you love, but don't do grunt work. Expand yourself. My first hobby -- network security -- turned into my full time job. My hobbies during that job have again become my work. I've cultivated a new set of hobbies, specifically with an eye on turning them into my full time work intentionally. Having had it happen many times, I'm determined to direct it a bit more the next time.

    Good luck to those workers. I hope it works out. But the companies have a bunch of free labor, and you often get what you pay for.

  54. I GET OFF LAYING OFF TECHIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Haha in college all my friends said I "didn't get it" and that "getting an economics degree and an MBA is so old-economy" but now who has the last laugh? I can fire and hire these tech monkies like the hired labor power they are. I can get people deported by firing visa workers, or just put someone in the poor house or i suppose make someones day if i decide they are worthy of a job. Muahahhaha. Put that in your "Get with the new economy bro! All you need is a website and dream!" pipe and smoke it!

  55. It's a hard life. by agent0range_ · · Score: 4, Insightful
    ... pulled in more than $100,000 per year.

    After she was laid off in September, she and her husband moved to Sonoma County to be closer to their winery, which she manages.


    Boo hoo.
  56. Underselling yourself is a bad idea. by tshak · · Score: 1

    It's like having a baseball card that was worth $100, but because it's a bad economy you're willing to sell it for $25, even though you know that in a year (or even months) when things turn around it will easily sell for $90+.

    In multiple industries it is stressed that you should never undersell yourself. Yes, IT Java Drones getting paid $120K a year with having only 2 years experience is rediculous. However, if you are a good employee and have good skills, never undersell yourself. It's better to pass up a lowball offer and wait for the right job to come along. A company that completely lowballs is a company that is willing to exploit you in bad times. You are also lowering your personal value by accepting a low salary because you are desperate.

    I'm very involved with the usergroups in this area and many people know that I am a program lead, and therefore have a strong voice for recommending developers in my company. I've had countless IT professionals tell me that they'd work for cheap or even nothing for "experience" (even though they already had 3-4 years of experience). I will not hire someone until we have the budget for a reasonable salary simply because once the economy get's better this person may jump ship.

    --

    There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
  57. it's not the worst thing in the world by Crashmarik · · Score: 1

    I don't know the full details of her situation. But given her described skillset its not such a bad option.

    Marketing positions and marketing, sales in general tend to be political positions in technology companies. Its very hard to measure performance. (IBM Had great salesmen, Microsoft still does, Cisco had a product that couldnt be kept on the shelves so they looked good, Sun and DEC were great examples of what you usually find) Anyway, she probably doesn't have the pull to slide into another such position, so this may be the best that she can do.

  58. Make your own work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Start a business. This is a capitalist country. What is the problem with that?

    It is much better to sign salary checks than to receive a salary check...

    1. Re:Make your own work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Start a business. This is a capitalist country. What is the problem with that?"

      Insert commie slashdot screed:

      CAPITALIST!!!
      arrghh,no!! scum!!

      score: -9 bazillion!!!

      Businessmen OWE us a living...did i say businessmen?
      I meant Big Busine$$$$$$$,Big faceless Busine$$,yeah,that's it!
      viva la revolution!
      lenin isn't dead!!
      etc...

  59. Two sides to every story by deop · · Score: 1

    Two years ago I worked for free for two months as a web developer for a then-struggling firm - but I was rank amateur, with little in the skills department. At the end of my two months I was offered a full time position, so I have to admit I realize some value in the pro bono approach, but only if you're approaching this work as a newbie. If you have skills and real experience and you work for free, good luck. Now maybe if IT workers had any sense of community/union/organization...eh, forget it.

    1. Re:Two sides to every story by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      Two years ago I worked for free for two months as a web developer for a then-struggling firm - but I was rank amateur,

      Sounds to me like you were essentially an intern. To me that is a reasonable way to get a start in any profession. However once you get that start, and make some financial commitments working for free is a pretty dire circumstance.

    2. Re:Two sides to every story by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      Sorry, interns must be getting academic credit from a respectiblely accredited institution in order to qualify qualify to get out of the minimum wage laws.

      Which means the original poster is owed some money from his employer. If he leaves the job for any reason before the statue of limitations law is up, he should collect.

  60. Amen to "Get a job!" by jasonn · · Score: 1

    Amen!

    Quoting someone in the article:

    "It's not like I'm going to walk out tomorrow and get a job,"

    Uh, well you could! You may not make the 100K you were making last year, but you could make say 50K and that's better than unemployment.

    Or, you could be a dropout and just be pissed about the marketplace you helped create. I'm sorry, I just think it is a tad intellectually dishonest. At least when you say "I don't want that kind of job.", you say what you mean. I take it as a personal offense when people choose unemployment intentionally and blaim things other than the real culpret: their ego and zen factor.

    --
    Build something beautiful!
  61. Volunteering can be a good idea by erik_ascott · · Score: 1

    I scanned through quickly, saw a few posts about giving your time and technical knowledge for free. I can tell you firsthand it is worth it, if you are stuck and jobless. I volunteered at a local computer 'shop' (small town, jobless after graduation) and after 3 weeks of hard work trying to prove myself... they are offering me a job after new years. Now alot of people might not like this approach, and I sure didn't enjoy it at first... but this is turning out pretty decent for me now. I suggest if you are out of ideas, put the big VOLUNTEER somewhere in your email or phone call... they will pick up on it as it means FREE LABOUR. and usually if you are anywhere decent at your job they will notice that you are worth paying goodluck

  62. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wal-Mart isn't even hiring, dufus.

  63. Yep - Zero Hope by eples · · Score: 2

    I stuck with an AWFUL job for too many years because of a promise of 1/4 mil. in stock options. Salary was good, but the scent of options let me put up with entirely more bullsh*t than I would have otherwise. Hey, I was 22, whaddaya want. (no scathing retorts please)

    --
    I'm a 2000 man.
  64. But it's too late already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's already expected.

    I regularly hear Rush Limbaugh on the radio loudly proclaiming that "if you don't work 50 hours or more a week, then you're not working (or you're lazy - whichever)" and people in my department who spent their whole 2 day weekend working on some stupid wiring project saying, "Well, it had to be done." It's over. That's now the norm for most well paying IT jobs. Hell, besides 12/25 and (upcoming) 1/1 I've been working every single day in December (I'm at work right now).

    We've established that it sucks. Now - what can we do about it?

    1. Re:But it's too late already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well you don't have it too rough -- you seem to have found time to read Slashdot. At least you don't have to work in a coal mine.

    2. Re:But it's too late already by smagruder · · Score: 2

      We've established that it sucks. Now - what can we do about it?

      In the guild yet?

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
  65. working for peanuts by taxman_10m · · Score: 2

    The good thing about working for peanuts is that at the very least you can eat.

  66. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Welcome to our world.

    The number of people who lived it up making $40,000+/yr. jobs, spending it up, and then getting crushed and then not finding any other job (pride?) when the bubble burst is amazing to me. Meanwhile, the rest of the warehouse workers and manual laborers just keep stomping on.

  67. A Challenge by snarfer · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I challenge any of those posting that people should go get a job, or that if they have good skills they can find a job, etc., to please post their phone number at work, so people can call and ask them who at their company to contact.

    Companies posting job offers in Silicon Valley are getting THOUSANDS of resumes. So give people a break about finding a job, please. It ain't gonna happen. Even Starbucks isn't hiring.

    In fact, if you live in a town where a Starbucks is hiring, please post that.

    1. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People flooded into silicon valley when the work was there. Why not leave when the work left?

      awww, did someone move their cheese?

      Adapt and survive. I'm sure their dotcom bosses stressed that everyday. But I bet they threw in a "paradigm shift" somewhere :)

    2. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so full of shit. I finished an MS in Physics from Berkeley sent out dozens of resumes and landed a bunch of interviews. Of course, all the jobs were outside of the Bay Area but what that fuck do I care (and I was dying to get out of the shit hole that the Bay Area is). I don't believe all the people who whine that they can't find a job. 99% of them want a particular job in a particular market in a particular city -- I applied to finance companies, wall street firms, IP law firms, consulting firms, government labs, defense contractors, computer companies anyone who I could fanagle an interview from. It paid off. I started my job in the DC area for a defense company 10 days after my last class with excellent pay and benefits. GET OFF YOUR LAZY ASS AND STOP BEING SO WHINY ABOUT LIFE. Make your own luck.

    3. Re:A Challenge by Klaruz · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Oh c'mon, just leave silicon valley. Move to a modest sized city with around a million people in it. Less crime, lower cost of living, and believe it or not, they do use computers.

      I live in Omaha, NE, about 800,000 people in the metro area. Granted, we have a higher than average tech/telecom industry than most cities this size, but it's not too hard to find a job. I had my last day on one job of 4 years on a friday this august and started my new job on a monday. I spent about 5 weeks job hunting. I still get offers for jobs almost 5 months later.

      You may only make $50k a year, but $200,000 buys a really nice house and $800 buys a really nice apartment. I live in a 3br 2500sq foot apt that takes up a whole floor, 2 blocks from a medical center so my neighbors are doctors and med students, and we (2 roommates and I) pay $1000 a month. Starter houses and not as nice 2 br apts are about $125k and $500/mo respecivly. You won't need to pack heat to make it from your car to your door either.

      It's time to cut your losses and say you're willing to relocate.

    4. Re:A Challenge by snarfer · · Score: 2

      Move WHERE?! That's the point.

      WHERE are these imaginary jobs? The clssified ads survey shows that now we have the fewest job listings since the depression. That's nationwide.

    5. Re:A Challenge by snarfer · · Score: 1

      You have a masters in physics, and you get a job with a defense contractor. Fine. We can all see how you actually found a job. There's a fit there, and military spending is way up. But to call ebngineers whiners because THEY aren't educated to design nuclear weapons is going overboard. It takes a few years to get a masters in physics.

    6. Re:A Challenge by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      Dude, not only did the company move me here, but my wife found a job a month ago. I don't think that we are special, I think we have SKILLS and EXPERANCE in our field. We are not people that were making 100k a year with a liberal arts degree at a start up or dot bomb. I am an engineer with 10 years experience, and my wife has 15 years in IT. It is possible, I am not buying it from everyone. Besides, I am supposed to pay unemployment for people with options? I don't think so....

    7. Re:A Challenge by snarfer · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You have no idea how many people I know who are relocating. My wife and I are also looking to relocate.

      I wonder if you understand what is about to happen to Omaha because of your post. Did you ever read or see The Grapes of Wrath? The part where all the people in Oklahoma are packing up their families and belongings into trucks because they heard that there were some jobs picking vegetables in California? You're about to get a few thousand hungry engineers arriving in Omaha.

      One thing is for sure. No one in Omaha is posting employment ads.

    8. Re:A Challenge by snarfer · · Score: 1

      I guess you forgot to say WHERE this job is located. What part of the country? How about it?

    9. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do what I did in the 1980s. Get the to thy local military recruiter and enlist. All the folks with degrees even have a shot at being officers.

    10. Re:A Challenge by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      San Jose, ca, baby.... :) Been here 6 months

    11. Re:A Challenge by Klaruz · · Score: 2

      Yah, I thought about that. But think about how many people will actually read that comment and move here. The same could be said for any other city besides the huge ones. Just in the midwest I'd think of cities like Cincinati, Columbus, Dayton, Springfield (IL and MO), Des Moines (All though we did just lay people off from our division there...), Twin Cities, etc. It does take work to find a job, but you need to have realistic expectations. Don't expect to move to a city this size and make what you made in the bay area. We do have that winter thing to contend with too....

      But since I've spilled the beans (not really, any city this sized IS like this). Here's some more info:

      A good employment place to look for Omaha is http://www.careerlink.org/.
      Of course there's the chamber of commerce. http://www.omahachamber.net/

      Omaha has a ton of insurance (I live 2 blocks from the mutual of omaha towers) and agraculture. (I'm 10 minutes from con-agra's headquarters). Also first national bank is huge. We also have strategic command if you like government work. I'm pretty sure we're the telemarketing capital of the world too. There's a good chance if you call a company and get an automated voice recognition thing it goes through a company here in town called west. Allthough I hear west treats their employees like crap. I had an interview there to be their security engineer/hippa (sp?) guy and turned it down. Two weeks later the guy who got me an interview there jumped ship and started working where I did take a job at. (Which is a kick ass company, pay isn't great, but we make a ton of money (job security) and have a very laid back work env, and no I won't tell you where I work. I'm waiting for a position to open up so I can transfer...)

      If you do move here, stop by a LUG meeting and say hi. There's a good ale house a few blocks away that we tend to go to afterwards too. (Also in my neighborhood.)

    12. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit.

    13. Re:A Challenge by Ikari+Gendo · · Score: 1
      Just in the midwest I'd think of cities like Cincinati, Columbus, Dayton,
      As someone who's been seeking employment in Columbus/Dayton for six months, I can tell you that it's not any better here. Ohio is a fairly crappy place for tech jobs.
    14. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please. Move. Out. Of. The. Bay. Area!

      And take everyone else with you too!

    15. Re:A Challenge by /dev/trash · · Score: 2

      I'll move. What I am lacking is someone to 'lean' on when I do. Right now I have a friend in Philly, who is willing to have me move in, but Philly is still in PA and PA is no good for jobs.

      I can handle making *only* 50k a year since my last job was at around 30k.

      Omaha sounds perfect, but I have no foothold, thus my dilemma.

    16. Re:A Challenge by netcaretaker · · Score: 1

      nope, no bullshit, really.... santa clara moved in on july 1, 2002. They paid to move me and my wife. My kid goes to school out here so it was a no brainer. Don't have to believe it, but, there are worse places to try and find work right now.

    17. Re:A Challenge by SupaYoda · · Score: 1

      The future hubby and I just bought a 3br/3ba home in a nice neighborhood for $103,000. (It was $105,100 after closing costs.) Our payments will be under $800/mo after we escrow our insurance and property taxes, and we're practically down the street from a large shopping area that includes a very nice movie theater, several resteraunts (most with 100 health ratings), a BlockBuster, bowling alley, and (laugh if you will, but they rule) a WalMart Supercenter. Our utilities will cost around $200/month (shooting high), and we both have car payments and high insurance (I had an accident last year, and he has a sports car). Consider that we both make around $30,000/year. I put back about $200/month into savings via direct deposit and he puts back about $100/month into savings the same way. We're paying for a wedding. We both have a little bit to spend on ourselves at the end of the month. The trick is in the budgetting.

      This is in Alabama (greater Birmingham area), btw.

    18. Re:A Challenge by Klaruz · · Score: 1

      Ahh the south. I lived in Biloxi, MS for a while. Talk about low cost of living. It's too bad the state just sucked to live in. I did have some good times in Mobile and New Orleans though. I grew up in Ohio near the WV border, and allthough WV is the 2nd poorest state in the nation MS (number 1) seemed to be several times worse. Maybe it's just the area and the people. [shrug]

      $30k/year, talk of budgeting, direct deposit... Sounds like military. Birmingham IAP I bet. You're right, the trick is budgeting. Always have a buffer. I learned my lesson on that a few years ago. Never again, I'm 23 and on the ball now. No house for me for at least the next few years though. I'm too young and single for that. I am thinking about buying a 30k apt in the spring though. I can pay it off in 5-6 years and have 30k to drop on a house downpayment. :)

      Congrats on the engangement!

    19. Re:A Challenge by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How are the doctors and med students you refer to making out in this economy?

    20. Re:A Challenge by SupaYoda · · Score: 1

      I probably should have specified that I meant 30k/each. With a low cost of living, it's really not that bad.

  68. Stand your ground. by still_sick · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We've established that it sucks. Now - what can we do about it?

    Stand your ground. Make it clear to your boss that you won't do it, and why you won't do it. Don't be a jerk about it, but be firm.

    Yes, it sounds like a recipe for getting shit-canned, but if you're a good employee you'll stick around.

    I've had my current job for almost three years now, and have never worked a single hour of unpaid OT, and anytime anyone asks I make very sure to tell them why.

    Most of my co-workers do, but I don't feel bad for "not doing it" while they're "stuck" doing it, I feel bad for them not standing up for themselves as professionals.

    Just because almost no-one stands their ground doesn't mean that it can't be done.

    --
    ...Also, I didn't know Buggalo could fly.
  69. Related by loconet · · Score: 2

    On a related globe and mail article, we can read and see what we've all been fearing. Techies, specially graduates without much experience are taking jobs that pay as much as a burger flipper at your local mcds.

    Hard times, Hard times.

    --
    [alk]
  70. Told ya by WildBeast · · Score: 2

    So those who have a family to raise will stay jobless because of some morons who are willing to work for free.

    Employers will look at the situation and say. Hey, what the heck? Many IT workers are willing to work for free, maybe we should decrease the salaries for IT people. Minimum wage would be good.

    1. Re:Told ya by iWishMeHadModPoints · · Score: 0

      Aah, yeah, I am sure Microsoft and IBM and other real computer companies, not the dot-coms and free-software-type-of-thing, will fire all their people immediately, or maybe Jan 6th, since this week is holiday, and then hire those guys working for peanuts.

      --
      Some day I will have mod points, so add me to your friends.
    2. Re:Told ya by WildBeast · · Score: 2

      Bah if I was an employer I would consider it.

    3. Re:Told ya by delong · · Score: 2

      Time to go to Law School. Too many free-floating dipshits in the job market now, driving down wages.

      Derek

    4. Re:Told ya by cranos · · Score: 2

      Umm no, not going to happen. For a start if they start offering minimum wage for software developers then they are going to get laughed at. For exactly the same reason if you tried offering minimum wage to doctors, scientists and other college educated professionals.

      So some people are working for next to nothing or nothing during the slump, so what, good for them. They are trying to stay in the workforce rather than sit on their arses waiting for the next big thing.

      Sure in some situations minimum wage might be justified - FrontPage jockies for a start, but any serious developer who uses more than the point and click crap from MS is going to laugh at the offer.

    5. Re:Told ya by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

      Obviously you need to read the other posts in this thread. Doctors and Lawyers are still in demand. Developers however are not. If they were then this article would not have been written to begin with. When devs are being fired by the thousands and can't find jobs for up to 2 years, then minimum wage becomes better then no wage.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    6. Re:Told ya by cranos · · Score: 2

      Most of those being fired right now are the slack arse wanna bes who thought they would make a million during the dot bomb.Unfortunately a lot of good dev guys are being thrown in as well. However good Developers will always be in demand just like good doctors or lawyers. If your only skill is knowing Front Page on IIS then you are going to be out of luck. Trust me I know what Im talking about.

      The region where I work has an almost non-existant IT job market. I lucked out because I didn't limit myself to one area, my job covers everything from Intranet/Internet Dev to Network Maintenance and more hard core software Dev.

      My point is this - companies will always pay for quality, if a company wants to pay minimum wage for their software dev team then they are going to get the team they deserve. On the other hand if they are going to pay comensurate with skill and ability then they are going to be shooting ahead of the others, and companies realise this.

    7. Re:Told ya by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

      I understand what you are trying to say. The only problem is your one of the last people to hold onto this view. When the recession first started Slashdot was flooded with posts like yours. "Its only the dead weight thats getting fired. Good engineers/techies who know what they are doing either aren't getting fired or can get a new job the next hour/day/week!"

      Then as time went one, and the recession dragged on, and more and more techies of all talent levels continued to go unemployed the tune started to change. You saw less and less posts like those and more and more posts complaining about the situation.

      IT is no longer looked upon in the way it once was. So many hyped promises that weren't kept were made. Companies are now looking at their IT projects and wondering where the hell the savings or higher earnings that they were supposed to bring have gone. Now there is resentment and a need to make those IT "jerks" reign in their enthusiasm and cut their budgets. This means IT went from being a revenue generating unit to a unit that now costs the company, at least in managements eyes. They're not going to pay top-dollar for talent anymore. Not with thousands of techies out of work flooding each job offer with 500 resumes.

      So what I have to ask you is, have you been blind to the situation for the past year? Do you honestly not know whats going on? Perhaps you live in an awesome area which has so far been recession resistant? I'm just trying to figure out why you still cling to this mostly abandoned view of the situation.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    8. Re:Told ya by cranos · · Score: 2

      No I am not blind to the situation, I do know what is going on, and as I said in my previous post the IT market in my area is pretty dead. What I am however is a realist.

      I am working as a software Dev guy for my company, I am the only one in the organisation, I also run the Linux servers and assist in any other area of IT they need. No I am not getting paid the big bucks but Im not getting minimum wage either, and I can tell you now that if they had tried to offer minimum wage, I would have knocked them back. I have a family to feed and support and its just not going to happen.

      Sure the dot bomb made management warey about IT, and sure there have been plenty of lay offs of both the good and bad, but you have to remember that now more than ever our industry is an ever changing one, you have to learn to adapt and move on. Not making it in this area, then move into another, no market in your region then find another one. Stop bitching and moaning and do something, anything.

      Before I got this job I was commuting two hours away each day because thats where the work was, I wasn't sitting on my arse moaning about how nobody wants to pay me $70,000 for designing web pages.

      In the end it comes down to this - Get off your arse and do something about your problem, stop complaining.

  71. On the flip side. . . by kfg · · Score: 2

    My first "job" out of college was designing an electric car for a couple of "Whole Earth" types from Iowa. This was the mid-seventies. The idea was still considered viable then.I did this for the promise of "future compensation."

    I was responsible for *everything* in the design and turned in some very good and innovative work that still stands up today. A few of the ideas I came up with that weren't viable at the time ( and that I didn't patent) were later hailed as genius when duplicated by others ( such as building the motors directly into the wheel hubs, controlled by a computer, and thus eliminting anything that could be considered a "drivetrain").

    Why is my story different? I never saw a dime. Not one. And I wouldn't trade that experience for the world. I was doing something I loved, for reasons I loved and turned out work I'm still proud to have done.

    I have been crudely used by employers who complied with every letter of the law with regards to compensation. These people didn't use me at all. At times I wonder if I didn't use *them.*

    There are always multiple sides to any story. The laws can only typically accept one of them, even though some of the others may be perfectly valid.

    In this case the laws are specifically oriented to the "factory worker" position where the worker performs tasks strictly for the paycheck and fails completely to recognize that in some fields what the workers are doing at work is what they would be doing for their own personal satisfaction if they were free to chose anything to do.

    As H.D. wrote in "Life Without Principle":

    "To have done anything by which you earned money *merely* is to have been truly idle or worse. If the laborer gets no more than the wages which his employer pays him, he is cheated, he cheats himself.. .

    The aim of the laborer should be, not to get his living, to get "a good job," but to perform well a certain work;. . .

    Do not hire a man who does your work for money, but him who does it for the love of it."

    This is a bit of wisdom most have yet to learn, and the modern evolution of American capitalism seems to actively deny.

    KFG

    1. Re:On the flip side. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I was responsible for *everything* in the design and turned in some very good and innovative work that still stands up today. A few of the ideas I came up with that weren't viable at the time ( and that I didn't patent) were later hailed as genius when duplicated by others..."

      You don't like yourself much, do you?

  72. Start A Business by limekiller4 · · Score: 2

    My advice would be to come up with a good idea and use your skills to implement it. Sure, maxims like "they'll always have a need for more programmers" might come and go like so many packets but one thing that really never will die is the need to buy goods and services. Provide one or the other and do it smartly and you'll probably be a lot better off than you could have dreamed working for someone else.

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
  73. there's a term for this by carlhirsch · · Score: 2

    SCABS.

    There doesn't need to be a strike on for you to sell out other workers.

    --
    . We've got computers, we're tapping phone lines, you know that ain't allowed - Talking Heads, "Life During Wartime"
  74. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    40k and spending it up?

    Fortunately for me, I lived through the 80's recession (although not as bad), make barely 20k to start out, and learned to pack away my savings.

    Still working now, but I won't be forced to work at walmart if I lose my job for a while.

  75. I can't get a job... "No MSCE" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I would laugh if were not nearly flat broke. I've been a unix guy for about 15 years now. I've programmed on everything imaginable. I've built lans, corporate networks, built server systems, programmed databases.

    And yet... now I can't get a job. The reason usually given is "You don't have an MSCE. We need someone with credentials". People have never heard of "Solaris" or "HPUX".

    So now I'm considering getting my MSCE just to put those loser letters on my resume. Great world, huh.

    1. Re:I can't get a job... "No MSCE" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "So now I'm considering getting my MSCE just to put those loser letters on my resume. Great world, huh. "

      Hmmm...loser,eh?

      Seems like they're wanted and you're not..so who's the loser,loser? ...and oh yes,what a horrible world..whhhaaaahhhh

      at least you can drink your whiiiiiine

  76. The Internet lets you work from anywhere by billstewart · · Score: 2

    ... which is of course why everybody moved to Silicon Valley. It was a lot of fun, even though it made housing prices silly, the weather is great, and if you didn't have the contacts to get jobs easily, it was easier to make them when you were there in person as well as on the net, and of course there's the fun of walking by a sidewalk cafe and hearing a conversation about some latest trend in your field as opposed to some random topic you don't care about. But while it'll be a long time before there's another boom like this one, there's no guarantee that it'll be around here.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
  77. Re: Nike by Lucas+Membrane · · Score: 2
    Up here around Portland we've got Nike, Adidas, Columbia Sportswear, and maybe a few more. They mostly only hire from each other. If you are not in the apparel business, not much chance to get hired there.

    The IT market is so glutted with workers that all the employers want industry-specific experience in whatever industry they are in.

  78. You *do* understand that . . . by kfg · · Score: 1

    tech support is where the IT industry puts its liberal arts majors, and that hackers generally consider them far lower on the evolutionary scale than workers at Taco Bell, don't you?

    I mean, at least the workers at Taco Bell perform a real and valuable social service.

    KFG

  79. Okay, relaity time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    More misleading journalism....

    Okay, this woman is 50 and lives in Healdsburg....a very wealthy area. Her husband and her either own the home, or have a very low mortgage. They have at least $1M in equity in the home.

    Bottom line: they are not hurting to pay the rent.

    She lost a 100K a year job as a product marketeer at Critical Path....and so she should (by the law of economics). I know CP very well...good products, horrible marketing and management. Obviously, if she was worth the 100K, she would still be around. I'm not trying to be harsh (I know many CP people), but come on...overpaid marketing jobs went the way of the dinosaurs a couple years back.

    Let's see some stories about the young families who are scaping by on food stamps after losing the job....people who will work at any job in order to feed their families....people who know true hard times.

  80. So What?? by Delifisek · · Score: 1

    3/1 of world people get under a dollar per day. 3/2 of world people get 2 dollars per day.

    I'm get 450 per month. I can rent a house, can buy food. Not good, not bad.

    You amerikanski, your country get %47 percent of total world income. And you still unhappy. What is your problem ???

    --
    [My english is better than most other people's Turkish, so please point out mistakes politely. Thank you.]
    1. Re:So What?? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      According to the world bank the average per capita GDP world wide is about $7000/year. The US is near the top, true; but it's more like 32%, not 47%.

      The problem that people are feeling here is that if you are unemployed and your benefits have run out (typically 6 months) your income is zero. That is not good on a very personal level, regardless of what the country is doing.

  81. Stop Bringing in HIB foreign visa workers by SirPsychoSexyMD · · Score: 0

    None of our recent graduates have work. And the INS is so damn porous they bring in anyone from god knows where. Oh well.

  82. *AMEN* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And PicPuter.com was born october of 2001. There are alternatives to a venture capital funded startup companies, you simply need to watch your expenses, and have a WORKABLE plan. I will only make 10-20K next year (the first year offering an actual hardware product) but I this income will continue for several year, employed or not. There is always the chance that It becomes a hit, or someone will want to buy the company like parrallax. Over the last year or so I have learned many new skills such as PCB design/ manufacturing, web publishing, and met some interesting users.

  83. 'Scuse me? by pla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    most folks aren't really at the brink of destruction

    'Scuse me? I hate to tell you this, but after over a year of unemployment, I, and hundreds of thousands like me, exist REALLY uncomfortably close to the "brink of destruction".

    I've maxed my CC's, run out of savings (including 401k), and would presently starve to death if my SO decided to throw me out.

    And I've always managed my money rather well, not buying too many frivolous things, avoiding spending more than I have like the plague (my one exception, buying a new car when my last one died. But a "commuting" car, by no means a luxury toy). But a total of around $10k to last 14 months now, good luck. I suspect many geeks (who have a stereotype/reputation for buying *lots* of expensive toys and holding pretty decent sized debts) have it a lot worse than I do.

    And it has nothing to do with "wanting" to work, or only the "bad" geeks not having jobs... I have qualifications and experience that hiring managers used to *dream* of. And yeah, for the first three months, I only applied for "sweet" jobs. Then "anything involving computers". Six months ago I started getting sick of hearing the word "overqualified". Lately I've taken to simply "forgetting" the fact that I went to college for applications, and get a much better callback rate, but the number of unemployed (in general, not just tech) means anything I apply for, even flipping burgers, I have to compete with literally hundreds of others to get noticed.

    Not a pretty situation, for a lot of people. I don't "whine" about it much, but *DON'T* try to trivialize the problem.

    And, think the US has economic problems now? Wait another year. If the tech market doesn't start picking up, a lot (more) of us will end up declaring bankruptcy. What effect do you suppose that would have, half a million geeks, each owing as much as a quarter million dollars (typical house, or a really nice car and lots of toys), all defaulting on their debts?

    1. Re:'Scuse me? by RabidOverYou · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Let's play "spot the discrepancy"! I pick:

      a) I've maxed my CC's
      b) I've always managed my money rather well

      Do I win? Do I? Whoohoo!

    2. Re:'Scuse me? by Wudbaer · · Score: 1

      Do I win? Do I? Whoohoo!

      I'm afraid not. It's quite simple: You first use the money that is physically there, and when that's gone because no more money comes in and you have to pay the rent and eat and other frivolous things, some day even with the best money management it just runs out. So in the next step you try to use up all the credit you can get. It's that easy.

    3. Re:'Scuse me? by jayed_99 · · Score: 2
      I suspect many geeks (who have a stereotype/reputation for buying *lots* of expensive toys and holding pretty decent sized debts) have it a lot worse than I do.

      Oh yeah. The best processor in the house is a 600Mhz PII.

    4. Re:'Scuse me? by base3 · · Score: 2
      And, think the US has economic problems now? Wait another year. If the tech market doesn't start picking up, a lot (more) of us will end up declaring bankruptcy.

      The current administration will be passing bankruptcy reform in the middle of the night by voice vote in anticipation of this.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    5. Re:'Scuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So be versatile and LEARN ANOTHER TRADE! As geeks you are smart, so apply your intelligence to learning skills people wil pay for.

    6. Re:'Scuse me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Don't know what to tell you ... deliver pizza? (Those guys actually do pretty okay .. I averaged > $130 / night in cold cash at a cost of about $10 fuel every couple of days.)

      There are expensive new cars and there are cheap new cars. Which did you buy? I bought a cheap used car ... an 11 yr old Geo Metro that, in two years, has cost me less than $100 in maintenance. It doesn't have a fancy CD player or power windows but NPR comes in pretty good on the radio and I don't need to impress the chicks with what I own.

      I have been working as a temp. It aint fat, but I'm eating and could continue paying my bills if my wife were not on the scene. We have a land-contract mortgage almost paid off (after only 3 years), pay our taxes directly and garden organically. Maybe instead of whining you could actually apply for some sort of 'make-do' employment while you apply for better work. My wife & I have a credit line of about $50k on one card and another $20k on another. Obviously we are paying our bills or that line of credit would not be there.

      One other fellow mentioned working as an instructor in the local community college. Don't knock it ... those cats do about $20 an hour. Been there, done that as an adult education teacher. The teachers unions are bs'ing about low wages ... those people are eating just fine from the public trough and putting kids who can barely read and write on the street looking for work or more education. The crap the high schools graduate is job security for the junior collegs. Tie, dress shirt, decent knowledge of the subject and good presentation skills and you're in for life. The state-funded program I was teaching for went kerflop or I'd be there still. Loved it. And the pay was the best I've seen since I left the railroad. (Hey ... there are lots of bachelors and masters degrees switching boxcars in the rain. Wanna guess why? In 1976, as a single man, I netted >$70,000. 'nuff said?)

      Factory rats make about $60,000 plus OT in the auto plants and they hire a steady trickle to replace retirees. Around here (Detroit) they can find themselves on the recieving end of well over $100k / yr. If you can't hack it on the straight time, you are just hopeless.

      Step outside the cubicle and I think you'll find that money is green, not beige and opportunities exist anywhere you force them to be.

      You are a computer techie and you've had 14 months off work? If you can't program, you should have at least been putting up a commercial web site selling just about anything. The law of big numbers says you should be able to make at least minimum wage (24/7) if the site has anything to sell that is worth buying.Good grief ... you could have sold invisible dogs and plastic vomit on eBay and made more money than you say you made.If you can program, you should have been writing a Linux game ... there's loads of people chomping at the bit to get fresh games for Linux and almost no one to write them. Hellllllooooooo ... that's a solid gold business opportunity for somebody who's got a little lead in his pencil and actually IS competent.YMMV

    7. Re:'Scuse me? by Doomsayer · · Score: 1

      I'm in a similar situation, only I'm depending on my mom for housing and I have some temporary jobs which now barely pay the interest on my debts. I suggest you try tutoring, the pay is little; but, it is relatively easy to get. Should you want to talk more, email me at perez_enrique (at) yahoo.com

    8. Re:'Scuse me? by MikeFM · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I was un/under employed for about two years before finding my current job. I lost my last decent tech job just as the economy really began to bomb and was foolish enough to turn down a couple offers I had right away because I'd have had to move across the country. Within a couple months all offers had dried up and then the rest of the economy followed the tech economy down the drain and I could barely find minimum wage grunt work. I didn't have a lot of debt or a lot of savings. I had turned down better paying jobs in order to stay near my family so I didn't make big bucks during the boom.. making the mistake of figuring I could move to one of those areas after I had plenty of job experience soaked up. I made the mistake of thinking that not having credit cards or debt was a good idea. Boy did I get fscked. No income soon meant I owed back utilities and rent. Then the car went to shit (hit a massive pothole in the street) so my roommate couldn't do her job which required traveling to clients homes. (They were supposed to make other arrangements for her but luckily both her supervisors quit at that time putting her job in limbo.) Now totally screwed as we were unable to pay much of anything outside buying enough food to survive. Then the brilliant utils company shut off our electricity ruining our fully stocked fridge of food we couldn't afford to replace. Lease was up and we didn't have any money to renew it with so we started hoping around living with friends/family. Finally got unemployment to start sending me a check but they refused to send my roommate one because supposedly she quit her job (because her supervisors never filed the paperwork for a position change). Make due on a little unemployment check for a few months and then that runs out. Hang out with no money at all for a while and finally each find a shit job (at the same place.. after removing most of our resumes) and I got some contract work for about $.50/hr to help out a little. Were both offered better jobs for which we agreed to move for.. got there and they changed their mind so we're screwed totally. She's still unemployed but I finally got a new tech job. Doesn't pay what I'd like but I'm thankful to have something above minwage and not cleaning toilets. But for the most part we lived off something like $3000 for two years and racked up thousands of dollars in debt and much pain and suffering and thoughts of suicide.

      The only benefit was I cranked out a lot of good opensource code while unemployed and learned some new geek skills.

      Now that I'm working again I'm paranoid to the extreme. I'm working on starting a couple unrelated small businesses. I still do freelance geek stuff but am also doing non-geek stuff to keep me from being so reliant on a single market.

      The concept of being overqualified IMO is something that should be legally removed from job applicant considerations. You should not be able to turn down someone because you think their over qualified or just don't understand most of what is in their job history. An intelligent experienced worker has as much right to work at Burger King as a pimple faced virgin teenager. Just think American Beauty every time you're turned down for such a job. :)

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    9. Re:'Scuse me? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Funny

      ...processor in the house is a 600Mhz PII.

      You have a ridiculous cooling system on that, I would imagine.

    10. Re:'Scuse me? by delong · · Score: 2

      Here's a thought - get a job, any job. SOME money coming in is better than NO money coming in. What planet do you live on? If you live in a Metro area, and you can't get a job waiting tables or pushing a broom or something you just aren't trying that hard.

      Derek

    11. Re:'Scuse me? by smagruder · · Score: 2

      In the guild yet?

      --
      Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    12. Re:'Scuse me? by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      The job I just got was handed to me w/ no interview. I called to check on a resume submitted afew days before and the hr drone said they had so many apps she was only considering the people who followed up with her. Took a quick peek at the resume and made me a pretty decent offer, contract for now, but it's looking good.

  84. Laid-off techie? by sweet+'n+sour · · Score: 1
    As a product marketing director at Critical Path, Renae Perry pulled in more than $100,000 per year. After losing her job last year at the San Francisco communication technology company, she started working for Accerra Corp.

    Since when has the description "techie" included marketing directors?

  85. Oh, exactly. by EvilStein · · Score: 2

    Perhaps they should have SAVED MONEY just in case something happened. I know, that's really not that easy for some people, but come on, if you're making over $100,000/year and can still say that you cannot afford to put aside *something* into savings, then you need some serious financial counceling.

    An entire freekin winery in Sonoma County is by no means affordable to the average techie.
    My heart just *weeps* for these poor Marketing Directors... *sniffle* working for free..

  86. hmm by nomadic · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've hoped this has knocked some of the pomposity out of a lot of you; if so, this cloud has a silver lining.

    2 years ago 95% of the people on slashdot were CONVINCED that they would never worry about work, since they were just so amazingly skilled that they could always get a job. Unemployment was for those other people, those liberal arts majors and all the people that made fun of them in high school and aren't we showing them since we're all rich and will stay that way. Oh, guess we won't.

    1. Re:hmm by FreshFunk510 · · Score: 1

      Someone has some repressed feelings of aggression/angst.

      --


      "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
    2. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you got this 95% figure from your Big Book of Bullshit?

    3. Re:hmm by nomadic · · Score: 1

      "Repressed" doesn't mean what you think it does.

    4. Re:hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, you don't have one?

    5. Re:hmm by cybrthng · · Score: 2

      Nah,

      I think it just pulled the weeds from the fields and left them to rot.

      People who have PEOPLE skills, IT skills and are educated (doesn't mean school) have jobs.

      Mind you the entire ecomony has shrunk as of lately and everyone is bitten. Fields like Geophsyics for Oil research are dying (we know were just about every oil field is) and even labor jobs are pounded. I know for one i'm building most of my basement by myself, hirring an electrician only for hooking up to the panels and certifying me wirring for inspectinos. I'm hanging the walls, wirring my speakers, putting up the movie screen and installing a trapdoor for my projector.

      Things are changing is really all i'm saying. I'm convinced i will never have to worry about work because i don't worry about it. I stay focused, i do the job and i do what is necessary to understand how things are working, where things are going and what my position in the company is. I understand the projects going on, the requirements demanded and what the future holds. I work with management to resource, manage and provide solutions. People who sat around and expected there job to last are usually the ones who get fired first. People who WORK and STRIVE to understand what is going on.. usually have jobs, have people skills and have other interests that keep them EMPLOYEED.

      I for one would go work at mcdonalds if i had to. It is a job. i wouldn't sit on my unemployment checks until the last day, i wouldn't wait around for people to respond to my resumes, i would be out SELLING MYSELF.

      I think that is where people messup. Who says you have to stay where you started? I started in tech support for an ISP, moved up through sysadmin at a nationwide ISP, moved on to some consulting jobs/contracts and ended up working for Oracle for a while. I know work at a tech company that is growing and doing well. I know they appreciate me because i know what my position is and i now how to provide what the company wants and needs without people telling me so.

      just my 2 cents.

    6. Re:hmm by Tokerat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      2 years ago every moron who had ever heard of a web site was about to graduate college with a associates in computer science because that was the "hot industry" and if you didnt know what you where doing you could design web sites or program something for computers, which where going to take over the freaking world. yeah.

      Sit back and just think about all the HORRIBLE HORRIBLE software you've seen in say the last 5 or 6 years. Those aren't the geeks who took apart their tape decks and wired them with variable speed controls at age 5, they're not the geeks who wrote BASIC programs on their Apple ][ or C64 (or both) when they where 7.

      These are the people who saw their geek friends website, and then heard how much he could make with a decent tech job. These are the same people who could be pumping your gas if they had heard how neat this gas pump was and how much they could make 3rd shift at a gas station. (OK I exaggerate to clarify...) You've met these people. You probably have worked with these people. But they will go away, when the next big "hot industry" comes along, and it will. Natural selection still applies to industry, so just know what you're doing and soon enough all the morons will flee for "easier" things to do. I hope.

      --
      CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
    7. Re:hmm by jafac · · Score: 2

      two words.
      tulip bulbs.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  87. teaching ability helps a lot too by billstewart · · Score: 4, Insightful
    If you're going to teach, it's really helpful if you take a course or two in teaching methods, and a course in technical writing. Toastmaters wouldn't hurt either, if you haven't picked up equivalent experience at work. You really need to know how to do things like preparing lesson plans, having some clue about pacing if you're teaching a semester-long course as opposed to a one-night session, and in general how to talk without being boring, or scatterbrained, or running out of material, and it helps a lot to know about different learning styles that different people have, because some of your students will be great at abstract thought, some will be really concrete, some will be intuitives who get a lot out of examples if you've given them principles first while others do better with a few examples before you give them principles, but at least half the class learns differently than you do.

    No need to do that at MIT or Stanford; your local community college can teach you that just as well. Real-world experience is always valuable too, of course, but the only way to get it is to teach people in the real world :-)

    Remember the worst teachers you had in college? Besides the grad student who didn't speak English, there was that old guy who droned on and on and rambled without getting to the point, and the guy who discovered halfway through the semester that the class had only gotten through a third of the programming projects he'd planned for the semester, so he'd have to double your workload for the second half? All of them were nice people I'd studied under, one was a co-worker teaching a night course, and the last one really was a good teached but I had to drop a humanities elective to be able to finish his course instead. You could be one of them, or you could be a much better teacher than that.

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    1. Re:teaching ability helps a lot too by Raiford · · Score: 2
      This is great advice. I have been teaching now for three years at the college level after a career as a research engineer. My transition into the classroom was pretty smooth. I seemed to know what to do when I got in there. I just came up a composite model of the best professors that I had in college and tried to emulate that. I have attended a few training sessions on educational methods and techniques and they have been helpful. After three years I still see a lot of areas that could use some improvement in the way I manage some classes. Being a good teacher takes a lot of work and commitment. I think the best teachers are the ones that feel like it is what they were meant to be doing with their lives.

      --
      "player 4 hit player 1 with 0 stroms"
  88. $0 by redtail1 · · Score: 1
    Hey look, another open source story!

    Hmmm. I suppose I should read the article...

  89. Want Frys with That? by SuperGlue · · Score: 1

    Back when the Dotcom boom was at its height, I was constantly being slammed by my friends for not changing jobs. They would always talk about how now they make 20 to 40 grand more than me and I was being stupid for not quiting my somewhat stable job. For a while, I thought that maybe they were right.

    That "I missed my Big Chance" feeling faded quickly once I started noticing those same people asking if I "Wanted frys with that"............

    SuperGlueBooger

  90. How's it going? by wackybrit · · Score: 1

    Ooh! Lemmings on Palm! Your stuff looks pretty sweet for the Palm.

    So how's it working out for you? Are you making enough to pay your bills?

    It's just I like stories from people who've taken a risk on stuff like this, and I'm just wondering how you're finding it. I'm sure a lot of other people round here would be interested too.

    1. Re:How's it going? by ardiri · · Score: 1
      • Ooh! Lemmings on Palm!
        Your stuff looks pretty sweet for the Palm.
      lemmings :) yes, very very very nice game - loved it on my PC.. now, its portable *g*

      • So how's it working out for you? Are you making enough to pay your bills? It's just I like stories from people who've taken a risk on stuff like this, and I'm just wondering how you're finding it. I'm sure a lot of other people round here would be interested too.
      well, we dont do it fulltime :) we want to *g*

      i got into this stuff a few years ago, and, always maintained a fulltime occupation doing something :) getting experience in the field has created new opportunities (not many palm developers in sweden) :) and, a lot of contracting work definately pays for everything. from the 'games' side, shareware is always an issue - but, there is enough coming in to get new devices (new toys), go to developer conferences and generally have a good time :)

      as for doing it full time.. well - it all depends on how much you want to live on. these days, times are changing; if you want to sell, you gotta advertise.. the market is being saturated, so, its a dog-eat-dog world, unless your well known. :(

      but still, plenty of opportunity out there!
  91. please consider this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you do this, you're making everyone elses work less vaulable for the companies!

  92. A Better Idea... by meldroc · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The fact is that ninety-nine plus percent of those companies who are employing people for options are not going to end up with stock that's worth anything.

    So if you have to work for free, do it for yourself and start a project. At least you won't be deluding yourself into thinking your getting money when you're not.

    You'll be able to work on exactly what you want to work on, and all the fruits of your labor will be yours in the end, even if it has no dollar value. You can sell your project if anyone will buy it, or you can give it away under the GPL and get karma++.

    --

    Meldroc, Waster of Electrons
  93. Yep, I have advice. . ! by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 3, Informative
    Move to China.

    I'm serious. I have a Chinese friend who reports that the pay over there for Westerners is extremely high, while living costs are almost nothing. The country is throwing billions of dollars trying to ramp up for the new century. --And to host the next Olympics, don't forget. If you're white and you know technology, then you have a job and you'll make a mint. The governments of the West prefer not to advertise this to their citizens for obvious reasons, but the word is real. You want to live well and make a stellar living? Then pack your bags. China is the new America.


    -Fantastic Lad

    1. Re:Yep, I have advice. . ! by iie1195 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hehe, after reading your links, I realize he's right. China IS the new America...

      (Or is the US the new China..?)

    2. Re:Yep, I have advice. . ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do I get to keep my organs tho?

    3. Re:Yep, I have advice. . ! by helarno · · Score: 3, Informative

      Flamebait. As a foreigner who worked in China (left in 99) and still maintains ties with people there, I can tell you that things are hardly as rosy as painted above. It's true that multinationals who have just recently gotten into China are on the hunt for "white" professionals due to their distrust for local talent/work ethics. However, due to the extreme cost differential between local and foreign workers, any "white" foreigner can pretty much expect to be replaced within 2 years by a local employee.

      Any company that has been around for more than a couple of years has a large local staff, even of technical people. Upper management may be foreign, but that's maybe 1 position in 20. Getting that position is also extremely tough - even in 99, at the height of the tech boom in the US, you would find highly skilled foreigners in China working for only equity. We're talking about ivy league grads with years of work experience. The best way to get an upper management position was either to get transfered over from headquarters (i.e. home country of multinational) or to be best drinking buddies with the local General Manager.

      This of course does not take into account the difficulties of legally acquiring a work permit in China, finding affordable housing, etc.

      Working in China is quite an experience and I would recommend it for the adventurous. But don't expect to make a bundle of money or get a cushy job. I'm not sure such a position exists anywhere in the world anymore.

    4. Re:Yep, I have advice. . ! by kaeru · · Score: 1
      The previous post has a lot of truth in it. You also have to be careful about being cheated. I have a few friends who have had to argue about getting their full wages.


      While the riches aren't flowing, if you don't mind getting paid the local equivalent of somebody with the same amount of experience, or just a little bit more, then Asia has a lot of opportunities for foreign tech workers. You always have to keep in mind the problems of being a foreign worker. Apart from legal problems, you should also be aware of cultural problems such as language, food and so on.


      Consider South East Asia. It provides far less, legal problems in terms of visa's and so on for foreigners, especially for places like Singapore. Other countries like Malaysia, even make it easier for you to obtain visas if you are working for an approved tech firm in the cheesily named Multimedia Super Corridor.

    5. Re:Yep, I have advice. . ! by kevcol · · Score: 2

      Bullshit. Every democratic republic swings a rights pendulum from time to time. The liberties infringed now will be corrected in time. China on the other hand is an authoritarian dictatorship with zero safeguards on personal freedoms.

  94. russians do it too by Herr_Nightingale · · Score: 2, Insightful

    this Russian guy I went to school with is currently holding down an unpaid job with zero benefits. He does it because he's got no work experience in tech over here, and they pay his bus pass.. "live on unemployment insurance, get free transportation, donate 8 hours daily, and look for job in the spare time" says the guy.

    Work without pay is better than sitting at home losing your skills on the couch. Or playing Everquest.

  95. Welcome aboard by bman08 · · Score: 1

    This is the kind of shit people in the entertainment industry have been getting suckered into for years. "internships", deferred pay, millions of bucks around the corner... the deal's already set up. All you have to do is a little bit of work up front.

    I'm teaching a "workshop" and YOU can be a part of it. All you have to do is pay me $150 and I'll let you show me your stuff. I'm connected to industry people, I swear it. I'm offering you a huge chance here... now where's the check.

  96. Nuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nuts FAQ v. 1.0
    Q. What is the difference between deer nuts and beer nuts?

    A. They're both under a buck!

  97. mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    insightfull!

  98. Sounds like the employers are trying to scam.... by merodach · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ..not just the employees but the state governments.

    From the article:

    Some are holding down these jobs while receiving unemployment benefits.

    In my state (and I believe most others including California) this 'work' makes you inellegible for unemployment as you are being compensated (the stock options, although worthless, are still 'pay', but not in California where they don't count and therefore the people are not being paid for the work performed). Call me a jerk (or worse) but if I found out that someone I knew was doing this I'd be calling the local unemployment office to report them. Yes I'm hard-hearted about it but look at it this way - this is a way for the 'employer' to skirt around the unemployment funding laws, and for the 'employee' to get money THEY ARE NOT ENTITLED TO. I should not have to pay more taxes because people are defrauding the government. Again from the article:

    State officials say those working for equity can lose their unemployment benefits. Moreover, the startups that sign up these workers could be violating state labor laws.

    These people in question are not really employees but I bet they have to sign a non-compete agreements anyway in a large number of cases.

    A previous employer, for whom I worked as a tech, put me on pure commision pay (i.e. no work, no pay) and then didn't provide any work to do. They weren't happy when I said I would do work for any one who called me directly at home for help without including them (sorry - you don't provide the work I, and usually the courts, consider your non-compete voided) nor were they happy when I finally filed for unemployment (lack of work provissions in the law). The entire commision pay but no work deal was a way for them to avoid taking the hit on the unemployment taxes they had to pay.

    Julian Millenbach said at the end of the article employers who do not pay don'tvalue the worker's time or labor. I would add that at least some of them do value it - as something that can be stolen.

    --
    ***Blackholes are where the gods divided by zero.***
  99. 600 resumes per job by carlgt1 · · Score: 1

    I'd like to know more about what a tough time your employer had filling a job for two years. Where I'm at there was a job vacancy and there were something like 600 resumes mailed in and I assume probably a million emails based on the disgust with the HR dept. The funny thing is still the H1B visa program is setup to take in soemthing like 150,000+ per year.

    1. Re:600 resumes per job by bpalmer · · Score: 1

      Same situation up here in Southern Ontario. The last job I interviewed for (made it to the second cut) had over 500 resumes in response to a posting for one position.

    2. Re:600 resumes per job by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      Ah, you're just bitter because you didn't think of just offering stock (tee hee) options (snigger) instead of actual money.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  100. Degrees in "Teaching" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Several dozen "schools" give degrees in "instruction". but have NO foundation in any particular field of expertise. These degrees are bogus to the n'th degree. Niggers pretending how they KNOW how to TEACH! Pure bullshit dot com! If you have no background in a particular subject, you should NOT be allowed to"teach/instruct" in that field! Niggers seem to think they have some magic methodology to instruct in a field in which they have NO basis in fast , to do so, Bullshit!
    Yeah, I have a Degree in Education! What a JOKE!!! Niggers! Affirmative action? Sure it is! Niggers!
    Too bad most people ara Niggers like this! History? Yes, I saw that in school!

  101. Indeed... indeed. by The+Tyro · · Score: 2

    Heheh. Absolutely. Don't know about you, but I love burritos... don't know where I'd be without "the Bell."

    How ironic that those minimum wage tech-support types (it's a dirty job, but let's face it... someone's gotta do it) are making more money than the people mentioned in the article. Nobody ever said life was fair, but cmon...

    It's one thing to work for some kind of equity: training, health care benefits, a vested retirement plan, future job consideration, or even your own parking space. I just hope these guys have something in writing that says they'll get preference when a full-time (or heck, even part-time is better than free) position when one comes open. Work for free to get noticed by the boss? At the rate managers come and go, these freebie employees might be building up sweat equity in exactly nothing.

    Might be time to move on to another market, or get a temporary job to pay the bills. For families with kids, mortgage, etc this has to be no fun.

    --
    Even if a man chops off your hand with a sword, you still have two nice, sharp bones to stick in his eyes.
  102. Selling porn on the net is your new career? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey, it's in your signature line, and your web site.

  103. I have to disagree! by gunnk · · Score: 2

    I'm a sysadmin at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. We're in the process of hiring a person for our desktop support team in my department. Now, university training in Comp Sci is a minor plus, but it comes NO WHERE NEAR experience for me. I'm interested in real world experience and an ability to communicate well with others. Personally, the best sysadmins I've known have tended to have come to IT after first being in some other (usually technical) discipline.

    I have a stack of 50 resumes for the support position right now. Not having any degree will tend to count against you in my book, but lacking an IT-related degree won't. In my book 8 years IT work can count for more than a degree + 3 years.

    Many of the resumes I see overrate the importance of degrees and underrate experience. I don't find that academic performance is necessarily a reliable indicator of job performance. Experience (with good recommendations from previous employers) does serve as a good indicator for making wise hiring choices.

    --
    Life is short: void the warranty.
    1. Re:I have to disagree! by wolfgang_spangler · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I know everyone doesn't count it as the end all be all...but many do.

      Too many in this area anyhow :) I applied for a position at the company my brother works for and he was told I wouldn't get an interview because I didn't have a degree.

      I DO have 8 years of network/support experience, a CCNA, 4-5 UNIX and Linux experience but won't be granted an interview for this job which is for a Solaris/Linux sysadmin position.

      I know that is just one example, but I know it happens more often than not.

    2. Re:I have to disagree! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      8 years Network/support experience? How can you compare this to a degree in Computer Science? Maybe a degree in MIS.

  104. The Pendulum Swings Both Ways by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the entire tech boom people in the tech industry were paid WAY too much.

    Now, they are working for free.

    Does anyone else see the Karmic reality here?

    DS

  105. I still hear IT education being advertised... by vasqzr · · Score: 1


    Every time I turn on the TV or the Radio, I hear the ads talking about thousands of jobs opening in the fast growing field of IT.

    I looked in todays newspaper, there were 0 IT jobs!

    And then, they've got crappy classes at our local community colleges, churning out "IT Professionals".

    Ugh.

    I'm glad I have a job *knocks on wood*

  106. Revenge of the Employers by sphariss · · Score: 1

    Employers already know that techies are willing to work for peanuts. Infact they have put off hireing for that very reason. In May of 2001 I was laid off and figured I would have a nice 2-3 month "vacation" while looking for anouther job. I Hit the job boards, went door to door, started attending networking events and was able to get a fair number of callbacks. in almost every case I was told that while my experience was good, I was lacking some of the hard job requirements (certs, 4 years working with XP, Coulden't contact one of my refrences, etc). I was told twice that the company was really not looking to actually hire someone, but to make it look like there was no one that had the skills needed. When the hireing freezes where over and I started getting serious calls again, the same jobs are offering way less then before. My thought is that all during the boom times, the established companies had to offer much higher compensation to keep up with the dot coms. Now that the bubble has burst, the same companies are getting back to a much saner compensation structure (for them)

    1. Re:Revenge of the Employers by mikefoley · · Score: 2

      Yea, a friend and I were talking and he lamented on the fact that he could be spending $30k/yr for a high quality CS education only to be offered $35k/yr after graduation.

      In the Boston area, $35k/yr isn't even a living wage. Housing prices in Mass. are $380k/avg.!!

      For those out of school, companies want every $7k cert only to be offered $29k/yr! It's time to look for a different line of work.

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
    2. Re:Revenge of the Employers by macshit · · Score: 2

      In the Boston area, $35k/yr isn't even a living wage. Housing prices in Mass. are $380k/avg.!!

      I lived in Cambridge Mass. until 5 years ago, on $32K/yr (I worked for a nonprofit org, which paid fairly low wages -- but they paid what they considered `enough to live reasonably'). I was quite comfortable, and certainly didn't pinch pennies (e.g., always shopped at upscale stores, bought various tech toys when the urge hit, etc); I probably could have survived on quite a bit less. Have prices risen dramatically in the past few years, or are you exaggerating just a wee bit?

      [of course, I was single, but if you're not single, well, then you've got two incomes!]

      --
      We live, as we dream -- alone....
    3. Re:Revenge of the Employers by mikefoley · · Score: 2

      Prices are insane for housing in the greater Boston area. Really, the average price of a house in Mass. is over $350k and I do believe it's $380k. We live in Acton, MA, about 25miles west of Boston, and you can't touch a house for under $400k. These are houses that 10 years ago went for $170k. McMansions are still going up like crazy. I don't know who's buying them. Alot of my friends are out of work too.

      I have a wife and kid and she makes more that $35k/yr and we're struggling. We've gone thru our house savings and have dipped into 401k money to make the rent. It's not a cakewalk out there. Childcare is $16k/year (yea, $16k!) so I'm the stay at home Dad till things pick up. Mind you, I love spending time with my son, but we'll never make it if things continue like this.

      Yes, we're looking to relocate.

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
  107. techies my ass by painehope · · Score: 1

    As a product marketing director at Critical Path, Renae Perry pulled in more than $100,000 per year

    Fred Davis, president and founder of Berkeley's Prosumer Media Corp., which publishes Dig- iT magazine, offers stock to his freelance writers

    these are techies only in the loosest sense...associated with the technical sector of the economy.
    I damn sure don't consider product marketing directors as techies...I put them in the slag heap of largely useless bastards that I put sales weasels in. There's too many of these business school graduates running around selling pipe dreams and snake oil, and the computing industry has attracted quite a good deal of them. Let them work for stock options at idiotic startups...the real techies will just move on to somewhere else.
    personally, I get a kick out of watching these useless bastards squirm...let them join their brethren in the used-car lots and junior management at mcdonalds.

    --
    PC moderators can suck my White pierced, tattooed dick. If you think pride == hate, s/dick/Aryan meat mallet/g.
  108. highly skilled!?!?!? by peripatetic_bum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I just read the article and it states that this lady worked as a Product Marketing directory. She markets a product. She got paid 100K for this. The article calls this a highly skilled job!?!?!?

    Are they nuts?

    Writing good code is a high skill. Repairing engines is good diagnostic and repair skills. being a doctor 'saving' lives is a high skill.

    Marketing a product is not a high skill. It is a knack with no theoretical underpinnings that would require a high level of symbolic manipulation in order do a job.

    But some people paid her 100K and now she wonders why she cant find someone else to pay her 100K for ajob that any college grad with an english degree could do. This is not highly skilled. English degress are not a sign of any high skill. It is a fundamental on which other things are built on it.

    anyway, would like to hear replies

    --

    Sigs are dangerous coy things

    1. Re:highly skilled!?!?!? by mikefoley · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A typical engineer response. "What the fuck do we need marketing for?"

      I used to work in Engineering. I was the sysadmin in the VMS Development Group, amoung other positions. I moved to marketing because I was annoyed with the way things were done.

      Needless to say, I found out it was alot more difficult than I thought. It's not a hard/fast science like coding. THAT'S was makes it difficult.

      Don't knock someone elses job unless you have walked in their shoes.

      FWIW, I've been out of work since Aug 01. I went back to school full-time till my son was born, now I'm a stay at home Dad till things pick up.
      I used to work as a marketing engineer at Alpha Processor Inc/API NetWorks.

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
    2. Re:highly skilled!?!?!? by peripatetic_bum · · Score: 1

      mmmmm, I grok your point in that Marketing may in feact be symbolic manipulation but we dont think its hard because we havent quite defined it?.
      yes?

      --

      Sigs are dangerous coy things

    3. Re:highly skilled!?!?!? by mikefoley · · Score: 2

      No, you don't think it's hard because it's not "technical".

      Many would argue that running Enron into the ground didn't take alot of brains, but many made a shitload of money doing it.

      Value is a weird thing. As more and more programming jobs are going to India, the value of programmers is decreasing. It's all relative.

      I never said she was WORTH $100k. I was just defending the point that one should walk in anothers shoes before judging if the job is difficult.

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
  109. The job gap! by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've only seen one person say this, and it was in passing. Probably one of the major benefits of this is not having a huge gaping hole in your resume. "Let's see, you've been unemployed for 8 months now? Well, sounds like we want to pick you right up!" The benefits are most important in the immediate term.

    Although the parallels aren't exact, I think of it as selling a home. A just-on-the-market home is going to look far more appealing than one that has become a stale property. Everyone wonders, "what is wrong with this that it hasn't sold?"

    There are some interesting parallels to this and what happened when the domestic oil market bottomed out... was that early 80s? Lots of unemployed oil workers (yes, even technical types). They eventually shifted into sales or other things. Here, I think they're trying to ride it out. I don't think it is going to make for a good recovery (pent-up worker demand for jobs).

  110. In Soviet Russia... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK. I'm no good at Haiku. Natalie Portman means nothing to me. (Yes, I'm Gay.) Don't like grits. And the closest I've been to having a Beowulf cluster was a 5 node Mosix setup. (Total MHz: 2500.) So maybe this is "my thing". Here goes:

    "In Soviet Russia, the Peanuts Work You!!!"

    So what do you think, guys?

    Oh... Well, at least I posted anonymously... ;-)

    Happy New Year's to all!

    1. Re:IN SOVIET RUSSIA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      peanuts work for techies!

  111. Sanity is worth the peanuts... by ChrisKnight · · Score: 2

    There are a lot of very qualified folk unable to find a decent job these days, including myself. One of the worst things that can happen is the wearing down of confidence as each day goes by with little prospect of finding a job earning enough to keep the bills paid.

    Volunteering your efforts may not pay the bills, but it can provide a much needed sense of accomplishment; and when the bills aren't getting paid anyways that alone can be priceless.

    -Chris

    --
    -- This sig is only a test. If this were a real sig it would say something witty. --
  112. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sound like you don't know what you are talking about. That Frontpage designers and PHP and MYSQL experts were valued during that time, but it is not. Java is strong too, so fuck off with your ignorance.

  113. are 'real' techies out of work? by linuxlover · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Most of the laid -off people I have seen are in this category
    - novice graphic designers (2 yrs exp). Most of them working some totally unrelated field then saw the dot-com boom, went for a quick diploma, and joined the 'hi-tech' companies

    - marketting types..

    - 'irritable' programmers, who think all programming is pressing that button in Visual Studio IDE. These are again the 'quick-buck' types, who doesn't know what a 'stack' is..

    All my friends who are real techies (programmers / engineers / sys admins) are still employed. Sure they don't get 20% raises these days. But they still have a job.

    This just my observation, I am NOT saying who ever doesn't have a job is not a real techie. What do other slashdotters think?

    please no flames.

    1. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by mpost4 · · Score: 1

      How about the real techies that just got out of collage at the time of the crash, I got into computers because I loved them and was programming since I was 8. All I hear is that I don't have the exp. that they want, being fresh out of collage as of a year and a half ago. No job means no exp. no exp. means no job.

    2. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by los+furtive · · Score: 2

      I agree with you, but another contributing factor is that so many people in the last 3-4 years went to school to learn how to be a sys admin...and the fact is there is no real demand for them, heck, with every passing day things in the sys admin world are getting easier, most of their days are numbered, soon to be replaced by some whiz-bang chip instead. Okay so I exaggerate a bit, but you understand what I'm saying right?

      I could see this coming a few years ago when I was in school, and its what drove me to do development, which was harder academically, but has payed of since then. All my networking pals are doing joe jobs, while myself and most of my developer friends (at least those that saw beyond graphic design) may not be doing as well as at the height of the dot-com craze, but are still doing just fine.

      --

      I'm a writer, a poet, a genius, I know it. I don't buy software, I grow it.

    3. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      What do other slashdotters think?

      Last year the company I work for got a big project around Thanksgiving. We hired several contractors to work with us on the project, and got really top people, from whom we learned a lot and improved the level of quality on all our projects. This was of course about 2 months after 9/11.

      This year the same thing happened - and we found that the quality of people that were available was much lower. However they were also asking for less money. Now we are teaching our contractors.

      None of my techie friends are currently out of work - I really don't know anyone who is 'entry level'. This summer I did know two people who were unemployed, a sysadmin and a Java programmer. Both found jobs within a few months. In the past I would have expected that these people would have found jobs within weeks.

      I do know a fellow who says some of his friends are having a very hard time finding a job, but these are younger people with little or no experience.

    4. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by mikefoley · · Score: 2

      You MIGHT want to learn how to spell college first.

      --
      What's my Karma Mr. Burns? "Excellent"
    5. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by Baldrson · · Score: 2
      How about every "boomer" I know that didn't dig himself into a long-term position many years ago?

      Like for example two programmers that originated the code for Apple's WebObjects are respectively a) living with his parents and b) thinking he's going to have to go to work as at a fast food joint by day and a bouncer by night if he can't find employment within the next few weeks. Neither of these guys are in Silicon Valley -- both went where they thought the jobs would be and both are 40'ish.

      Another developed the automated fraud detection system still used by a major credit card company and has had to resort to living off his parents as well as his wife working to avoid going bankrupt under the weight of the mortgage payments. He says he lived around Silicon Valley long enough to get to know the sort of personality that gets into the Bay Area B&D/S&M scene and, without joking, says the current crop of head-hunters that are out there 'helping' guys like him are of that preference -- getting a real kick out of dominating their employment-seeking clients. He has been looking solid for over a year with no jobs save an hour of consulting here and there once a month or less.

      Another guy who was CTO of a company prior to the Dot-Con bubble-and-bust and, when it hit, stayed out of it while successfully running an insurance firm's fraud investigation is now out of work and can't find anything at all.

      Another guy I know who is widely thought of as the best Perl programmer among a group of highly competitive Perl programmers is approaching 60 years of age says to queries of how he is suriving simply "Bah humbug. Why didn't the world end at Y2K like it was supposed to?"

      Most of these guys were pulling in $50-$80/hour (no benefits mind you) fairly regularly before the start of the Dot-Con boom when their rates went up about 30% only to go to ZERO for over a year now.

      These are guys who towed the line their entire lives and are now facing middle to old age with bankruptcy and only the cajoling of anonymous if not insolent "advisors" to "change careers."

    6. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      What do other slashdotters think?

      This is so going to generate tons of anecdotal counterexamples but not a lot of useful data...

    7. Re:are 'real' techies out of work? by CACondor · · Score: 1

      Yes, "Real" techies are out of work. What makes the current recession interesting is that it isn't only the bottom rung of skilled workers who are left out to dry, with the effective elimination of investment in new ventures (VC investments in technology are at an all-time low; not the rates prior to the boom, but rates prior to the transistor.) the innovators are left out to dry.

      Worse, Montgomery Street is seeing layoffs. These layoffs are of the analysts who understood the technology market. They weren't laid off last year... they're being laid off now. Why? Because a recovery is no longer expected to happen in the near future. VC firms are shutting down, too...

      This is truly disturbing for the future of innovation in this country. It's one thing to have a down turn, and pull back investments a bit. Instead, we're seeing a meltdown of the infrastructure that made companies like Intel, Cisco, HP, etc... even possible.

      Big companies tend to innovate slowly at best. The innovators tend to be poorly rewarded at best, and often go unrewarded. Right now, that's the only innovation path available in this country. What incentive is there for someone to work hard and come up with new ideas?

  114. Bullish Sign For The Market!!! by istartedi · · Score: 2

    This is classic market bottom stuff. At the bottom, it always sucks to be a worker. I have very vivid memories of working a night-shift temp job in 1993-1994, when I had just graduated before the economy had really picked up. I remember thinking at the time that if I was being exploited, surely somebody was making out well--the corporations. So I was determined to get into stocks but didn't have the money. At one point, I had finally managed to scrape enough dough together to buy into the Netscape IPO. I was priced out on what I thought was a ridiculously high limit order. If I had managed to catch those shares on opening day, IIRC, the buyout came at twice that price. In retrospect, that particular pick wasn't the best. A friend had recommended AOL, but I couldn't see the value in it because I knew people who were just "cycling" their free disks, and AOL itself was also screwing people. I couldn't see the short-term value in companies and customers screwing eachother, but we all know now that it worked great--for a while.

    Anyhow, this tech bubble is more severe than most ordinary recessions, but the rules don't change: At the bottom of the market, it always sucks to be an employee. So become an employer. If you have any money saved up from the last expansion, now is the time to buy in.

    So forget all this crap about interning because you might get your foot in the door. Work at Taco Bell if you have too, and plow whatever you can save back into the market. Live with the folks if necessary. Don't buy imported beer. Don't buy beer. How do you think the immigrants do it? Read "The Millionaire Next Door". By holding back your services until you get paid, and buying stock in industries that are reaping the benefit of free or low-cost labor, you are turning the tables on what might appear to be a bad situation! By buying into the market, you become an employer without assuming the risk of forming your own start-up. It's really a great little invention, this market thing, as long as you know how and when to use it. Finally, read my .sig. It sums it up pretty well. Don't give any significant effort to the corporate community unless you have nothing better to do. Otherwise, you are better off earning a few bucks at Taco Bell and programming when you feel like it; not trying to impress some suits who might just give you a handshake and escort you out the door whenever *they* feel like it.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  115. Buy gold. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    A shitty job market is nothing compared to what's just around the corner.

    Buy gold while you can. The yeller stuff is quietly creeping up. Gained $30 since this time last month, thanks to war worries and people waking up to the fact that whole star-destroyer of the economy is going bye-bye in a few short months. --You can gauge how close the world is to disaster by watching how reliably gold gains, how shakey the dollar gets, and how many Britney clones are flashing their skin at us. The water's boiling, kids!

    --And when the bubble bursts and all the poor to middle income people are bankrupt when the banks foreclose on all the debt they addicted the populace to, you'll sure be glad to own something a little harder than the soon-to-be tanked American dollar!

    Some of the most powerful American banks got that way by foreclosing on mountains of mortgaged property during and after the Great Depression. Depressions allow the rich to consolidate wealth and the poor to become slave labor.

    You think this stuff isn't planned? Don't be stupid. Bush isn't stupid; He's a raving psychopath, but he isn't stupid. (Easy mistake to make, mind you. Stupidity and psychosis sort of look the same at a distance.) --In any case, that loon is deliberately crashing the economy for several nasty reasons. Just watch. But don't waste any time getting to your seats; Estimates put the big kablooie sometime within the next six months, with the smart money on mid to late February.

    Don't say you weren't warned; a few of the more aware ones out here in cyber space have been screaming and yelling about this stuff for a couple of years now. It's late in the game, kids and kittens! Make yer hay while you can.

    Invest somehow in Food, Gold or unmortgaged Land ownership. --And military/biomedical interests for those of you with no morals. That shit always does well during Hell years. (Daddy Warbucks.) Canned goods might not be a bad idea either. I can't remember; did they issue food stamps during the Great Depression?


    -Fantastic Lad --Fear is stupid and useless. Preparedness is everything.

    1. Re:Buy gold. by Cheeze · · Score: 2

      i got a Y2K solar power converter i'll sell you for cheap.

      remember when everyone thought the world would end because of the y2k bug? all it caused was a lot of unqualified employment in the computer industry. This type of hype is speculative at best, at worst it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy.

      --
      Why read the article when I can just make up a snap judgement?
    2. Re:Buy gold. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      If the dollar becomes worthless, gold is not a winner.

      You see, the concept of law requires that there be law enforcement. If the U.S. Dollar were to become absolutely worthless, then the police and justice systems will break down. Government employees are paid in dollars, which means they will not work unless they think that their pay is worth something. If that system ever breaks down, then gold and land become worthless, brute force will be the only thing of value left. Gold is only valuable when there's something protecting you from people who want to steal it from you.

      The fact is, the US Government is never going to let that situation play out. They have enough economic tools, including the ability to do crazy things with the interest rates, hire people to work on make-work public works projects, and tax any behavior they want to. The New Deal did it all once, and the government hasn't even come close to tapping that kind of power yet.

      The only situation where gold becomes king is the one where the United States has failed to preserve the value of the Dollar. If that can't be done, you have much more serious problems to worry about other than the price of gold.

    3. Re:Buy gold. by mjwise · · Score: 1

      In appropriate MST3K voice....

      Gary North?!

      Seriously, you think the president somehow controls the economy? Alan Greenspan really could never manage it well (he really did try to prevent the dot-com/tech bubble from ever forming but some people just refuse to listen) and he had direct control of a number of key economic controls. And I think you're confusing most of the yelling with all those dire Y2K warnings. And those weren't off at all, were they?

    4. Re:Buy gold. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
      remember when everyone thought the world would end because of the y2k bug?

      Yeah. They were over-reacting, and I wasn't among them. --But you're also incorrect, if I'm reading your post right. --Y2K was a real problem and it was only solved because people were aware of its implications in advance, and because they spent millions on updating their code.

      I knew a guy who had been working non-stop with a programming team for about two years de-bugging code for a large bank. They got the job done in time.

      In the case of our current situation, however, people have done nothing to prepare for the problem. We don't even have people over-reacting, buying generators and such. There isn't even mis-information. There is NO information. That's where the problem lies.

      But I'm sure if you keep telling yourself pretty lies, you'll sleep well tonight, and who am I to snatch that comfort zone away from you?


      -Fantastic Lad

    5. Re:Buy gold. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
      Gold is only valuable when there's something protecting you from people who want to steal it from you.

      Very true. But since this is an engineered economic collapse, I think we can expect it to be severe, but not so severe that government or monetary systems would be truly threatened. The super-wealthy and the Shadow Government just wants to hurt the people in order to increase their degree of control over them.

      Now, I am doubtful that fascist military rule will rise directly from a depression, but it is certainly a step in that direction, and it is also an intended goal. I strongly suspect that we will see concentration camps before this decade is out. (Though, people will certainly be able to turn blind eyes towards them, or justify them. But concentration camps are concentration camps no matter how you label them. Semites be warned!)

      As for gold. . . I don't care about prices. I just want something which will be stable when all my $20 bills are worth $5, my job vanishes and the banks come calling to get back the wealth they loaned me. Gold will increase in value, and when I cash out, I'll hopefully be able to pay off my debts and keep myself housed and fed for the year or so it will take before things start to normalize.

      I'm not interested in speading fear. With knowledge, this sort of situation can be managed with far less trauma.


      -Fantastic Lad

    6. Re:Buy gold. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
      You're only looking at conspiracy theory the way people are being directed to regard it.

      But the fact of the matter is that Bush and his thugs are getting away with murder. Everybody knows, so it's not really a conspiracy. I like the word, 'corruption'. Seems to fit better.

      You might serve yourself well by doing some reading about how the economy really works. The controls Mr. Greenspan has influence over, while certainly logical enough to keep nearly everybody happily fooled, are nonetheless part of an elaborate stage performance.

      The economy is being de-stabalized using some of the following ways.

      1. Media perception. If everybody can be made to simultaneously believe that the economy is fucked, then six months later, the economy will be fucked. Enron 'went off' to set up nervousness in people. Concepts like, "3 Trillion dollars just vanished from the stock market," now freely float around.

      2. Corporate disintegration As a direct response to the Enron scandal, there are now currently 17 massive corportations which have over-stated earnings or are being investigated for similar fraud. --Seven of which are energy companies, (which adds more imperative for Congress to force the White House to compel full disclosure from Vice President Cheney's 2001 energy task force. Only problem is, one of the companies under investigation is Halliburton. Cheney was its CEO until taking office, and the fraudulent accounting occurred while he was the boss.) The hammer hasn't finished falling yet, but it seems pretty clear that things are only going to get worse in this area.

      3. Civic Debt New York's city budget has been devastated, as we know. And California announced recently that they are in a lot of trouble as well. To quote . . .
      With its huge economy stalled and state revenues plunging, California has descended into its worst budget crisis in a decade and is now facing an excruciating round of budget cuts and possible tax increases.

      State officials are proposing deep reductions in education, health services and other programs to deal with a budget shortfall that could total $25 billion in the next 18 months.

      "That's a hole so deep and so vast that even if we fired every single person on the state payroll -- every park ranger, every college professor and every Highway Patrol officer -- we would still be more than $6 billion short," said the Assembly speaker, Herb J. Wesson Jr., a Democrat.

      Further, according to this article, I think it is reasonable to assume that similar situations will hit many more states when it comes to budget and tax time in 2003. Again, though, the media will be needed to spread the appropriate levels of fear and anxiety. (Note that both articles originated from the New York Times.)

      And those are just the vectors of attack which are clearly visible. There are other, more complicated items. But in short, from consumer confidence, to corporate accounting, to the dollar, to gold, to foreign capital flight, to pension fund wipe outs, to the derivative bubble, to national and personal debt; there is not a single economic indicator which is not flashing red.

      Also, you might be well served to discover the actual mechanics of where money comes from in the U.S.; which corporation prints it and sells it to the government(!!!), who owns the banks, who owns and directs the people in power. It's quite a revealing little journey, to say the least.

      Can Bush and his gang direct this? No. Bush is just a tool serving much larger interests. Who are they? That's a subject for a different post.


      -Fantastic Lad

    7. Re:Buy gold. by LostCluster · · Score: 2

      First, your $20 becoming worth $5 prediction means you are calling for 300% inflation over the next decade... that's a tall order.

      Second, assuming that situation does play out, what's to say gold would continue to maintain its value? Who would be willing to buy gold in such a situation?

    8. Re:Buy gold. by mjwise · · Score: 1

      Just remember, it could all be far, far, far worse. Always remember that. It gives you some scope and perception of the current woes. Oh, and economic indicators tend to flash red sometimes. It's called 'contraction' as opposed to 'expansion'. Both happen all the time whether it's Dubya or The Illuminati in charge. I'd be far more alarmed and suspicious with economic indicators that always were green.

      And California, well, they've basically screwed themselves over many times. From 'Oh my?! We have an energy problem?! That's un-possible!' to this. And this ain't New York's first impending bankruptcy. Just don't be so quick to scream TEOTWAWKI.

  116. Time is a pendulum by kien · · Score: 1

    It swings back and forth constantly. When we allow big business to dictate the market, they take full advantage. The last time the pendulum swung this way, we had sweat-shops and railroad tycoons. This time, we're seeing outsourcing and "automation" (a myth-in-progress). When the going gets tough, the CEOs cut headcount because that's where they realize the most benefit for the shareholders.

    The last time the pendulum swung this way (in an industrial setting), the workers revolted and formed unions. Actors and craftsmen and have long believed in the power of guilds. Each of these organizations is as prone to corruption as the corporations they are supposed to oppose.

    There is indeed a Programmers Guild but it hasn't gained much acceptance in the industry.

    Perhaps it's time to realize that, collectively, we are the reason for the state of technology today and give the finger to the companies that want to screw us. Just one hitch (and here's the breakdown)....you first. :)

    --K.

    --
    Sig: Bad people happen. Try to avoid being one of them.
  117. Re:Early dot.coms all over again by octalgirl · · Score: 2

    Working for options is really nothing 'new', and was born in the mid 90's dot.com stampede. There were many 'paper' millionaires. Some worked for free, others for near minimum wage. It was a huge risk, because most companies failed, even in the very beginning. And of course, most others failed a few years later. But the trend of working for chance seemed to start back then, and even though it's marketing and other non-tech types jobs, it shows this start-up method may have migrated across business lines.

  118. These aren't really for the desperate... by RoadKnight · · Score: 1

    ...but for the well-off looking for some place to cool their heels until things pick up. Which isn't to say that they're not working. I have no doubt that it's more or less startup business as usual inside most of these places and the workers are excited, clued and working their butts off.

    I live out here in San Francisco and the only people I know who are doing equity-only work are the ones who can afford it. The rest move or scrimp and scrape by as they can.

    I'm not doing it because I had savings and contract work to get me through to where I am now and need real money at this point.

    If people or the gov't want to get up in arms about something, how about the plethora of so-called unpaid "internships" ?

  119. This is illegal! by LostCluster · · Score: 3, Informative

    The article points this out. There are minimum wage laws. You CANNOT legally pay an employee strictly with stock options, or even stock. You have to give him at least the state minimum wage in spendable money.

    You cannot agree to be an independant contractor and then behave like an employee. If it quacks like a duck, it's a duck in this case. If you behave like an employee (go to work at the hours they appoint, use their equipment and not yours, etc.) they cannot file a 1099 form and say that makes you a contractor... it just means they've filled out the wrong form.

  120. No way by ToasterTester · · Score: 2

    I'm out of work and looking, but only person I'll work for free for is myself. If I'm going to work for someone I'm going to get paid. I rather change careers and make my love for computers a hobby.

    If you work for nothing that is what people think you are worth.

    1. Re:No way by WetCat · · Score: 1

      To what?
      I would like to ask you to show the examples of
      the professions that IT specialist can consider
      switching to.
      - Math teacher?
      - Cook ?
      what else?

    2. Re:No way by ToasterTester · · Score: 2

      I all depends on the person, age, other experineces, intelligence, creativity. Like designing systems, there is no one correct answer.

    3. Re:No way by WetCat · · Score: 1

      I didn't ask about "one correct answer"
      I tried to ask about exampleS that can accomodate
      some with math or CS background.
      Advertisement? Marketing?

  121. The scale of the downturn by davinc · · Score: 1

    How bad the downturn really is.
    You won't see this graph on CNBC very often.

    1. Re:The scale of the downturn by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

      You won't see this graph on CNBC very often.

      For good reason! Never plot long term stock market results on a linear scale! Always plot on a log scale to get a more realistic view of the growth rate vs. time.

      This plot clearly shows the other recessions that have occurrred over the course of the century, the malaise of the 70's, the NASDAQ bubble, the crash, etc. in persepective.

      http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=^DJI&d=c&k=c1&c=^gs pc ,^ixic,^dji&a=v&p=s&t=my&l=on&z=l& q=l

    2. Re:The scale of the downturn by davinc · · Score: 1

      The log view looks equally as ugly, but in a different way. The linear view is offered for a reason, there are uses for it. If you scale up any other period in US history only one looks this extreme as the Nasdaq, and that is the crash of the Dow preceding the depression.

      For moving long term trends log is good, but it tends to marginalize recent events. For example a move from 10,000 to 5,000 looks like a hiccup compared to an earlier move from 2,000 to 1,000, even though both events represent an 50% decrease in value. You wouldn't know by looking at the log chart that the Nasdaq lost about 2/3rds of its value.

  122. No worries.. by microsost · · Score: 1

    Could live like that.. Live in your parents basement (admit it, half of you do anyway), eat the peanuts and sell any extras to afford more computer stuff..

    1. Re:No worries.. by DragonTHC · · Score: 1

      heh, I think those of us who do live in their parent's basement don't eat any of our peanuts at all, we sell all of our peanuts and eat mom's peanuts!

      --
      They're using their grammar skills there.
  123. Yes, getting India into IT was a good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one wanted to listen.

    It was "give India free Linux, they'll stick it to Bill, and they'll have a monster coder base to develop Linux!"

    Well you got exactly what you wanted. All the coding jobs are now going to India. Your nice proprietary programming job is getting ready to FIRE YOUR OVERPAID ASS, to make room room for an Indian coder working for peanuts to write some Linux apps.

    This OSS really worked out well, eh? Still interested on coding (for the Cause) after that 8 hour shift at the Bell?

    1. Re:Yes, getting India into IT was a good idea. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless other companies have better experiences than the company I worked for up until about two months ago, I don't see the India thing working out all that well. That company's experience with contractors in India has been -- to put it quite diplomatically -- dreadful. In the end, large contracts were signed, money changed hands, months passed, and eventually all the work had to be either fixed or completely re-written from scratch by engineers back here in the US. Looking back on the experience, it would have been MUCH more economical to just do the development here.

      I don't give a ding damn how cheap engineers are in India. Based on what I've seen, the whole "send it all to India" movement has been a bleak disaster. Companies that continue to send stuff there thinking they're saving money are either lucky as hell to have found a quality team or are so out of touch with the day to day grind in their companies that they deserve to go out of business.

      (Note: There are good engineers and there are bad engineers regardless of the country of origin. I am only speaking from my personal experiences from the company I used to work for. YMMV... I'm posting anonymously because some may be able to figure out who I am if I posted with my real name.)

  124. Forget IT. by Regul8or · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm a laid off Network Engineer with a CCNA. I couldn't get shit so I mooched unemployment for all it was worth and got a job as an automobile mechanic. Thankfully I had formal education in both fields. I was so sick of the IT world, I'm just glad I had a backup plan.

  125. 40 acres and a mule? by moankey · · Score: 1

    Sounds like the 40 acres and a mule thing. Do something now for something later, but that something later never comes or is upheld.

  126. Because you never used the spellcheck function by ramdac · · Score: 1

    ...idiot.

  127. Got Lucky by BGunner · · Score: 1

    Laid off twice in 2001 Got a unspecified job at a small company thanks to a incredible head-hunter. Unspecified as I did not really know what my responsibilities where. All I knew was I was to be able to act "autonomously". One year later I have received a nice raise and was asked "to be more part of the family". My buddies also recently laid off are suffering or have bought a Togo sandwidch shop. I am beginning to realize success requires not being specialized in the field of programming. I have in the past year researched new technology, learned the way a specific industry works, specified a new product's features, architected the system and wrote the code in time for a demo at THE trade show in Chicago. The demo went well while I vacationed in Maui. All the above led up to an excellent review. All the above led up to a great experience. The ability to act autonomously really lets one compete where it counts. To create something that will generate profits in the marketplace. Coding without the end results being profitable is just solving crossword puzzles or playing EverQuest. All I can say is good luck to those who can't see the big picture and act in what ever manner is required to make something people will pay money for. That money is the only reason you deserve a paycheck!

  128. recursively insane by noshellswill · · Score: 0

    Soooo ... pad're, an unemployed & unemployable techie is gonna teach more of the unemployed to become unemployable ... did I get that right?

  129. We could all join the entertainment industry?!? by MactechBri · · Score: 1

    We could all make our millions making less than mediocre pop music for the masses. Or, or play baseball and bitch that a two million dollar contract aint enough to feed your family. I could aspire to be Tom Hanks and command 20 million a movie. Sheesh! I'm in the wrong industry.

  130. Low wages cannot mix with Hi-Tech by superpulpsicle · · Score: 0, Insightful

    * You can only work someone so many hours before they become unproductively burned out.
    * You can only pay such a low wage before people realize they are better off in some other field.
    * You can only pull off so many projects with so few resources.

    IF the wages keep dropping, it will end up fastfood-izing the industry. Where a few management brain does all the thinking and everyone's just a tech monkey. Of course since the cost of engineering degrees and the skills required to be an engineer is so demanding... Fastfood-izing will bring the beginning of the end for american technological progress.

  131. gay sex! by Gay+Sex+Troll · · Score: 0, Troll

    i love gay porno, my name is david disque, my email is krisnotes1@aol.com. please email me with as much gay porno as you can, i really cant get enough!

  132. become a manager in gov't | gov't contracts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    then you do not need to have any skill, do not need to show adequate results (and lying when they ask is OK), do not need to deliver on time (with those inadequate deliverables), will never be held accountable for your (in)actions. All this for the price that you must attend useless meetings, learn to bullshit good and devote your time to schmoozing instead of team building and facilitating. Think this is being sarcastic? This is exactly what happens in the world of government contracts. It is a sort of "professional" version of gradeschool in which the kid that had the coolest clothes was elevated as if he had saved some lives, helped others achieve greatness or any other worthy action. The theory is that the ones who make the decisions are often (but thankfully not always) as confused and willfully mislead as the kids in the middle school are for worshiping superficial coverings over anything of real merit. The result is widespread apathy and politicising, but since that is seen as OK by the very ones causing it then that too is not a problem. If you have the right credentials (which often include relationships in the right places) then skill, determination, loyalty and persistance are irrelevant.

  133. Time to cut way back on H-1B visas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Tell me if this sounds familiar:

    1.Your company has a round of layoffs.
    2. Say three programmers in your department get the ax.
    3. Two weeks later a H-1B visa holder shows up and starts working 80+ hours a week for ~30% less than one of the former programmers.
    4. Profit!

    Right now there are 195,000 H-1B visa holders in the US, most of which are in the IT sector. Maybe it's time to thank them for their help and cancel their visas. IMO we need to get American workers back on the job and send the others home.

    1. Re:Time to cut way back on H-1B visas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bowie J. Poag had a good story related to this.

  134. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Time to move or get a new career.

  135. Jobs like thes can pay off by jonsmirl · · Score: 1
    Doing a job like this is a long shot, but you have to look at it like a lottery ticket. Sometimes lottery tickets win; but if you never buy a ticket you're never going to win.

    Some friends of mine have scored big doing this:

    1) One went two years without pay, received $1M in an acquisition.

    2) Another went three years and recieved $10M in an acquisition.

    3) Three others have spent about a year and given up.

    4) I have done very well myself doing this too.


    You can't look at these as jobs, you're really an owner. If a five person company fails, you have have to blame yourselft for 20% of the failure.

    1. Re:Jobs like thes can pay off by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 2
      "Jobs like thes"?

      "Jobs like thes" can damage legitimate, real businesses simply by being another lowballing competitor.

      (1) operate company while not paying workers
      (2) kill off competitor who DOES pay workers by lowballing 'em
      (3) go out of freakin' business because you have to be an idiot to make a business plan where you don't pay your own people, you just gamble on being bought up lock stock and barrel
      (4) LOSE! Everybody loses!

      It's amazing how dot-com, corporate, stock-option-capitalist gibberish and insanity can STILL be doing damage years after the dotcom era collapsed! My god, what's it gonna take? Anyone care to start arguing that we should seek out bosses with big leather whips to physically beat us with, on the grounds that being tortured makes us work harder which produces more profit for the company?

      I just know that I'm going to stick with those who aren't totally crazy- and I _run_ a business, thank you. It's not computer tech, thank God. I'm just going to build it incrementally like I've been doing all along, with solid value and no debt and the ability to pay my suppliers and fulfil my orders, and I'm going to do that regardless of who else is in the arena with me- you can't hurt me via undercutting and suicidal moneylosing stupidity if I can KEEP OPERATING regardless, scaling back my needs in tough times. You can only put me out of business if I overextend to the point that I can't keep operating without X amount of income.

      These guys are worse than the damn lottery. There's no reality in what they're doing. Even a Harvard MBA would smack them upside the head for this- but what they really need isn't a Harvard MBA. They need to be given a good talking to by a hot dog stand owner...

    2. Re:Jobs like thes can pay off by jonsmirl · · Score: 1

      Software companies are different than normal companies. All of the no-pay ones I know of developed software products on speculation. There was never any intention to ship the product directly, the companies are designed to be acquired.

      The right group of people can assess the needs a company like Microsoft might have in a couple of years. Even if MS doesn't need it there is a good chance a competitor will. Products can be designed to meet these future needs. Some video games are also built on this model and then sold to the big distributors.

      If you don't pay people software R&D companies require almost zero capital. By eliminating the VC the stock holders get to keep 100% of the acquisition dollars.

      This is high risk/high reward employment - not a sweat shop. A salary isn't the only way to make money.

      My MBA is from Northwestern which is much better than one from Harvard.

      Sorry about the spelling. It is late here and I am tired.

    3. Re:Jobs like thes can pay off by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

      This is the single most important thing as a techie that you must understand, and understand now. Software companies are NOT different from other companise. A company either has a product or service to sell or it doesn't. When it doesn't its called a "failed business" a "sham" or a "scam". Nothing more, nothing less.

      Even with an MBA people such as yourself cannot get this. Its amazing. The days of a company being designed solely to be taken over are gone and won't be back for a while. The IP has to be pretty special and worht something of ACTUAL value to the purchasing company.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
    4. Re:Jobs like thes can pay off by jonsmirl · · Score: 1

      The companies do have a product to sell. It's called IP and they are only looking for one customer.

      A software IP company is different. It can be formed with almost zero capital other than money used for salaries. Very few other industries have this attribute. There is no rule that says you have to have expensive offices, a sales force, factories, etc.

      Valuable IP is created all of the time. It's just that during the bubble a lot of the same IP was created too many times. This made most of it worthless. There will be new opportunities in the future.

      Be prepared to fail. Two out of three or more attempts are going to fail. Here's one of my failures, you can have it for free. http://xpserver.mozdev.org/

      Software IP companies can work, I have done several successful ones. I don't recommend doing it useless you are a group of very experienced developers with a knack for assessing future markets. When a company likes this fails, you have only yourself to blame.

      If you can't accept this kind of risk go get a job for a salary.

  136. one theory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    as was told to me by several current and former HR folk... one of the most counter productive things that hiring folk do (often in bloated and bureaucratic companies) is to look at the resume of the person who held the vacant job previously. Then they turn that resume into the requirements for the job. That just does not work in most cases and is really another example of more do-nothing people/jobs that big bloated companies like to fill. Perhaps if these people actually did the job they are being paid to do, they would discover that the importance of the job is not in letters after a name, the straightness of the tie, the irrelevant experience that is coincidental nor the actual stated buzz words about experience under "past jobs." What is important is what was actually learned and applied on those jobs specific to what is needed to fill the job role at hand (the one that is vacant). Therefore you should not be so excited about the person claiming they have 4 years ASP experience for that vacant job of Portal developer and application integrator, if the ASP experience was merely front end cosmetics and form based data entry (that just happens to be generated using ASP).

    I have seen many hiring managers and more HR hiring folk who will take someone who "knows" ASP but has no applicable knowledge of the task at hand over someone who has been doing Perl and Java web application development with multiple databases for 5 years. It is these people that don't understand the difference between languages and methodologies that are the real cause of shitty software and wasted dollars. Any idiot can pick up any of the vast array of languages out there, but it takes domain experience to apply that... otherwise you have someone who knows the syntax and has to learn from scratch the methods of actually using that language. The same applies to linguistics as well. Which is better for a Doctor position in Japan: Someone who knows a bit of Japanese or someone who has practiced medicine for 5 years but whom has the Japanese knowledge of only the daily Sushi special next door?

  137. Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by gaudior · · Score: 3, Interesting
    They want techies fresh out of college, willing to go anywhere, work for any wage, any hours, with the sparkle still in their eyes.

    They don't want 15+ years experience in 5 different platforms, 8 languages, database design, applications, systems analysis, or training and documentation backgrounds.

    They aren't looking for programmers who understand business requirements, or who have full life-cycle experience with real-world applications.

    They want youth, to be ground-up and spit out in 10 years.

    Yes, I am bitter. I am a damn good programmer. But I'm 37, with no degree, and a mortgage and family to look out for.

    Even short-term contracts are impossible to find these days.

    I am starting to take some vo-tech courses. I'm thinking welding might be a good career move. Programming and UNIX administration is a field for the young.

    1. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by kcbrown · · Score: 3, Insightful
      They want techies fresh out of college, willing to go anywhere, work for any wage, any hours, with the sparkle still in their eyes.

      They don't want 15+ years experience in 5 different platforms, 8 languages, database design, applications, systems analysis, or training and documentation backgrounds.

      Uh, no.

      They want techies fresh out of college, willing to go anywhere, work for any wage, any hours, and who have at least 10 years of experience with the specific hardware and software that they're using. They want people who have 10 years of C# experience and 15 years of Java experience (that those languages haven't even been around that long is irrelevant).

      They want it all, and in this very down tech economy they can get away with demanding it.

      This is why techies fresh out of college are having just as much of a problem finding work as experienced people. Companies want the impossible, and are just as happy to ask for it, since doing so only works in their favor -- people are eventually willing to work for free for them, so why not?

      And that's only the beginning. You think things are bad now? You haven't seen anything yet.

      We're headed for a real depression on the scale of the Great Depression, people, and I don't think anything's going to pull us out of it in the near future. It's going to happen because the only major things on the horizon to invest in (biotech and medical) are either highly regulated (and thus have the same future that personal aviation has had) or are morally ambiguous at best, and thus something companies won't touch here in the U.S. due to the political repercussions. Much safer for them to conduct such research and development outside the U.S.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    2. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

      In West Virginia the average steelworker wage has been higher than the average programmer's wage for at least a decade.

    3. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, who is this mysterious 'they' you are talking about, and where can i forward my resume to?

      Oh wait, my resume says: college degree, no experience, some kernel hacking. Reads slashdot regularly.

      I'm a shoe-in. Riiiight.

      Fact is, there ain't shit for jobs for ANYONE. Experience or not, people just aren't hiring. The few firms that are hiring get flooded with thousands of resumes chasing one position. There are just too many skilled tech folks chasing much too few tech positions.

    4. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been thinking the same thing about changing jobs, but not because of lack of work, but because I'm tired of cleaning up others mistakes. I'm tired of employers hiring the cheapest person, of not looking for excellence in hires, of the IT industry going to the lowest common denominator.

      Hey that's the way it goes, life sucks, I've never viewed this business as one I'd get a degree to work in, unless I was to pursue being a CIO or something of that nature and even that is a tenious job, how many high paid CIOs are there out there, or how many employed versus unemployed.

      I really don't enjoy it as a profession any longer, however I do enjoy it as a hobby, it is a hobby like crack, I will never ever give it up.

      When you are 18 you will put up with massive amounts of bullshit, and that time for me is over after many years in the business.

      Be a corporate bitch to have a future or bail.

    5. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by 17028 · · Score: 1

      During the late 90s, all you could hear on here was "Boo, down with unions!". Now you're starting to see, those steelers might know a thing or two you didn't, having been through many a down-turn as a collective.

    6. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by driftingwalrus · · Score: 1

      That, combined with modern corporate tactics. Think about it. A programmer gets paid $100k - what does he do with all that money? He buys things. Things like a new car, new house, a stereo, a TV set - things which corporations make money selling. BUT, if he has a miserable wage, he can't afford to buy those things. Sales drop. So, the corporation in bloodletting mode, lays off a hundred people. There's a hundred more people that can't afford to buy things, so the economy slows down even further. This has been going on since the 80's, and the economy has been in a slump all this time. Eventually, they are going to push things past the break even point and it'll all come falling down around their ears.

      --
      Paul Anderson
      "I drank WHAT?!" -- Socrates
    7. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by driftingwalrus · · Score: 1

      Machining isn't bad. Journeyman pay is about $25/hr with all the overtime you could want. Though, up here in Canada at least, getting an apprenticeship is like pulling teeth.

      --
      Paul Anderson
      "I drank WHAT?!" -- Socrates
    8. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not so bleak, it's worse. I'm an experienced programmer with a lot of knowledge and experience and what I'm finding is that managers are only checking to see if you have the right acronyms on your resume. If you have a recent degree and are up on the current vogue you can find a lot of jobs. They don't pay so great, but nothing does when you're fresh out of college. My advice, latch onto one and start bucking for management. You want to be out of the technical trenches well before you hit thirty. Either that or expect to go back to school and change careers. There are some bright spots. If you have knowledge of good old fashioned programming in things like C and so on, you can always get a job doing the low level coding that makes all the fancy stuff work.

    9. Re:Don't be depressed. They don't want experience. by gaudior · · Score: 2
      I took metal shop in HS. I got bored with machine-tool and lathe stuff. Tedious setups on an old Bridgeport, and constant checks with a Mic.

      Welding was much more fun. Immediate feedback if a weld was good, or not, and while you had to measure and mark accurately, and clamp things properly, you could at least use a tpae measure, instead of a micrometer. I hated those things.

      I am going to be taking some courses in welding from the local Junior College. At least until UE runs out.

  138. I've heard of these people before: by Tokerat · · Score: 1

    I'm told the one they call RMS never showers, though. ;-)

    --
    CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
  139. Gee, where's that OSS spirit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember your mantra? Free beer, free mp3s, free lunches, free software, free Winona, free love, FREE EVERYTHING!!!!

    Well, why not free labor?

    THE SILENCE IS DEAFENING.

    Did you *really* think that things were going to go along their same merry path? Why should we now pay your ungrateful ass $50K a year when we can hand over $5K a year to an eager Indian coder WHO'D PROBABLY BE HAPPY TO MAKE LESS? What happened to the "let's make free stuff FOR THE WORLD"? Yeah, that's right, you just coded yourself out of a JOB! The irony is so sweet. In your zeal to "stick it to Bill, the RIAA, and the rest of the robber barons", you ended up slitting your own throat.

    And you did it willingly. Bill still doesn't worry about where his next tin of caviar is coming from.

    Then again, you won't have to either. Taco Bell is hiring, and you can snag all the free fixings you want. They will be right in front of you, as you prepare those tacos.

    OSS really worked out, eh? You're still invited to the party, but bring along your waiter's outfit. Party of 10 at table nine.

    Then again, you could become a capitalist again. But then you would also be a hypocrite. And everyone knows, Linux zealots are not hypocrites.

    Or are you? Suck it up like a man, walk it off, son. You made you bed, now it's time to get FUCKED in it too.

    But this is all academic, Pandora's Box has been opened.

    Hey, here's an idea, ask Linus for a job!

    1. Re:Gee, where's that OSS spirit? by DEBEDb · · Score: 2

      Yes, free everything. What's wrong with
      that? As long as there's free food and shelter...

      No, seriously... Some of the OS movement are
      not zealots who DEMAND things of you. You can
      call it, eh, enlightened communism. That
      is, nobody demands free things; people just offer
      things for free (like Open Source, which is,
      admittedly, easy to offer for free since giving
      info out does not deprive you of a physical
      resource, only of the possibility to use it
      exclusively for your gain which, in turn, is
      only useful in a capitalist marketplace, but
      y'all knew that....) in exchange for... well,
      nothing, except an [idealist] hope that others
      will offer their fruits of labor for free. The
      idea being that A) people like what they're doing
      for it's own rewards (that is, the task itself)
      and, as long as their needs are met, are ok with
      everything being free, and B) people realize that
      there are some things that not many people would
      voluntarily undertake (e.g., cleaning toilets.).
      In which case, one pitches in for her (and more than that, several times more, actually, ideally,
      in order to take care of those who do not, for
      whatever reason) share of the work.

      Remember, again: capitalism and free markets
      are a great system pragmatically.
      But this pragmatism hinges upon the notion
      that "nobody else does it[offer stuff for free]
      so why should I". If the shift in thought/action
      is swift and pervasive enough, why not have
      communism? That's idealistic communism, mind you,
      not the one where people with guns come to
      take your cow, as many people have been brought
      up to believe.

      --

      Considered harmful.
    2. Re:Gee, where's that OSS spirit? by cptmike · · Score: 1

      This shows how much you really know about OSS. You can charge for OSS you just have to supply the source. Redhat seems to be one of the few Computer companies turning a profit.

      I just can't believe that OSS brought down the dot coms I seem to think it was poor capitalist planning that did that. Lack of a good business plan? Gee if companies didn't have to pay MS every year to retrain MS supporters on how to click a mouse (MCSE) or buy new 500 gig hz machines to run the latetest MS OS. Oh and by the way if your OS is over five years old we aren't going to support it. Maybe there would be money to hire programmers and tech support people.

      Yes I am unemployed but it has nothing to do with OSS. If fact most of the jobs I'm seeing are for MS Windows types. But I don't the requirments for the jobs. (Masters or PHD, PHP, Sap, must have experience on spicific software that I've never heard of. and be willing to do that all for 24K a year.) Seems to me anyone with a PHD wouldn't be working for 24K a year. But I guess OSS has effected the other industries such as Health Care also.

      Go eat your fish eggs capitalist.

    3. Re:Gee, where's that OSS spirit? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2

      Open Source is NOT free software. Look at linux. If you do not have broadband, you will know that the latest and greatst of Linux distros are far from free. Unless you enjoy the idea of tying up a phoneline for days, if not weeks.

      Second, where's the hypocracy in believing that software that IS free can't compete with non-free software? Market forces will dictate what's better, according to capitalism.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  140. Whinging [not sic] by NoTildeQuestionMark · · Score: 1
    • Some high-tech employees who have looked into equity-only jobs and haven't accepted them because they're skeptical.


    Horribly off topic complaining:
    While, yes, online journalistic standards are low, would it kill this guys to run a grammar check? Reading this poorly edited, nonsequitor-laden tripe is like pain, but worse.

    ~
    --
    If you need me, I'll be hanging my computer from the
    1. Re:Whinging [not sic] by NoTildeQuestionMark · · Score: 1

      And I'm an idiot. ~

      --
      If you need me, I'll be hanging my computer from the
  141. Did you say pizza? by Surlyboi · · Score: 2, Funny

    'Cause I hear Uncle Enzo is looking for a new Deliverator...

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
  142. Not a techie by sleeperservice · · Score: 5, Informative

    The person initially described by the article isn't a techie. She's a product manager, a part of marketing. She's a great example of the kind of person with "soft" skills who made obscene money in the "heyday" and were laid off in droves.

    Remember the person who called you 3 times a day to wholly change the design of the product you and your team were developing?

    Remember the person who came to work at 10 and whose job seemed to consist largely of kibbutzing?

    Remember the person who promised the client the world and told you it needed to be done in 2 weeks, without being able to understand the architecture overhaul that would be necessary to implement the changes?

    Remember the person who asked you, the Sr. Developer, why their email wasn't working (assuming you could and would fix it as a top priority)?

    I'm sure there are lots of real techies struggling to get by these days. In fact, I know some of them. Let's hear more about these people. That would be more relevant.

    But I'm tired of hearing the sob stories of non-technical "soft-skilled" people who fanned the flames of the nascent Internet boom by helping to hype products and ideas that weren't tangible, pulling down 6-figure salaries for spouting off ideas with no grounding in technical realities, and then blaming the technical folks when things didn't materialize (because they couldn't).

  143. Odd Todd by Understudy · · Score: 1

    Well You could be so desperate as to have to document you unemployment. Now where is my coff-ay.

  144. slaves? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always suspected that in hard economic times America would reinstate slavery.
    These guys even get to take home some of their own cotton.

  145. Just two things.... by Hairy1 · · Score: 2

    In a job interview thejob interviewer will have exactly two things to judge you on. Hw will have your C.V and you.

    Your C.V will probably have something along the lines of previous employment, qualifications etc. If you are in the interview the interviewer already knows everything from your C.V anyway, which leaves.... you.

    When it comes down to it the person who gets hired isn't the person who is technically the best on paper, but the one who relates best to the interviewer.

    Some pointers :

    1. Be happy. Being a Grump is a one way ticket out the door.

    2. Don't complain about previous employer. Same effect as #1.

    3. Answer questions with reasonable length. Nothing worse than trying to force information out of people,

    4. Don't argue with the Interviewer.

    Finally - tests are usually fairly simple because employers use them to weed out the incompetents. If a test seems amazingly easy doesn't mean there is anything 'hidden'.

    1. Re:Just two things.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. Be happy. Being a Grump is a one way ticket out the door.

      Yes suh, mistuh bossman suh! Top o' the day to yah suh!

      2. Don't complain about previous employer. Same effect as #1.

      Approach #1:

      "Why did you leave your last job?"

      "My boss was a fucking asshole. All bosses are fucking assholes. You're probably a fucking asshole, but I'm willing to give you the benefit of the doubt for now."

      Approach #2:

      "Why did you leave your last job?"

      "A chasm opened under the building and it disappeared in a choking belch of magma."

      Those are the only acceptable answers. Anything else is complaining.

      3. Answer questions with reasonable length. Nothing worse than trying to force information out of people,

      "So where do you see yourself in five years?"

      "Retired."

      "So where do you see yourself in five years?"

      "Beer."

      "So where do you see yourself in five years?"

      "Monkey sex."

      4. Don't argue with the Interviewer.

      Good practice for the job.

      "Yes sir, Mr. Bossman sir! You're absolutely right! I can't wait for the project to faceplant so I can get blamed! Thanks for hiring me! I realize having a Cal Tech MSCS pales in comparison to your inestimable knowledge Mr. Bossman, sir! It's obvious you only hired me for my typing skills, because everyone here is smarter than me! Thank you for not firing my ass yet sir! Please just one more Visa payment, sir! More coffee sir?"

      Quit tap dancing for coins. Start your own company.

  146. No harm in humility by Hairy1 · · Score: 2

    I think the expectations meany grads had of good salaries straight into their first job was unrealistic. There is nothing wrong with a bit of humility to temper those expectations :)

  147. Earlier story from SFGate by roc_machine · · Score: 1

    I saved a link from an earlier story posted on Slashdot about a year ago.

    It may be cruel to say, but every time I read that article, I feel pretty good about my current job position.

  148. Working for Office Cookies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was just up late tonight installing WP on a network and all I got was a bunch of left-over office cookies brought by customers. The best ones were a peanut brittle/oatmeal cookie combo, and when I got a stack of these, I was told "That lady can't cook, we were going to throw those out...". No money at all, just a chance at the cookies.

  149. The upside? by LeftOfCentre · · Score: 1

    While the past few years have undeniably been depressing for the industry, it is sometimes said that few bad things happen that don't bring something good with them. In this case, I think that may be an eventual stabilization of the industry to a point where it is mostly people who are truly interested in and enthusiastic about software development and computer science who seek related professions. Wage levels have been returning to lower and more realistic levels but for those who are passionate about technology, that isn't necessarily a major consideration. Sometimes I think that in the long-term, the "dot com crash" will have been for the best. I do believe that there will be a continued essential need for our skills as computers and technology become an ever-increasing part of most people's daily lives.

  150. Is it going to get worse in California? by slam+smith · · Score: 2

    It sure does sound like the worst of it is in California. While things are bad in my area (Utah), it sure does seem really bad in California. According to this article it sounds like the mismanagement of the state government will likely make it a lot worse in California before it gets any better. I wouldn't be surprised to see a monster tax increase in California. I hope I'm wrong, but this would be a huge hit to California's chance of creating new jobs.

  151. I would hire the ones who worked free first... by SwedishChef · · Score: 2

    Most of the time I don't need brilliance, I need hard workers. I want employees who are motivated and what better proof of motivation could you offer than that you worked for free. How could you say "I like what I do" better than this?

    Credentials don't mean much to me unless I can send the credentials out to fix a network. I would choose an amateur radio operator over someone whose former company paid for their MCSE just because the ham did it on their own.

    I want people who can think critically, solve problems, and get things done and get on to the next job. It seems to me that these people are demonstrating that they have ambition and like to work.

    Besides, I was disabled for a few years and I worked for free for some ISPs which needed the help. It paid off for me when they became my clients later.

    --
    No one ever had to evacuate a city because the solar panels broke!
  152. Get what ya can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got laid off 18 months ago from Nortel. I was an Optical Networks Support Engineer, there is almost zero work around and a ton of people to fill it, and the longer you stay out of the field, field the harder it is to get back in. Working for peanuts in the field that you want to stay in is better than working for peanuts in a field that you hate.

  153. wake up! by delong · · Score: 2

    What a bunch of idiots. No wonder they don't have jobs - they're morons. "Oh I can't find an IT job, so I'll work for worthless options and continue to whine about not having money." Here's a clue for our San Fran wunderkind - take whatever job you can get, in whatever field or trade you can, if it means you can pay your rent and eat. There is no such thing as a bad job, if it puts food in your mouth and pays your bills. Hate to say it but wake up and join the real world.

    Derek

  154. Life is tough all over. by Sir+Network · · Score: 1

    If it has nothing to do with you "wanting" work, then why not do something "below" you, rather than live off of your girlfriend?

    Have you actually appllied for a food service job? A job with Manpower? I've got decent IT credentials, a girlfriend, and (maybe most importantly) a daughter. I can't afford to sit around and wait around for the economy to pick up.
    I've gone from being an instructor at two colleges and owning my own business to 3rd shift hotel work, restaurant jobs, some short-term contracts... working 90-100 hours a week sure sucks, but I can still pay for my necessities.

    "And, think the US has economic problems now? Wait another year. If the tech market doesn't start picking up, a lot (more) of us will end up declaring bankruptcy."
    "I've maxed my CC's, run out of savings (including 401k), and would presently starve to death if my SO decided to throw me out."

    Maybe that's true for some, but not for me. I have too much pride in myself to put all of my eggs in the tech basket, no matter how qualified I feel I am or how much I love my industry.

    The desire to succeed is independent of career field. Take a pay cut and gain some lost pride back.

    --
    Life is tough. It's tougher if you're stupid. --John Wayne
    1. Re:Life is tough all over. by delong · · Score: 2

      Right on! Someone here that has a BRAIN. There is no such thing as a bad job, if you get a paycheck that allows you to EAT.

      Derek

    2. Re:Life is tough all over. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Have you actually appllied for a ....

      Actually, I have, and been asked "why should I hire you, if you're going to leave in 2 weeks?"

    3. Re:Life is tough all over. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same here. Only interview I've gotten since I graduated, tech support job (part time). They were convinced by the fact that I had an MS in Computer Science that they'd train me and I'd be snatched up by another company, so they hired somebody else.

    4. Re:Life is tough all over. by Sir+Network · · Score: 1

      >Actually, I have, and been asked "why should I
      >hire you, if you're going to leave in 2 weeks?"

      You don't have to tell them about your training and certifications. You don't have to tell them about your past career and aspirations. Tell them that you used to work with computers and you just need a stable job that you can depend on for a long time. Go to great lengths to tell them that, if anything, you will work around your bar/restaurant/customer service job if a computer job arrives and you will not let your performance suffer there.

      Worked for me, and now I am able to fit in 30 hrs/wk on a help desk and 60 on secondary jobs. However, don't think for one second that I've given up on getting back into a big IT shop somewhere.

      --
      Life is tough. It's tougher if you're stupid. --John Wayne
  155. jobs not bombs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and yet still nobody is talking about dumping Resident Bush

    1. Re:jobs not bombs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > and yet still nobody is talking about dumping Resident Bush

      Apparently that whole "300 person company selling dog food over the internet with a stock value more than General Motor's" thing that was both created and then blew up under President "Its the economy stupid" Clinton slipped right past you. You should check into it some time. That, and the major accounting problems that started during the last administration.

      Oh ya, one other thing, .... did you hear about the terrorist attack that killed 3,000 people?

    2. Re:jobs not bombs by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Plenty of people on *Slashdot* are. The problem is getting Joe Sixpack away from CNN and "terrorist scare" stories that are doing a good job of keeping Bush's approval ratings high.

      I mean, wartime presidents (as long as they avoid getting their ass kicked) get great ratings, and Bush just found the perfect solution -- a never-ending war that has no well-defined goals, is vaguely military in nature, and lets him accuse just about anyone.

    3. Re:jobs not bombs by BasculeTheFule · · Score: 1

      > Oh ya, one other thing, .... did you hear about the terrorist attack that killed 3,000 people? Yeah, I heard that one, but I'm afraid that particular trump card pales into insignificance when placed alongside South East Asia and South America, doesn't it? How many millions have died there as a result of US interference in the name of the almighty dollar? Get real: millions went before those three thousand, and anyone who tried to get justice for them found themselves staring down the barrel of US led or sponsored gunboat diplomacy. No death is any more or less important than another, and multiple wrongs will never make a right.

    4. Re:jobs not bombs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are Joe Sixpack, you just don't know it.

    5. Re:jobs not bombs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I agree (troll) that no death is any less signifigant than another, THESE 3000 had a HUGE AMOUNT of importance to THOSE WHO HOLD THE $$$.

  156. perl programming for $4.75/hour by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 2

    The story: I left a job at a dot bomb that was imploding to go to work for a company that made a physical product that I could see a market for. The day I started I got fired... along with everyone else. Our next round of funding hadn't happenned. Everyone got the same offer: come back to work writing perl for minimum wage ($4.75/hour so I guess Java still pays better then perl) and the hope that things would get better. About four months later we managed to land a round of VC funding.

    I stuck it out because this all started in December (bad time to look for work) and my wife was making decent money plus the folks I would be working with seemed really decent (turned out to be true). Everyone who stuck it out got a "loyalty bonus" that just happenned to make up the difference between the $4.75/hr and what we originally signed on for. We just completed our third round of venture funding with an "up" round and clean terms. No guarantees, but things look good.

    Moral of the story: Some chance at real money still beats stock options. Look at the product and whether there is a market for it. If there isn't a market, there won't be funding and the stock options won't be worth squat. Due to wages and hours laws, no one can promise you in writing that they will make it up but, if you can't trust the management's word, maybe working there isn't a good idea anyway.

    BTW, I've got over 20 years professional programming experience and a M.Sc. in math.

    --
    They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
    Ben
  157. 0's & 1's by K'tohg · · Score: 1

    Cool Sig.

    01101001001000000110000101101101001000000110001001 10000101110100011011010110000101101110
    "i am batman"

    The terror that lurks in the night.

    --
    > SELECT * FROM brain_cells WHERE synaptic_rate > 0
    0 row returned
  158. working for peanuts?!? by vermicious · · Score: 1

    working for less than the regular price belittles the profession; hands down. the same problem exists in the local music industry. if you make your going price lower than the local market, you alienate the rest of your industry. you give the customer a reason to demand less. that only floods the market with half-trained ignorants who dont care what the product is that theyre dealing, only with the money theyre getting. hello complacinecy. -v

  159. Hey! by kingkade · · Score: 1

    This is Mr. Marbles, your CS teacher and I still say that that was a pointer to and int not a reference, young man! For shame!

  160. There is always an opening in the Peace Corp! by x_man · · Score: 1

    If I were to lose my job, I'd join the Peace Corps in a split second. Everything's paid for and you get a little scratch in the end (about $10k or so). Plus, you get to help build a nation, learn a language, travel to exotic locales, meet cool people, and ride out the crap economy in style.

    It sure beats working for some souless company for free.

    X

    1. Re:There is always an opening in the Peace Corp! by WetCat · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Russia Peace Corps joins you!

  161. You made a bad choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You didn't get a degree when the gettin' was good.

    You probably believed yourself when you said "degree doesn't matter".

    Degrees *always* matter.

    Always.

    I wish you luck in the job search. Time to move on if you can't get a job.

    1. Re:You made a bad choice by sumdumgai · · Score: 1

      Obviously you have had mom and dad looking out for you.. Or maybe you are from one of those countries that has government provided school through college. Can you say H1-B visa? You are probably the reason we are out of work.

      What do you mean move on? Die?!!? So if you can't get a job you should what??

      Some of us tried to get degrees in the recession of the early eighties. There were not all of the loan programs and grants and scholarships there are now. If I tried to work at minimum wage, I didn't have enough time to keep my grades up. If I studied enough to keep grades, I couldn't afford to eat and have a roof. Sometimes it is not a choice, but I gather you are too young to know about those things.

      I have a two year degree and am 20 hrs from my BS. I paid for every semester hour myself and worked , until I got laid off last year, during every class I took. I have over 20 years of computer experience. I started programming in 1976 on DEC 10. I can work circles around a new grad.

      You don't know what you are talking about. When was this degree gettin' "good"???? When does someone "decide" not to get a degree? When it is pay for tuition or pay for food. Not everyone had such opportunities so shut the $(!#%& up!

      --
      âoeIn theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not." â Albert Einstein
    2. Re:You made a bad choice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im a sofemore at a 4 year school ivy league no less, but even getting a tech internship these days is hard I have my CCNA but am working on my MCSE so nobody want me despite the fact that Im 18 and already have a year of college and the CCNA to my name. So I figure a CS degree is just about worthless at least for the next few years or even this entire decade. So Im changing my major as soon as next semester starts. I figure a poly sci major is broad enough so I can latter get an MBA or go to law school or even medical school if I choose. CS is so specific that with a CS degree most of these opportunities are closed to you. Most CS people who apply to a good (top 10) law school are rejected. So whats the fucking point. Im just gonna minor in CS and hope for the best. I speak Russian and honestly the job market in Moscow (not all of Russia) is booming. Worst comes to worst I'll move back. Russia desperately needs lawyers and even MBA's since in the old days (communist days) none of these people really existed in any real numbers. Ive been in the US since I was 4, but it would be nice to work abroad for awhile.

  162. We argued this out 2 years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Guys like you were saying "you don't really need a degree...waste of time...I know more than these guys".

    I am now in upper management (yes, with a BS degree), and I told you (plural) that you were wrong, degrees always matter.

    Times are tough and guess what....degrees matter.

    I'm not saying you're stupid, or lazy, or inexperienced, but degrees always matter. Never forget that.

    Immigrants do well because they insist on getting educated. What do they know that you don't?

  163. Stupid... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "However, due to the extreme cost differential between local and foreign workers, any "white" foreigner can pretty much expect to be replaced within 2 years by a local employee."

    In two years, the economy will be going great-guns again.

    What...didn't your mommy tell you IT jobs are cyclical? In the big downturn of 89-92, things were worse than they were now. By 93-94, we were starting to boom again.

    In 2 years, you can move back to a civilized country and make more money. In the meantime, go to china.

  164. Brain Drain in reverse? by Lokatana · · Score: 1
    Perhaps some of those techies who are out of work should look at moving to Canada to find jobs, especially the more remote parts of the country.

    For quite a few years in the late 90's, and early 2000's, all we heard about was the "Brain Drain" as Canada's top talent rushed to the USA to get these increadible 6-figure dream jobs.

    Perhaps it's time for the Brain Drain to work in reverse. If you're willing to move to small-town Canada, there are probably tons of jobs waiting for you - you just need to be willing to make a major relocation. Go check out the east-coast of Canada (Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, etc) and I bet you'll find plenty of stuff. This link might be a good starting place to find Canadian jobs.

    -Lokatana

    1. Re:Brain Drain in reverse? by OldCrasher · · Score: 2, Funny

      Being British and part of a UK brain drain to the USA, I have always wondered - aloud at times - if Britain ended up with a net increase in Cranial Capacity as a consequence of me leaving???

  165. Sorry, I don't work for free, even when desperate by OS24Ever · · Score: 2

    Even if I didn't have a job, and no money, and needed it desperately.

    Working for FREE gets you nowhere. now if it's like 28K a year or something, that's money, but the way it reads, some are working for peanuts vs. free. If a check bounces, i'm not coming to work until I get the cash.

    --

    As a rock-in-roll Physicist once said, No matter where you go, there you are.

  166. Contact me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Hi,

    I read your old posts and would like to get your resume for some possible Delphi/Windows or Embedded C/FreeBSD work. I am a small company doing software contracting, not an agency.

    ldn123@yahoo.com

    Thanks.

  167. How do I find programmers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a small, undercapitalized contracting company and desperately need decent programmers to work for cheap. I'm not out to screw anybody, I'm making about $10/hour myself as I try to build the company.

    Any suggestions on where to find unemployed programmers for whom something would be better than nothing? The primary qualifications are an excellent attitude, ability to pick up multiple languages and environents and 5 years experience.

    Thanks!

    1. Re:How do I find programmers? by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      http://wewantwork.informationr.us/

      Plenty of unemployed programmers out there- and just about any one that is still drawing unemployment after more than 12 months without W2 work has been ordered by the state to take $10/hr or less.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  168. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 5, Informative

    You knew India was going to kick the US's ass at coding eventually. Might take a while to get reputations and standards in place, but eventually, it comes down to the fact that there *are* competent coders in that country who *are* willing to work for a lot less. OSS might have accelerated the move, but the existing $90k salaries for "web programmers" was simply not a stable state of affairs. What's more, the shift is just going to increase. If they aren't already doing it, the government or a private organization is going to start a certification program with rankings of various companies to help with B2B contract work.

    And you know what? That's okay. Sure, for a brief while software developers were overpaid, and now there's a glut of them. Now things are changing.

    What's the effect of all this, on everyone involved? Well, let's see. People in other countries pretty much benefit. US programmers drop down from their bubble-inflated pay. Some of them may be hurt during the adjustment, since they have to compete with a glut of competitors. The average US citizen likely benefits, since his new patterned carpet was fabricated by a machine that was cheap to produce because an Indian coder did all the software work.

    So everyone gets trickle-down benefit. Globalization is, in the long run, good for just about everyone.

    I'm sure that coders right now that just lost their sweet spot find this not a lot of consolation, but it affects everyone. The next step is using machines to replace fast food workers, and machines with better interfaces to replace phone support and salespeople.

    Let me put things into perspective. In pioneer times, the US had a much less globalized environment. The lack of a transportation network meant that each area had to produce its own goods. And that means that things that we take for granted now, like granulated sugar and oranges, were *hideously* expensive. Sure, a lot of people lost in the short term (Peddler Smith, who packed a bunch of granulated sugar on his back, may have some tough competition with the upcoming railroads), but in the long term just about everyone won.

    Globalization tends to spread out wealth more evenly, so it's true that some US wealth is going to end up in China or India. But it also tends to vastly increase the wealth of the entire system.

    Right now, I can buy a keyboard for $10, and a mouse for $5. Just about anyone can afford a pair. That's thanks to overseas manufacturing of a lot of components -- massive globalization. I can buy almost any fruit I'd like, any time of the year. I can afford foods that used to be only for the seriously wealthy (and of poor quality), like pineapples, mangos, and oranges.

    Now, sure, a few things become more expensive for your average guy. Anything based on human labor in the US becomes effectively tougher to get. You might have a tougher time getting someone willing to work as a maid or a chauffeur. But we've been dealing with the loss of this sort of job for centuries now, as the middle class swells up, so that's nothing new.

    And what about society producing more goods than it can consume, with all these efficiency improvements, driving people out of work? Well, the US might get more socialized, with more government-subsidized benefits (like Europe). Plus, the human demand for luxury goods appears to be endless, so those with a job end up purchasing more unnecessary-to-survival items that end up employing the others.

    Anyway, what the point of all this rambling is, is that moving stuff to India and other countries, opening up competition, reducing barriers to trade, and letting technology replace workers is a good thing in the long run, even if a few people are worse off temporarily.

  169. Move to India. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They will work for peanuts and curry. Literally.

  170. Right here by 0x0d0a · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, that's right, you just coded yourself out of a JOB!

    And this is a temporary situation, brought on by a recession, too many programmers from the dot-com era.

    You think there won't be software development work left, because it's all consumed? Get real. Walk into a business, *any* business, and look at the amount of *crap* they waste time doing that could be automated. Same for government agencies. I still don't have good speech recognition or synthesis on my computer. My car doesn't drive itself. I can't check to see how much a Jolly Pirate (kickass franchise, BTW...easily beats Krispy Kreme and Dunkin' Doughnuts) doughnut is and where the closest location is by making ten taps or so on my PDA. I can't set up random speakers with a couple mics throughout the house and have the computer tune itself and dynamically generate a house-wide surround sound system, able to make a sound appear to come from anywhere in the house.

    Golly gee, there seems to be a *whole freaking lot of programming that hasn't been done yet*! And for the forseeable future, at least twenty years or so, I don't see those getting finished!

    You're complaining about not enough jobs. That's because the industry is busy dealing with a change in the market. Sudden changes screw everyone. But as long as there's coding out there that people want and find useful, there's going to be jobs out there as soon a business decides to provide it.

    Blame the baby boomers, who threw *way* too much retirement money into various mutual funds and stocks, and then got burned and yanked *everything* out. Don't blame the industry. The industry is fine, and seven years from now, it'll have plenty of work again.

    1. Re:Right here by johnburton · · Score: 2

      I agree with this totally. The problem with the industry is that we have gone from an unsustainable boom to a big overreaction of a recession in the industry. The economic downturn combined with the big loss of confidence people have in investing in technology after the .com fiasco have temporarily meant that spending on technology is way down. But it's a temporary thing and will go up again as there is still so much to do as the original poster says. The communications industry has been particularly badly hit. It was bound to happen because it was relying on unrestricted growth of selling products to pay for itself. And then all of a sudden everyone had a mobile phone, and there was enough internet capacity... And this happened at the same time as a general downturn in the world economy, and many goverments chose that time to impose a huge tax on those industries in the form of license fees for third generation mobile phones. It's not suprising that for a few years they don't have much money for new investment in technology. But they will in a year or two. Also, I think that the job market was due for a major shakeup anyway. Perhaps 80 or 90 percent of the people working in development jobs were not particularly skilled. Most web designers, database administrators, network administrators etc. know how to work a particular product but are basically not the core of the industry. And there are many programmers out there who know a single product and think they are excellent programmers when in fact they have an outdated skill which can be replaced at any time. Many VB and java programmers fall into this trap where they confuse knowledge of a single product with a generally useful skill. I think there are still excellent opertunities for perhaps the 20% of the development industry who can analyse customers requirements and come up with inovative solutions to their problems. I think that what is happening is that many of the relatively unskilled jobs are disapearing and perhaps some are being done in cheaper countries but that real development jobs are safe and still a huge growth area. The problem is that in the confusion at the moment many people don't see the diference between people who know how to work a single product and those with real analysis/programming/development skills and they are all being caught up in the same economic downturn. But it will sort itsself out and those with real skills will be fine in a year or two.

      --
      Sig is taking a break!
    2. Re:Right here by esanbock · · Score: 1

      You're right - those inventions will need software. But the software won't be written in this country. Just like people still buy cars - but they're made in South America. There still will be deman for software to be done locally. And to make sure that isn't too expensive Corporate America bought the H-1B program.

  171. SUCKER! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Insurance is the most important purchase you make."

    Right. For a moron maybe.

  172. You have no quals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a junior programming making 6 figures.

    You're peter-principled to the max.

    List these "dream quals". I'll bet they're only a dream to yourself.

    Probably nothing meaningful. You probably list "wrote keen bubble sort" on your resume.

  173. Shhh! Don't tell them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The washington DC area stayed out of the dot-com and consequently avoided the dot-com bust.

    But traffic sucks here, and I don't want these morons clogging up Maryland DC or VA.

    The ecomony isn't fantastic right now, but we have trouble finding people with good, solid experience.

    Note...programming 3 years in java isn't good solid experience.

    1. Re:Shhh! Don't tell them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullshit. Computer employment in Northern Virginia is the worst I've ever seen it, and I've been working here as a software engineer for 17 years.

      Stayed out of the dot-com boom and bust? What about AOL, Worldcom, Microstrategy, Nextel, Sprint, Ciena, and XO Communications? They're all headquartered here, have lost tons of money and laid of thousands. Those are just some of the biggies...a huge number of smaller companies have done the same.

      The two main industries here are related to defense and to telecommunications. Telecom has completely tanked. (According to the Washington Post, the DC area telecommunications companies lost more than any other industry in the area in 2002).

      Although the official unemployment rate is currently 3.9 pct here, it's disproportionately high for software types. The openings I've been seeing recently are only for defense related work, and almost all of it requires a current security clearance.

      Things are not much better in DC or Maryland, although they're not as telecom-heavy as Northern VA. Still, there's little besides defense work, and there are many more people looking than there are software development jobs.

      It's a very, very tight market here right now.

  174. Not to criticize you in particular by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    I'm sure this particular teacher could have been at fault, but I've seen a ton of people who manage to catch some trivial mistake a teacher made, and suddenly think that they're hot shit, years beyond the teacher. People are human...I'm sure Newton occasionally made mechanical arithmetic errors.

    It's a lot easier to sound knowledgable when you sit there and look and think for ten minutes, then find one error and make a fifteen second statement than if you're trying to juggle giving a lecture, not exceeding or going under your desired time, talking for an hour and a half straight with no technical errors at all (covering some material that you may not be actively working with aside from this class), monitoring a room of students and trying to figure out if anyone looks confused, and trying to be audible to everyone in the room.

    Again, your teacher certainly could be at fault -- I just want to point out that there *are* those that think they should be Orson Scott Card's protagonist because they catch a few errors.

    1. Re:Not to criticize you in particular by madcow_ucsb · · Score: 1
      Again, your teacher certainly could be at fault -- I just want to point out that there *are* those that think they should be Orson Scott Card's protagonist because they catch a few errors.

      I've had my share of these people as classmates over the last four years (gettin' my computer engineering degree in June, yay!). And the one thing I noticed is that all of the people who acted this way seem to have disappeared from the engineering classes within the first two years...

    2. Re:Not to criticize you in particular by DeadMoose · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I agree, but unfortunately, in my case, he was at fault.

      He would never try compiling any of his pre-done-up code examples, so they were riddled with syntax errors (which newbie coders don't need to be exposed to, since they were already confused enough)

      He'd have an example dealing with a data structure that was a "person" consisting of a first name, last name, and student ID. And then halfway through the code, he'd stop using person.studentid, and instead start using person.salary for no apparent reason.

      When someone couldn't quite grasp converting numbers between various bases, instead of trying to explain it, he'd just throw more examples at them & get increasingly aggressive and demeaning when it didn't magically clarify itself for them.

      So I'll fully agree, there are plenty of times where people are just nitpicking (like at conferences, when during a presentation, someone will stop the speaker to point out that they have a typo on their slides, and it should've been a period, not a comma at the end of that sentance), and I wish that were the case, but no such luck for me.

  175. No, you stupid moron by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Do you think there are throngs of people lieing just so you can feel good that you have a job?"

    No, I think there are a lot of people with marginal skills and bad personalities who only got IT jobs because of the extreme IT shortage 3 years ago.

    Now that the market has returned to normal, regular IT people who were there before are now there after, and people like you should leave the industry to those of us who actually do this because we like it, not because "I heard it was a good field to get into".

    My god, you shit in your own house and then complain about them smell. No wonder no one will hire you.

    "OH, I worked at petsandstupidstuff.com and made $300,000 a year programming PHP. But I'd be willing to settle for $80K, I can't work for less because I have a wife and family and mortage".

    "Uh, with those quals, you're worth $30K"

    "What! Oh shit, the H1B visa are ruining my career. Whaaaaaa!"

    And so it goes

  176. Look here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    www.washingtonpost.com

    Get a copy of the sunday paper.

    Behold. Job offers.

    Oh wait. Its not in Silicon Valley.

    Boo hoo.

    I guess if its tough in Silicon Valley, then who cares what else is happening in the rest of the country?

    SILICON VALLEY IS DEAD!

    Move away and get a job, or learn spanish and clean houses. Your choice.

  177. Re: Fries with that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Practice in front of a mirror: "Do you want fries with that?"

    Hits too close to home. Check out the 2nd carton on this page:

    http://zazona.com/ShameH1B/WorkVisaHumor.htm

  178. Re: Fries with that (correction) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, that should be "cartoon", not "carton"

  179. AMEN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You've hit the nail on the head.

    The fake techies...you can spot them a mile away.

    The real technies...you can spot them a mile away.

    The real techies are now systematically throwing the johnny-come-latelies out of their jobs and putting techies back in charge.

  180. Not really unreasonable by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    "what version of windows are you using?"
    "its a dell."


    Why should they know or care what version of Windows comes up? Most people hit the power switch, grab a drink, and come back to the computer. And "Windows 98" could mean the damn thing was released in '98 or God knows what. Heck, even an experienced computer person from twenty years ago would be looking for a *version number*, not "Windows XP" or "Windows NT" for a "version".

    "Ok, you're gonna have to get out your Windows CD."
    "Where would I find that?"
    [long pause] "...you're asking me where you'd find your Windows CD?"
    [No hint of anger or sarcasm] "Yes."


    You know, that really isn't very unreasonable at all. The person probably got their system with a preinstalled OS. They got a little plastic packet with papers and installation CDs and whatnot inside of it. They didn't look at it, other than to maybe fill out the warranty card, because the system worked fine out of box. So they've got a bunch of *stuff* that came with the computer. With some laptops these days, you don't even get a CD.

    So, what your answer should be is "It was bundled with your computer when you got it."

    Seriously. If you took all the things that *I* say outside of my domain when I'm trying to figure something new out and how foolish and naive they must seem to a domain expert, I'm sure I'd look quite stupid. Sure, I can rescue data from a seriously trashed filesystem, but my idea of what qualifies as a capital asset is hazy. What things do I have to be careful of when driving a stick shift? Are there some drugs that shouldn't be taken together? When can I sue someone for harassment? What exactly does Krishna *do*? To an economist, auto mechanic, physician, civil lawyer or Hindi, I come off as a pretty big dolt. After all, to them these things are *obvious*. "Heck," they think, "if you sit down and think them through for a moment, *anyone* could understand this, regardless of their experience." Well, that might be true, but I haven't spent time thinking about some of these, and at the least, I'm much more comfortable *asking* a domain expert (especially if I'm paying one to be present and help me) than just guessing.

    1. Re:Not really unreasonable by IndependentVik · · Score: 2

      To an economist, auto mechanic, physician, civil lawyer or Hindi, I come off as a pretty big dolt.

      Strictly FYI, that's "Hindu". A Hindu is someone who believes in Hinduism--Hindi, OTOH, is the predominant native language of India.

      Of course, with "u" and "i" being where they are on the keyboard, there's a good chance you just mistyped.

      --
      I'd suggest you don't use Slashdot as your only news source, or you will suffer permanent brain damage.
  181. Again, understandable by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    30 minutes is long, yes, but trying to figure out what someone is talking about (especially if they're using domain-specific terminology that you're unfamiliar with) isn't necessarily trivial.

    And the UI on the *task* bar (not the "start bar" :-) ) is one of the greater disasters in the desktop world. I think the first time someone runs into the thing moving, they *always* spend a few minutes trying to figure out what the hell happened and how to manipulate it. It doesn't work like anything else in Windows, and the *obvious* (at least to me) and consistent way for the thing to operate, moving when you drag the *body* instead of the rim of the bar, does not work.

    As an aside, one of the most annoying things is how current versions of IE, if completing a page render when the user is dragging the window (and assuming solid drag is off), "cancel" out of the drag. It's terribly confusing to users, and leads to a nasty perception of flakiness.

    1. Re:Again, understandable by doug363 · · Score: 1
      As an aside, one of the most annoying things is how current versions of IE, if completing a page render when the user is dragging the window (and assuming solid drag is off), "cancel" out of the drag.

      My pet hate, similar to the complaint you describe, is how Windows always makes menus disappear whenever a new window appears. It drives me nuts. I often start quite a few programs when I've just logged on, and then search for something in the start menu, and I'm about to click, and the menu disappears! I've got focus-follows-mouse turned on, and the option where programs can't steal the focus, and it still happens.

  182. So? by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

    I did a similar thing to change career paths a while back. One of the best employment experiences I have ever had. The people I worked for began to pay me without asking, then when an opening came, I was in, if I wanted. You know I was actually very qualified to perform the job they were asking me to fill, but would have never known otherwise. Also, it was not really the job I was looking for either. Learning both of these things was well worth my time.

    One difference though, I was also working at the time. Not sure how this affects your law argument.

    In my case, no harm was done either way. If I slowly learned things were not for me, I could easily walk. They got some services for cheap, and I got some new experiences to consider as I move forward in life.

    People compete every day for many things. Not willing to undercut free? Tough, others might be. There is potential for abuse on this, which is where your law argument comes in. Truth is, there is potential for abuse in the current labor law too.

    The best jobs I have had are those where I could actually work with the people to find out if I really had value. I hate to say it, but this rarely happens in the standard interview process. Person to Person networking is how this sort of thing gets done and doing a little sample work is an excellent way to further that goal.

    Maybe if the guy actually was pulling a full workload I could see your point, but what about other levels of involvement that can be useful to both parties? Getting a real-time education about something new combined with the chance to really network is no small payment when you don't have a job. If companies started to encourage this sort of thing, then maybe we have a problem, but for now...

    Employee agreement or not, this is good advice and should be taken if the situation is right.

  183. So? by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    he has locked out all of the competitors for that job who aren't able to undercut free

    And what's wrong with that?

    What metric do you propose for choosing a worker and who is going to be screwed? I'd say that artificially restricting how much they're willing to do the work for is a little bizarre, actually.

  184. Gee by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    Sorta took the wind out of the sails of his complaint, didn't it? :-)

  185. I have to disagree by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    And I agree, people do ask, "What do you do?". I started truly hearing that when I was unemployed, and it finally started to click with me that for most people, their jobs are their lives, whether or not they like those jobs. That's truly, literally, sad.

    I have to disagree. The question is a good, legitimate one.

    If you know what someone's job is, you know what they spend eight hours a day -- much of their waking life -- doing. You have some idea where their interests lie, as they're probably working in a field that they don't despise (or they would have switched). You have some idea of their socioeconomic status. You know where their field of knowledge is, and you may have a good idea of what their schedule is (a consultant may have to travel randomly, and a secretary probably has pretty regular hours). All that from just a few words "I'm a neurologist," or "I'm a file critic." Can people draw too much from this? Sure. But I'd argue that it's a pretty good starting point, and a pretty concise way to get information to make a lot of rough predictions about the person. It also gives people an area for small talk, since they can ask about your work.

  186. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 2

    "...i've been unemployed for a year. Not fun."

    That's one of the reasons I decided to stay on the creative side. My company wants me to be a Systems Analyst but I'm fighting it. I think I'd do better with my creative skills than as an engineer.

    I'm not sure what to specifically recommend to people in the techie world about that, but creativity is a rare talent. So far I've avoided 2 rounds of layoffs...

  187. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by AShocka · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I managed a testing project for the main Intranet project for a top Fortune company. The project was managed in the US, coded in India and tested in Australia. There were also a lot of Indians working in the Australian centre. I have worked with Indians in the past too, as well as other Asians. They have an incredible aptitude for detail and complexity.

    But I have found they lacked the knowledge and background to come to terms with the importance of managing and unifying the overall software architecture. There was little knowledge of programming to standards, managing common libraries, UI consistency, working to business and functional specifications, documentation, etc, etc. And also the business and legal implications of straying from these guidelines. Everyone suffers from these things, but to my mind it doesn't matter what advantages one has, if one does not have the knowledge and skill to implement good SDLC procedures, it handicaps the whole project.

    The other thing I noticed is that these developers are willing to work long hours, and they do not seem to get as stressed as those from western cultures, they seem to just thrive on the work.

  188. Dear Unemployed Right Wing Techies... by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
    First off, my condolences.

    Now, down to business: what were you freakin' thinking when you voted for George W. Bush?

    Did you imagine that the fat cats whom he serves wanted you to remain in full employment when there were workers willing, nay, eager to take your jobs for much less? Did you imagine that the terrible exploitation that so long has enriched the wealthy in this country would not voraciously make a meal of you, too? Did you not see the vast numbers of foreign workers being treated like slave labor, or were you too distracted by affluence and comfort to notice?

    If you have learned your lesson, then stop voting for politicians who exclusively serve the rich. Your politics has become quite expensive for you.

    1. Re:Dear Unemployed Right Wing Techies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck you

      better george bush than some piece of shit democrat who just wants raise taxes and to blow
      money.

      if we would have a democrat in office, we
      would all be fucked

      so here's a joke

      knock knock

      go fuck yourself

    2. Re:Dear Unemployed Right Wing Techies... by threadsafe_r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So, In anticipation of W getting elected our "economy" began heading south well *before* the election. Furthermore, (as a result of W's win) foreign tech workers decided to work for less pay and in fact, become slave laborers!!

      Thanks for clearing that up.

    3. Re:Dear Unemployed Right Wing Techies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, right...

      See...I'd vote for some of the left-wing socialist commies,except for one thing..

      I LIKE not starving to death(1)

      footnotes:
      (1) See: USSR,communism,gulag

    4. Re:Dear Unemployed Right Wing Techies... by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 1
      Oh dear.

      Well, it appears you're happy with your fate. So I'm happy for you, too, apart from the fact that your servility before wealth also consigns millions of others to that fate. And unlike you, they don't deserve it. If you want to vote for people who grind you under their thumb, that's your business. What a shame that the nation and the planet must suffer for your masochism.

  189. He's a freak troll from K5 folks... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wouldn't pay much attention to him.

  190. IN SOVIET RUSSIA... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    AC's produce YOU!

  191. Troll freak from K5....go home. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This guy's a know freak...I wouldn't bother trying to reason with him until get starts taking his prozac again.

  192. Re:Same old--WHAT?? by xtremex · · Score: 1

    Hmmm..I've been unemployed for a year, I have a mortgage, a disabled wife, a kid in school...We have exactly 1 month left of money (not including food). We didnt have Christmas this year (our parents pitched in for gifts for our daughter).So, we'll just sit here and while I'm on an interview competing with 20 H11B visas, I'll come home and see my house boarded up. I can work 2 part time retail jobs and STILL not pay my mortgage! Soemtimes I DO feel like I'm the only one, but believe me, I'm not!

    --
    If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
  193. Congratulations by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I got laid a bit before Thanksgiving

    Well, umm.. congratulations, or something.

  194. That's the most stupid thing I've heard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    7. You get no money

    8. You waste time making someone else money you will never see

    DO NOT work unless you get paid. People who do so are only making it harder for the others. Pretty soon you're expected to work for nothing, because "everyone else does it".

  195. Summary of what this guy tried to say by esanbock · · Score: 1

    Anything labour-intensive is going to be "globalized." Programming is labour-intensive.

  196. Here's the organization... by smagruder · · Score: 2
    The organization you're looking for is the Programmers Guild. It's not a union, but rather the first true professional guild for American programmers. Its stated goals are:
    • Promote the profession of programming
    • Conduct lobbying on issues that affect members of the programming profession (issues like H-1B, outsourcing to foreign body shops, etc.)
    • Set Professional Standards (which is about time!)
    • Certification
    • Job Placement
    --
    Steve Magruder, Metro Foodist
    1. Re:Here's the organization... by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

      You can stop promoting the guild by now. Its not like its ever going to catch on among the ever individualistic techie crowd in this country.

      --
      Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  197. biggest problem is how to tax 'free' labor... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can see the labor bureaucracy's problem. No wages,
    no tax. No wages, no union dues. No wages, no evil caitalist exploitation.
    This looks like a hell of a deal if one can afford the investment, has done his homework, and negotiates a decent equity share in the chosen venture. It's not like the folks who capitalized these businesses in the past got their money for nothing. Well 'labor' might want us to miss that connection, but at some point someone produced something to lend value to the specie.
    -t

  198. Other factors by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    Now you're starting to see, those steelers might know a thing or two you didn't, having been through many a down-turn as a collective.

    While it's an interesting statistic, I'm not sure you can derive that from it.

    I was talking about absolute pay -- I wasn't including union dues and the like.

    In addition, West Virginia tends to not have the highest echelon software engineers around. You aren't going to find many compiler developers or image recognition specialists.

  199. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    1... NOT believe in peanuts-security of job!!!

    2... Sad Peanuts NEVER had career !!!

    3... OLD peanuts always start late savings!!!

    4... Investing peanuts does not finance YOU!!!

    5... Never finance your own TRUSTS !!!

    6... If FIRE then second-hand-smoke is MUST!!!

    7... you ARE what you learn NOT what you eat !!!

    8... NOT Diversifying makes Cookie crumble !!!

  200. Not far from this in the UK by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

    The telecomms slaughter just caught up with my office. 40 engineers hit the local market. Two of us (at last count) have found new jobs. I was lucky to land a job that had been on the market for months. Not because they couldn't find anyone to fill it, but because they could pick and choose applicants and just turn them down until they got the one they wanted. I know this for a fact, because they've (to date) rejected three of my coworkers, two good developers and one really ace guy (I was lucky!).

    The salary at my new employer is the same as my old one (which was frozen for 2 years), with minimal benefits and the quite honest disclosure that the company will be gone in two years, either gone titsup, or stripped and the technology sold. The only upside is the promised stock options, but this has turned out to be a scam: nobody there has received any for a year. At this salary, I have had once again had to delay starting any kind of pension provision or investment. After six years in the tech sector, and as a non-smoker, non-drinker with no kids or vices or expensive hobbies and a small mortage (£40k ~= $60K outstanding), this does not bode well for social security in the UK.

    Note that this was one of perhaps three tech job going in my city (of a million people) at the moment. You think I'm exaggerating? Think again. I was told (via my agent) that the salary (less than I had asked for) was a final offer, and that if I didn't like it, I was welcome to look elsewhere. The current employees are all top developers, and are being treated like shit, with no raises or the promised stock options, simply because the company plans to not be employing them by the time they can get other jobs.

    And yet, for all this, I still feel lucky, because I'm still in employment, and most of my ex-colleagues aren't. However, I'm increasingly inclined to think that software development is a mug's game. The only people that make money at it are the guys in suits, and perhaps one or two tech leads that are lucky enough to be in at the very beginning of one of the 10% of startups that actually survive. For the rest of us, it's going to be a lifetime of two-years working, six months unemployed (if we're lucky), and salaries that - averaged over the hours we actually have to work - really aren't anything special. For example, I'd make more money pro-rata leading a sales-weasel team in PC World, or more money in absolute terms as a train driver.

    Anyone else thinking of a career switch? I certainly am.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    1. Re:Not far from this in the UK by ph1ll · · Score: 1

      OK, I got laid off in September. It took me six weeks to find something new. When I did, I had two offers on the table. I admit, one was with the help of a friend but things did not seem toooooo bad (BTW, I am from the UK, too).

      However, the problem is this: we put up with this crap. Coders need to be less timid and more proactive.

      I have been working on a project with some suits who simply did not know what they were doing. I swear this is true: one of them kept making stupid mistakes and asked me to look over his shoulder while he programmed.

      I told my management in no uncertain terms and with easy to understand metaphors that this consultancy were simply not up to the job and I showed them why. The result was that in-house programmers have now been given more respect.

      Though this story ended happilly, there were some of my fellow programmers during the project who fatalistically told me not to bother management as things would never change.

      The moral is that we should stop bitching about the suits and start doing something. If you don't, you have only yourself to blame.

      --
      --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
  201. Right now... by drfishy · · Score: 1

    I'm reading /. ...but I'm supposed to be writing firewall scripts for $10.60 an hour...

  202. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    50 year old cheese makes move on YOU!!!

  203. Why do Nike shoes cost over a $100? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Where is the "trickle-down benefit"? To me it seems companies are trying to make profits on the front and back ends. But instead of passing the on the savings the CEO takes it as a bonus.

    Need proof? Ken Lewis CEO of Bank of America moved from #372 to #91 on the best compensated CEO list in 1 year http://www.forbes.com/finance/lists/12/2002/LIR.jh tml?passListId=12&passYear=2002&passListType=Perso n&uniqueId=PAU6&datatype=Person
    How did he do that? Outsource software to India & networking to EDS and cut his IT staff. He also dropped the riskier portfolios and raised the loan qualifications. Have you seen an increase in your savings & checking interest rates? How about a reduction in fees? You should see the size of his bonus!

    I think the guy who wrote this "good idea" thread used to work in my office. He was singing the same song and when they walked in and handed him his walking papers he grabbed his chest and his jaw just about hit the floor. I reminded him how great it was for him to help the economy out. This guy talked big but when it was his turn in the barrel he started seeing it a little bit differently.

    1. Re:Why do Nike shoes cost over a $100? by Havokmon · · Score: 2
      Outsource software to India & networking to EDS and cut his IT staff. He also dropped the riskier portfolios and raised the loan qualifications. Have you seen an increase in your savings & checking interest rates? Yep. Just like there's been a decrease in interest rates.

      How about a reduction in fees? You should see the size of his bonus!

      That's because people will buy Nike's for $100. I work for a Fitness Company that Nike is starting to compete with. Not with shoes, but with "fitness gear". Almost everything is made overseas, and is pretty cheap to make.

      People will buy what they like, and if they like Nike, they'll pay $100 for it. I paid $140 for non-Nike mototcycle high-tops. My helmet was cheaper. That doesn't mean I'm going to complain about that shoe companie's CEO for my troubles. If you're whining about not getting what you think you deserve, you need to stop buying $100 Nike's.

      Your big mistake is your assumption that the CEO's 'big bonus' is 100% of the savings from outsourcing. The rest goes back into the company, in the form of expansion, and bonuses to people who've EARNED their positions (though sometimes that position IS earned via the missionary position :P)

      --
      "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
    2. Re:Why do Nike shoes cost over a $100? by zanderredux · · Score: 1

      ... because you cheerfully agree to pay it!

  204. Cheap stuff on eBay!! by Agent+Green · · Score: 1

    What effect do you suppose that would have, half a million geeks, each owing as much as a quarter million dollars (typical house, or a really nice car and lots of toys), all defaulting on their debts?

    Woohoo! Lots of cheap stuff on eBay!!

    Sickening as it sounds, that's what I'll be looking at doing if I get into a rut...

    --
    // Agent Green (Ian / IU7 / KB1JQO)
    // IEEE 802.3: All 10base Are Belong To Us
  205. Reminds me of the Dot-com days by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I remember a time when people use to work for free during the dot-com era. When People were paided nothing but promised lots of worthless stock paper. Those were the days!

  206. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    young, smart & hungry burgers flip aging programmers !!!

  207. i do it too, but there are subtler compensations by Kwantus · · Score: 1

    i've been building and running the LAN at the local kaputey store, for `nothing.' It's the only one for leagues, so anything that helps it go saves me gas getting stuff. Plus this store has very good prices. And I get to rummage in the junk drawers.

    I gave up thinking of kaputeys as a source of income years ago, after I read Matloff's layout of the hard facts (which accorded with what I'd learned on my own).

  208. umm.. YES! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    are you on crack? I live in new york. Pick up the Sunday Times classified one of these days... The thing is a LEAFLET!

    After being laid off at the beggining of this year (I'm a UNIX & Windows sysadmin, as well as a DBA and have over 8 years of exprience, degree from a good school, etc.), I was unemployed for 7 months during which I was sending out resumes and making phone calls constantly.... I fianally got a job last month.

    I'm actually quite happy about my unemployment experience... before it happened I had your hubris. "There is always a need for people with technical skills." Guess what pal? That's bullshit.

    Being a techie today is no different than being a carpenter, a car mechanic, or a plumber (actually these people probably make quite a bit more... call a plumber recently?) Over in Europe there never was a premium for tech folks... their pay is comprable to other plain-ol'-jobs and i'm sorry to say, that's the future here. It's all a matter of supply and demand.

    Many of my tech friends (seasoned perl / java programmers, networking & security people, etc. with CS degrees and years of experience) are unemployed and have been looking for a long time. My friends in SF say things there are very, very grim.

    Sure the market is flooded with psuedo-techies who know powerpoint and thus can claim that they are programmers.... ....but are any "real" techies out of work?

    Hell fucking yes!

    Lots of 'em.... save your pennies. You are out of touch.

  209. Porn Demand by Peridriga · · Score: 2

    I don't know about you...
    I certainly don't wanna see the bill for the amount of bandwidth consumed by a jobless shelter for geeks...

  210. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    smart, young & hungry burgers flip aging programmers like YOU!!!

  211. Re:Hah! by 91degrees · · Score: 1

    How would I learn some useful skills from a book on a Microsoft Operating System? No book documents the OS adequately to gain an understanding of how it works, and they certainly will not go into great details about the design.

    Of course learning the MS API would be a good idea, but getting that from a book seems a little pointless when there are enough online resources not to need a book. Besides, the Posix API would be just as useful, as would OS independent skills such as image processing algorithms, or compiler design. Actually, hacking the kernel is also a valuable skill. There's a lot of decent OS design in there.

  212. No way... by GNU_Suit · · Score: 1

    You clearly do NOT go to an Ivy. Your grammar is horrid.

  213. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    life is good

  214. Exactly by NateKid · · Score: 1

    I always play the field like this and I even once worked as a Correction Officer on Riker's Island while I was between contracts. People might be too good for a job like that, but it's important that you diversify yourself, as well as your portfolio. 3rd shift is next to godliness because it allows you to
    1) search for other stuff
    2) read on the job (i.e. better yourself)
    3) avoid management :)
    4) not have to "push the supersize" to anybody you know.

    Nate

  215. Some informative comments... by flashman78 · · Score: 1

    >Right now, I can buy a keyboard for $10, and a mouse for $5. Just about
    >anyone can afford a pair. That's thanks to overseas manufacturing of a
    >lot of components -- massive globalisation.

    No, this is due to the development of a whole range of factors amongst which are mass production, the development of cheap plastic injection technology, cheap labour, container ships, a mature market for basic computer peripherals.

    If the importer now pays a lower import tax *then* globalisation is also a reason.

    If they are importing from Mexico this would probably be the case, however NAFTA is hardly globalisation is it? It's more like regionalisation.

    >I can buy almost any fruit I'd like, any time of the year. I can afford foods
    >that used to be only for the seriously wealthy (and of poor quality),
    >like pineapples, mangos, and oranges.

    This because of the development of refrigerated container ships and transport aircraft, it has nothing to do with globalisation. Globalisation is the exposure of your home market to foreign competition and cheaper labour. This is a particularly stupid example for you
    to give when the EU and the US pay huge subsidies to their farmers so they can survive this global competition.

  216. IN SOVIET RUSSIA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    check comes not for free to YOU !!!

  217. Baloney by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The telcoms didn't *DO* software development.

    You're confusing MSCE and CCNA with Software development.

    It took us 3 months to find 4 resumes to interview people for software development. And half of those were junior programmers advertising as "senior technical developer".

    is the market for "Certified" professionals tanked? Yes! Good! They were never part of the computer industry anyway.

    The market is good, unless you have 17 solid years of COBOL and JCL and got your MSCE. You're a dinosaur.

  218. Dude, you couldn't be more out of touch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Uh dude. The main employer in ths DC area is state and federal government, and that's completely recession proof.

    The telcoms for software dev? Whoa. You must be smoking a crack pipe.

  219. $300k for a cape on a quarter acre? by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

    >(Anyone in the market for a $300,000 cape on a 1/4 acre of property in Long Island , NY---it's a CHEAP starter house)

    DAMN! Jesus man, for $300k you can buy a 4,000sf 4/3/2 new construction all brick junior mansion on a multi-acre farm ranch in Texas, Florida, or Nevada.

    Real estate prices in the North East are one of my biggest beefs - but that is a gripe for another thread.

    --
    Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    1. Re:$300k for a cape on a quarter acre? by xtremex · · Score: 1

      Yes...New York is VERY expensive...there are houses around here that easily go for a million. All property values and taxes increased by 100% this year....I have no idea why..

      http://www.mynassauproperty.com/Photo.asp?mnu=PS ea rch&submnu=Photo&pin=%19%1F%18%15%18%12%11%1C%1B%1 4&cp=1&tp=1&Data1=
      That house goes for $500,000

      --
      If you're not a Liberal in your 20's, then you have no heart.If you're still a Liberal in your 30's you have no brain.
  220. 4 fundamernental skills to always being employed by fishdan · · Score: 1
    Who I am--developer/architect..did the dot/com, did the successful Hardware company, currently working for a huge health care company writing educational software--though I must admit once a week I get asked to change the printer toner. I usually respond with "No Hablo Anglais!"

    1) Be able to DEMONSTRATE that you can build industrial strength software.

    Industrial Strength means that the software should NEVER fail because of it's own issues. BUT when it fails because of external issues it should have very good thorough logging and alerting procedures so that it is part of solving whatever went wrong. I hate working with developers who deliver products that don't produce readable logs and aren't configurable through a text file. Also you HAVE to incorporate unit testing. If you can't build the tests you shouldn't be building the product. You must be able to describe the process by which fail proof software gets created. From architecture to pseudocode/UML to planning the unit testing to planning scalability testing. It means that if you have a QA dept you know how to integrate them into the planning stage. A great buzz word to toss around is "multi-disciplinary." But even better than using the word is being able to proove in an interview that you understand that EVERYONE has an equal part in software creation, from user to DBA to QA to you the developer.

    2) Love the code!

    If you don't love the code, you should get out...the stuff you build will not be worthwhile. I don't mean that you have to love all the code you write, but you DO have to love refactoring, the well tuned application and that small little optimization gain you get by using the right data structure. If you don't love those things (or don't know what I mean!!) it will show up eventually, and you'll be found out...don't set up yourself for dissapointment by trying to last in a field where you don't belong.

    3)Be able to sell yourself to the right people

    If you can't sell yourself to ANYONE no one will hire you. If you want to be an architect, you have to be able to sell yourself to a suit. If you want to be a coder, you have to be able to sell yourself to an architect. I know this guy who is a damn fine coder, he does the work of any 2 other developers. But two years ago he could only sell himself to other developers who had seen his work. He got his first break by being hired by a company that was run by his cousin....Then his second job he got hired because the developers he worked with previously knew how good he was...during these years he tried to ge better positions, but other than being promoted internally, his quest for a better job outside the company was always thwarted by his lack of social skills. But now, he's out interviewing and getting offers...and it's not because his already exceptional coding skills have increased, but but becuase his previously deficient people skills are starting to catch up. If you can't realize that software development is a customer service industry, and you HAVE to make the customer/consumer happy, then you are not going to stay employed. And again, be able to sell yourself to the right person. If you can't sell yourself to another developer, you're in the wrong line of work If you don't have friends who were developers and would hire you if they could, then you're probably not in the right line of work.

    4) Embrace new technology

    I'm a Java guy, but I learned C# (well, what there was of it that was new) when it came out. All you C developers who never bothered to learn Java...For shame. One of my standard questions when I interview people is "How many languages can you write 'Hello World' in?" If the number doesn't look right for the persons age, (you should have at least 4) the interview will go down hill from there. (I usually will let them count C++ and C as different languages because I'm generous). I'm not saying you have to be a pro...but please be able to write Hello World in Java, C and one scripting language. And show me that you've picked up a new language/skill in the last year. And of course you have to read to keep your skills up!

    --
    Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
  221. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  222. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    This all seems like a repurcussion of the general public's realization that pumping more and prettier audio/video through a TV/computer into their system (read American culture) does not make them happier. It leaves them with a hollow sensation. An utterly worthless feeling. Almost like there is not meaning to their life. This makes them no longer pursue the "bigger" and "better" technological trumps. Because they are starting to realize that all these newer technologies do not make their lives better. It makes their life more generalized. Technological innovation only turns society into a bland grey mush. The melting pot that is America has been cooked and stirred way too much because of our embracing "progress" as our common culture. Our culture is a hollow generic template, and we have finally become just a number. I want to move to Germany. At least they tried to toss things up every now and then by trying to take over the world, thereby giving their lives at least a little meaning.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  223. Shut the fuck off will you!!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you weren't sure of what the fuck are u talking about, then shut the fuck off.

    Tons of experienced IT workers as well as newly graduate college students can't find fucking lowest jobs in the tech-food-chain industry.

    I am fucking sick of hearing people like you.

  224. Working for stock options... employment only if.. by digital+photo · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but does this sound alot like what happened during the "Dot Com" craze?

    Ie, people were offered relatively low salaries and were paid in stock options. Which, should the company grow and become profitable... would be worth millions... and if the company should fail or never recieve funding, would be worth less than the notice they are credited on.

    Granted, to stay networked and to keep one's skills up are good things if you want to get back into the job market. But to work for essentially what amounts to potential tips and no salary, no health benefits... that is essentially a what I would call a fool's gamble. A desperate fool, but a fool nonetheless.

    These people obviously have job skills, why work for virtual stock when they can put that same energy into working for real dollars? The real dollars would be less than what they are used to, but it would be better than zero.

    I dunno.

    I'm sure the IRS and SEC would be interested in people who are collecting unemployment and yet, at the same time are working/gambling for virutal pay.

    This can result in some pretty horrible fines for those who are collecting and working "off the record" for these companies...

    Slave labour and a new form of accounting: Zero overhead in terms of personel, but pure profit when it comes to work generated. Since these people aren't employees or even consultants and what they are being offered are stock options, they may not even have a leg to stand on if the company decides to shaft them.

    It sets a bad precedent and it sets up a whole group of hard working people for yet another harder fall.

    Sounds like a bad deal to me.

  225. You miss the point. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    While all your points are well taken, they have nothing to do with what I was talking about.

    When America truly was a land of opportunity, there were periods where it was legal to shoot a guy so long as he drew first. --It was perfectly legal to employ people in life threatening job situations; (a life lost for every mile of railroad laid), murder and mayhem ensued just to get unions into being, the Hoover Dam would have been impossible to build without cheap, disposable labor, etc., etc. This was part of what it meant to live in America.

    Human rights have nothing to do with lands of opportunity. That stuff comes later.

    As for pendulum swings. . . I think you're going to be upset with how things continue to disintegrate in the West. There is no return from where we're heading. Sorry. Face the truth and get yourself well placed, or continue to dream. Only one method will ensure survival.


    -Fantastic Lad

    1. Re:You miss the point. . . by kevcol · · Score: 2

      When America truly was a land of opportunity, there were periods where it was legal to shoot a guy so long as he drew first.

      Oh really? You mean it was legal to do that when Andy Grove escaped Hungary when the Soviets ruled it and came to help found Intel? Or when a couple of high school punks ripping off Ma Bell jump started the personal computer industry a couple years later? You have a narrow view of what opportunity means.

      Human rights have nothing to do with lands of opportunity.

      Yeah, I guess no one should think about that shit. What an incredible inconvenience. Hell, Tibet didn't need all those monks, and big deal if before they were murdered they were forced to fuck nuns in the street at gunpoint beforehand. That could never happen again anyway.

      As for pendulum swings. . . I think you're going to be upset with how things continue to disintegrate in the West. There is no return from where we're heading. Sorry. Face the truth and get yourself well placed, or continue to dream.

      Wow- I didn't know crystal balls were real. Where'd ya get it? They do swing.

      Actually, I did understand your point the first time. I just wanted to remind people of what they get themselves into before they leap. Don't think I hadn't thought of it as well before (several times), but I can't sacrifice certain ideals to the benefit such an odious system. I say it well knowing that so much stuff we have on the shelf was made in shitty and murky circumstances but people have to be reminded of certain things from time to time.

  226. Posts in more place than one. . ? by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    Why yes.

    I post in more than one place, and horrors, I use the same name wherever I go, unlike the above coward. And yes, I always post loud, and I am of course, liable to make mistakes and assumptions from time to time being human as I am. I'm not always right, and I freely admit this, though in this case, as it turns out, while talking in broad strokes I was not entirely off base either. But discussion boards are self correcting in this manner. I learn as much as others do, and probably more because I like to venture new ideas while remaining open to more informed people. The web is full of informed people; people with direct experience in a million different areas. I mean, look at what happened here; somebody who had actually worked in China offered up his knowledge! How cool is that? Now we all know more. This is the magic of the web! It's not about king of the mountain; about being right or wrong. About snivelling in order to be accepted by the popular kids under threat of being labeled a 'Freak troll'. That's all bullshit.

    At the time I scanned the 300 or so posts in this story thread, outside of the general griping and worrying and comiserating, I was the only one with an actual new *IDEA* to offer. Think about that. If this makes me a 'freak troll,' well, I'm terribly sorry to have caused alarm.

    As for our coward here, perhaps he shouldn't be on the web at all if unconventional ideas and debate are disturbing to him. I think he will find that his computer can also run nice, safe video games which do not require one to expand one's awareness.


    -Fantastic Lad

  227. Oops. My mistake. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    This guy's a know freak...I wouldn't bother trying to reason with him until get starts taking his prozac again.

    Ah, sorry. I validated a previous post made by this guy by offering an actual answer.

    In reading this latest post of his, I realized my error. --In a single sentence he demonstrated both a total lack of grammatical ability as well as a nodding approval for anti-depressants. I wouldn't have wasted my breath on him had I known earlier that he was just another mud-head. Sorry for any confusion.


    -Fantastic Lad

  228. Selling everyone short. by JimPooley · · Score: 2

    If you agree to work for nothing, you are being exploited. Not only that, you are making it easier for your peers to be exploited. After all, if a company can get someone to work for them for free, why should they give anyone else a decent salary? And that includes yourself if you see a better job. "Hey, you worked for that company for free, why should we pay you £60,000 to work for us?"

    Also my experience is that many companies will not count any unpaid work you do as valid - except perhaps for charity work which is only good on your character reference.

    Wake up! Working for nothing is a mug's game that in the end benefits no one.

    --

    "Information wants to be paid"
  229. I wouldn't worry about India just yet... by ph1ll · · Score: 1
    I've been working with a big blue chip cosultancy who, for legal reasons, we'll call Ass-centre.

    They brought in a few Indian programmers who were so poor that I had to get my boss to defer payment untill they fixed their botch-job.

    If this is my competition, then I am not too worried about the future of my livelihood.

    --
    --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
  230. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by ph1ll · · Score: 1
    Wait!

    You say:
    "They have an incredible aptitude for detail and complexity."

    Then, you list all the things they are bad at (programming to standards, managing common libraries, UI consistency, working to business and functional specifications, documentation, etc, etc..)

    So, you are saying "they're great programmers except when they program".

    Dude, are you a manager with no experience of coding by any chance?

    --
    --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
  231. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

    Your apathy has allowed your thinking to become most pathetic. You don't bring meaning to your life by committing genocide against another race. If you are so BORED then go find something to do so that your feeble mind does not have the time to think up any more stupid things like what you just said.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  232. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by SnapShot · · Score: 1

    Just because a programmer has an "incredible aptitude for detail and complexity" doesn't mean that anyone else will ever be able to read or use his code. I've worked with a couple of programmers where Jalopy was the savior in trying to facilitiate communications. The things the poster listed as problems cover just about everything but sitting down and pounding out LOC. They are also the things that separate the "lone hacker" from the "team of software engineers". In my experience, they are also the things that may make the genius programmers less efficient in the short term but make the vast majority of average programmers more efficient in the long term (and I place myself in the group of average programmers).

    --
    Waltz, nymph, for quick jigs vex Bud.
  233. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    No you bring meaning to your life by not becoming just a number like every other American out there right now. I didn't say I believe in the principals of the Nazi party. And actually that was only their driving factor in one world war (they were an aggressor in both). Genocide is not something I like the idea of being a part of. I bet you 90% of the Nazi soldiers didn't even realize that is what they were doing. I'm just saying at least they have a REAL culture. I've lived in America for 23 years. All I've seen is law after law passed to restrict the rights of every person and empower big businesses. Capitalism is a darwinistic business competition method. In the shadow of 5 million laws which bind you, in a system where politicians care nothing about its constituents but only about how much money certain lobbyists are promising them, how can someone possibly differentiate themselves anymore? I crave freedom. "As government grows, freedom recedes." - Thomas Jefferson

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  234. overpaid? hahah! by idResponse · · Score: 1

    My boss and I both get paid literally -crap- for our job. We are the entire IT department and we work for a nonprofit orginization. We face the hardship of having our employers not able to understand what we are doing as an IT department because most of the people that work here are complete idiots. Apparently, the management thinks that both of us are overpaid for our positions, however, I get a measly 1200$/mo for being a "Help Desk Technician" who basically does almost all the work. My boss is the guy who takes care of all the department paperwork as he's wheelchair bound with very little use of his hands. Apparently upper management was urging him to get rid of me, even though I know the network inside and out and am probably one of the few people in town who would bother -taking- the job. When you're paid so little for a job that gives you absolutely no gratification except for being chewed out by upper management who doesn't understand why we have to reboot the server so often to help fix things and absolutely no budget to obtain new equipment that isn't on the edge of breaking down. They expect us to magically make their p200 machines run faster with no budget.

    So what do you do when you've got employers who are too stupid to realize that technology doesn't grow on trees and that if we weren't here, they'd have a hell of a time finding a replacement mcse or even mcp who would work for such a measly price and still be willing to deal with the complete bullshit way the company is run?

    --
    [)(]subliminal labs[)(]
    1. Re:overpaid? hahah! by ph1ll · · Score: 1

      Leave, you idiot.

      --
      --- "We've always been at war with Eastasia."
  235. You know you're obsessesed when... by f1a8oy · · Score: 1

    All I can think about during this entire post is how it relates to Civilization III.

    --
    Man the poets down here don't write nothing at all, they just stand back and let it all be.
    -Springsteen
  236. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by AShocka · · Score: 1

    What I am saying is that often many coders, until they have a lot of experience, just love their coding so much they are not yet experienced enough to engineer their code according to the rigours of strict business discipline.

    The value in experience I bought to this project was that I was a coder with more than 10 years experience as a developer, and the rigour and scrutiny I applied to testing was much greater than the testing department was used to applying for web applications. There was almost 4000 test cases applied to this product.

    This project was highly political with the CIO monitoring it. It was bound to fail given the parameters and time constraints, yet no department wanted egg on it's face, and to be only shown they had done their job thoroughly. This is the type of politics that pervade all big business (I have worked in) and why I was utilised for it. This department wanted to make sure that when shit happened, they were clean, they had done their job thoroughly. Not a case of blaming others, just survival and to be seen as utterly professional.

    The problems in this project were obvious to anyone with real knowledge or experience, yet not so to these young unexperienced, but enthusiastic coders. Most of the others on this project did not have the experience to see where the real problems were arising from; no real unified architecture, and it was failing miserably in UAT.

    Personally, I feel this type of scenario is almost endemic in large scale web development today, especially in big business where projects scale across departments and if you raise issues you are more likely to be standing on toes than helping the project and others out. More often than not it is best to STFU and just code exactly to the business specs, even if they are wrong. Just do your job as a coder as well as possible, utilise all your knowledge and experience, but don't add or neglect anything beyond the business and functional specs, and if they are not thorough, make sure you back yourself with the best of practice use of standards, engineering and architecture.

    Actually, it wasn't these guys fault at all, it was the clowns in management who did not have enough knowledge and experience to properly manage web projects. If they were doing their job properly they would have implemented better guidelines, but the coders were not experienced enough to know what to do in these situations, when the specifications are poor, to completely exempt themselves from the inevitable blame that would rebound. Good programmers, with a lot of experience know what allies such discipline and rigour provide.

    An "incredible aptitude for detail and complexity" != experienced knowledge in the importance of working to standards, library management, UI consistency, specifications, documentation.

  237. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

    What is your idea of a culture then that you so easily find among Germans and find lacking in Americans? Are you certain you simply do not have a grass is greener outlook concerning America?

    Do we all have to hold hands and sing songs for us to have a culture? Should we all be anarchist counter-culture annoyances so that we can have "culture"? What defines it?

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  238. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    A culture where the television is not the central focus of life. And a culture where thousands of laws do not destroy not only your freedoms but your quality of life. I do have a grass is greener outlook for non-American societies. Simply because I know that America was once a good place to live. But now it is owned by big businesses, and nearly all its inhabitants have been brainwashed by the media. Germany may or may not be an optimal choice. Hell I was only there for like a week. But given the fact that they have spurred some of the most interesting events in history, they must have some kind of inspirational force in their culture. America should redub itself home of the generic, PC, bland, shackled nothings. Because that is all an American amounts to now.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  239. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

    Does any other nation have television as the center of their life? If not, why can't THAT be our culture? Of course our culture really is popular culture. If its popular, its us!

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  240. MOD PARENT UP. by njdj · · Score: 2

    If there is an intelligent moderator out there, please mod the parent up.

  241. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    I believe America, and the other tech is god countries are the only ones with TV based societies. I agree with you on the pop culture thing. Although, you have to realize that popular culture is dictated by big entertainment super-conglomerates, and fed to all of us intravenously through every facet of media available to them.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  242. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by dpt · · Score: 2

    You knew India was going to kick the US's ass at coding eventually.

    Really? You could have fooled me. Total creative and/or innovative output of Indian sweat-shops: zero.

    The simple fact is, once something is well-defined and well-understood, it's not "skilled" labor any longer. If you can do your job after reading "HTML in 21 days", "Flash for Weenies", or "Javascript for Dummies" (now *there's* a redundancy ;) you are doomed to be replaced by someone who also reads that book, and is willing to be paid a whole lot less.

    So, if your job can be summed up as "putting up a web site", you are in trouble (temporarily). This happened 7 or so years ago with back-end COBOL business apps - but no-one minded because this whole "web" thing took off and there was something actually new to work with for everyone to become involved with. So we didn't mind that the brain-dead stuff disappeared to Elbonia.

    The answer is to be working on things that sweat-shop workers in third world countries can't do, as true creativity requires a good, solid, broad education and exposure to more of areas of technology, science and life in general than working 20 hours a day in an asbestos lined factory can provide.

    Build the next "web", "Java", or whatever interesting new technology in your vertical industry you can come up with, perhaps building on existing things. Okay, that's a pretty hard to reach goal, but you get the idea. Accept that this is the status quo - people won't pay large amounts of money for people to do stuff that has become, frankly, pretty simple. It's part of the maturity cycle of any technology. Live with it.

    And yes, there are a lot of non-techies out there, too. They will either sink or swim, depending on whether they are *really* interested in technology, or they just saw a quick buck. So there is far more supply than demand, but most of that supply is an illusion - I may get X candidates for a position, but it's pretty clear that most *aren't* particularly good, or even have anything interesting to contribute to computing. Those people have to drop out of the market first.

  243. Fair enough. by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    Actually, I did understand your point the first time. I just wanted to remind people of what they get themselves into before they leap. Don't think I hadn't thought of it as well before (several times), but I can't sacrifice certain ideals to the benefit such an odious system. I say it well knowing that so much stuff we have on the shelf was made in shitty and murky circumstances but people have to be reminded of certain things from time to time.

    Yeah, okay. I can get behind that.

    You might want to work on your delivery, though. You were coming off like one of those leftist-guerrillas who bend absolutely every topic of conversation into, not just a soap box, but an excuse to criminalize and blame everybody around them for all the dead trees.

    Been there, lived that. When I was 18. I remain one of the most socially and environmentally conscious people I know. I've lived in your shoes, (or at least the pair you were running in just then), and I have become even more aware and careful in my personal actions over time, but I've also learned to better target my attacks because it doesn't pay to look like an un-discerning twit. More people listen when you use a finer brush.

    In any case, take care and keep up the good fight!


    -Fantastic Lad

  244. Well. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 2
    First, your $20 becoming worth $5 prediction means you are calling for 300% inflation over the next decade... that's a tall order.

    Well, I don't know the specifics, and with any luck, I'll be very wrong and things will actully improve. We'll have to wait and see.

    Second, assuming that situation does play out, what's to say gold would continue to maintain its value? Who would be willing to buy gold in such a situation?

    Well, I'm not sure people will be after a certain point, but we're not at that bridge yet. Right now, I'm using the model of the Great Depression, and gold in that period retained value.

    Historically, Gold has always proven reliable so long as there has remained a semblence of organized culture where people aren't entirely starving. (So that having weapons, fortresses and food stocks are more valuable than token metals) And even then, people covet the stuff. So long as things aren't completely screwed up, you can count on the power of greed. --That is, evil will always want to hold power over others, and for this to happen, everybody needs to agree where power resides so that Evil can make a big pile of it for themselves and sit atop it. --Gold is a pretty safe bet, since there is so little of it on the planet, you can't reproduce it, and it never decays, and well, I dunno actually. It's so nice and shiney? Greed baffles me.

    Greed is a disease with locomotive-like power, but it is also predictable. When you can predict the behavior of a locomotive-like power, you can hitch your cart to it; use it to drive other engines. --This is what the economy is all about really, and why some misguided individual coined the phrase, "Greed is Good!"

    I know it seems a little hypocritical to use greed when it is the source of all the problems in the world, but things are far, far beyond repair at this point. Right now, and for the next ten years or so, the name of the game is going to be one of basic survival.

    Maybe I'm wrong; I don't think so, but I sure would be happy to eat that crow!


    -Fantastic Lad

  245. Maybe they are open software developers? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Working for Peanuts, for free?
    That's called open software!

    We all know that sofware should be free as beer, shouldn't it?

    (Of course people can somehow make a buck by using free software, but what software should be free, and what not?

    Compiler+OS for free? Applications for hire? ... but OS guys need to eat too.

  246. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

    With the European Union gaining in strenght and implementing free market reforms this should encourage the growth of business and thus of technology. Very soon the Germany you love so much will be just like the US. On the other side of the globe in China, the government is using greed and materialism to keep the populace distracted from the horrible lack of rights that they suffer. So they too, a nation of 1 billion and a half people will become a TV loving society.

    As you can see the world is submitting to US culture like it or not, kicking and screaming. Resistance is futile.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  247. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by Directrix1 · · Score: 1

    Yes, unfortunately what you say is true. I really wish that the forefathers had a seperate system for refactoring the legislation when it gets corrupt. They should have seen that no system can last forever before people find loopholes (in this case, straight greed of the politicians and the utter ignorance of the general populace). And I really wish soft-money contributions were deemed illegal long ago.

    --
    Occam's razor is the blind faith in the natural selection of least resistance and in universal oversimplification. -- EF
  248. Re:I live in one of the major comm hubs of the mid by NDPTAL85 · · Score: 2

    If the people truly want to watch TV, who are we to arrogantly decide that they should not and prevent them from doing so? There's a lot worse a populace could decide to do.

    --
    Mac OS X and Windows XP working side by side to fight back the night.
  249. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by Lars+T. · · Score: 2
    What's the effect of all this, on everyone involved? Well, let's see. People in other countries pretty much benefit. US programmers drop down from their bubble-inflated pay. Some of them may be hurt during the adjustment, since they have to compete with a glut of competitors. The average US citizen likely benefits, since his new patterned carpet was fabricated by a machine that was cheap to produce because an Indian coder did all the software work.

    So everyone gets trickle-down benefit. Globalization is, in the long run, good for just about everyone. Well, it's better for some. If Microsoft (or Corel etc.) gets its software done in India, were will most of the higher profits end up - in India or in Bill Gate's pockets? In the end the poor get a little more money, the middle class gets less, but the rich simply shovel it in.

    --

    Lars T.

    To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  250. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by ATI800 · · Score: 1

    You brought up good points but your presentation highly is one-sided.

    Your Comment:

    "You knew India was going to kick the US's ass at coding eventually." is inaccurate.

    This is more accurate: Many of us were busy coding away trying to meet deadlines and learning new stuff while CEOs and Politicians were busy taking work from U.S. Citizens and taking it to 3rd world countries. We were just to busy and/or self-absorbed to pay attention until our pink slip came along.

    (To be fair, who the heck wants to be bothered with these details when they're busy? Maybe next time we'll pay attention to what's really going on politically, vote, make our voices be heard by politicians regardless of how demanding our jobs are.)

    You wrote:

    "So everyone gets trickle-down benefit. Globalization is, in the long run, good for just about everyone."

    and

    "Globalization tends to spread out wealth more evenly"

    Globalization is not about the working person - American or foreigner. It is about CEOs maximing their profits. Jack Welch, Craig Barret, Shawn Maloney, Bill Gates, and others aren't going global so they could make things cheaper and better for the consumer and provide jobs in the 3rd world. They're doing this to Maximize their profits and minimize expenditures.

    Their investors (who consist of the CEOs themselves, their friends, the upper management echelon, and Wall-Street) demand this from them at any cost. If you don't believe me then read up on Enron. They don't care what lives they ruin or people they impoverish.

    When enough companies have gone global and minimized their expenditures, their profits will also be minimized. Who is going to buy their stuff?

    Recently, I heard on a radio program how a worker at a Nike Chinese sneaker factory only makes $800 a year and will not devote $100 or 1/8 of their salary to buy these shoes. They can't.

    Linux is taking off in India, to Microsoft's concern, because they can't afford the Microsoft OS or Windows applications. (Heck, even I'm switching to Linux. I'm unemployed and I won't be able to afford the forced upgrade to the new Microsoft office suite.

    companies, (Intel, Microsoft, GM, Ford, Chrysler, etc, etc,) take advantage of social inequalities. Their factories and plants are operational in a country so long as poverty is high. The moment poverty decreases and wages improve for the common person, they're looking to move elsewhere.

    Recently, car-manufacturing plants in Mexico migrated to Vietnam because in the former, wages went to $2.25/hr Wow - a lot of dough there! In the latter they are 25 cents per day!! For the last decade, thousands of people in Mexico had built their lives around these factories They contributed to the wealth and success of these companies just like the Americans here in the U.S. did.

    What are they supposed to do now, eat their own young? No CEOs, including Ford's, apologized.

    Globalization increases the profits for the already insanely rich and yes, it allows people in impoverished nations to squeak by as long as they don't cost too much.

    My guess is that at some point the African continent, where extreme poverty is rampant, will be the next China, or India, or Vietnam. Everyone gets to try squeaking by for a while.

    You wrote:

    "I can afford foods that used to be only for the seriously wealthy ..., like pineapples, mangos, and oranges...

    Right now, I can buy a keyboard for $10, and a mouse for $5. Just about anyone can afford a pair."

    Are those fruits and vegetables you can buy any time of the year really that inexpensive. Let's examine this. The government allows people to come up illegally because they say Americans don't want to pick their own fruits and vegetables. (Actually agricultural lobbyists pay American politicians to look the other way on this issue and are the ones promoting this propaganda.)

    I just saw a program today about women in labor on a cable channel. They focused on a South-Western state. Interestingly most of the women were in their teens and were from South-Of-The-Border. (Gosh, maybe they and their parents had to come up here after the car companies shut down over there.) Do I honestly believe these teens are paying health insurance that will pay for the cost of their pregnancy? No. Who then is paying this? It's the American Tax Payer.

    Let's take this a step further. These newborns will attend school here. Every homeowner knows this raises taxes. Uncle Sam and the state governments are not turning around and saying, "Gee, we know you've been displaced from your good job and now you have a lesser one. Don't worry everything's cheaper now. We'll even lower your property Taxes." No, No, No, this is like automobile insurance - it only goes up especially when migrant workers are adding more kids to the system.

    The point is the cost of producing that apple cheaply comes from somewhere else. Nothing's for free. What good is an inexpensive fruit or vegetable or keyboard if I can't afford to live somewhere, buy gasoline, or own an auto?

    You stated that moving stuff to other countries is a good thing in the long run.

    BTW, I was born in a communist country. Many people in this country have an out-of-touch view with the rest of the world. There's a lot of hatred for this country - some of it justified and some of it not.

    Large companies will do whatever they need to do to keep their investors happy. If this means taking sensitive technologies to China, Russia, Poland, India, Pakistan or some other place hostile to this country, they will do it. It's all for short-term profit. BTW, life in these countries is cheap.

    What does this really mean in the long run? For example, if there's a political crisis between the U.S. and say China then what? They shut down Intel's chip producing plants and a huge part of the tech sector collapses. Gee, where did all the short term profits go then? Down a Chinese toilet.

    Interestingly, I just learned this:

    "US: Boeing, Hughes Helped China Illegally WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The State Department said on Wednesday it had charged Hughes Electronics Corp. and Boeing Co.'s Satellite Systems unit with illegally sharing sensitive space technology with China in the 1990s that may have helped Beijing fine-tune its missiles"

    I came across this article at www.iwon.com.

    Who knows, these missiles may aimed at American soldiers/citizens one day. Hopefully not though.

    On a final note, I'm not proposing any solutions other than to say, we need a new system. One where people are more important than profits and one that is in tune with the environment. Maybe the current system has to crash before this is obvious.

  251. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2

    You brought up good points but your presentation highly is one-sided.

    Yup. :-)

    "You knew India was going to kick the US's ass at coding eventually." is inaccurate.

    I meant from an economic standpoint. People have been talking about India probably becoming dominant in the software industry for at *least* five years (at least I've been hearing it for that long).

    This is more accurate: Many of us were busy coding away trying to meet deadlines and learning new stuff while CEOs and Politicians were busy taking work from U.S. Citizens and taking it to 3rd world countries.

    Only expected behavior -- a lot of this got set in motion after a serious worker shortage at the end of the 90s. Workers demanded obscene rates. They got 'em, sure...but it also meant that it was now less costly to contract out additional work to other countries.

    Globalization is not about the working person - American or foreigner.

    I'm not sure what you mean by this. It *involves* the working person. As for whether it benefits the working person...sure, I'd argue that it does the majority of society, and even probably people in the affected segment (though they may have a painful dip in the short term).

    It is about CEOs maximing their profits.

    Yup. That's just part of capitalism, though. If you don't work to improve your company's efficiency, you'll get trampled by your competitors.

    As the matter of fact, the point of a goernment embracing capitalism at *all* is usually to drive improvements in efficiency, since those that don't improve go under.

    Jack Welch, Craig Barret, Shawn Maloney, Bill Gates, and others aren't going global so they could make things cheaper and better for the consumer and provide jobs in the 3rd world. They're doing this to Maximize their profits and minimize expenditures.

    Sure, and in the short term they will -- there will be a short time during which profits will rise. But barring monopolies (which the US government and most other governments seek to avoid, for exactly this reason), competition drives down prices and consumes this profit. Most of the benefit of capitalism over a more socialized system is right there -- it's robust. People can be mean, greedy...and instead of screwing over the system, they just improve the system as a whole.

    Their investors (who consist of the CEOs themselves, their friends, the upper management echelon, and Wall-Street) demand this from them at any cost. If you don't believe me then read up on Enron. They don't care what lives they ruin or people they impoverish.

    That's true. I can assure you, though, that the opposite can be quite frusterating. If you have a "warm, family-owned business", it can suck to be passed over for promotion because of nepotism. It can suck to have your taxes going into agricultural subsidies to "ensure that no one's life gets wrecked." Generally, the system moves along and the requirement of adaptation to the changing environment falls upon individuals. Molded glass replaces blown glass? Not much market for glassblowers any more...they're going to have to change professions.

    Recently, I heard on a radio program how a worker at a Nike Chinese sneaker factory only makes $800 a year and will not devote $100 or 1/8 of their salary to buy these shoes. They can't.

    So? Nikes are a luxury good. That doesn't mean that they can't buy shoes, just that they can't buy the particular luxury good that their employer happens to produce. Do you expect the guy that sweeps the floor at Ferrari to be able to afford one of their cars?

    Linux is taking off in India, to Microsoft's concern, because they can't afford the Microsoft OS or Windows applications.

    Yup. MS has had artificially inflated prices for a while now, because they've been able to squeeze people out of the market and because they can impose some serious barriers to entry (computers have so many incidental "compatibility" problems...).

    companies, (Intel, Microsoft, GM, Ford, Chrysler, etc, etc,) take advantage of social inequalities. Their factories and plants are operational in a country so long as poverty is high. The moment poverty decreases and wages improve for the common person, they're looking to move elsewhere.

    Sure. Is that unjust? Why does the person who's now comfortable deserve wages more than the person who's starving in another country?

    Recently, car-manufacturing plants in Mexico migrated to Vietnam because in the former, wages went to $2.25/hr Wow - a lot of dough there! In the latter they are 25 cents per day!! For the last decade, thousands of people in Mexico had built their lives around these factories They contributed to the wealth and success of these companies just like the Americans here in the U.S. did.

    And they were compensated for it. If they didn't feel that their pay was worth it, they wouldn't have worked there. Very few people I've seen (aside from people founding a company) hold a particularly high degree of loyalty to a company. If another company came along and offered them nine times the amount of pay for their work (and offered and equivalently nice work environment and people and all that), very, very few people would stick around out of "loyalty". No. They'd drop their old company like a hot potato and move to the new one. So there's little loyalty of the worker for the company. Yet you expect companies, when faced with that same prospect, getting nine times the amount of work for the same price (going by your numbers), to suddenly be "loyal" to their employees? When their competitors will force them out of business or they will face a shareholder suit if they do not?

    What are they supposed to do now, eat their own young? No CEOs, including Ford's, apologized.

    Do workers apologize to their CEOs when they leave for a higher paying job?

    The government allows people to come up illegally because they say Americans don't want to pick their own fruits and vegetables.

    The government "allows" people to come up illegally because those people have little to lose in trying to make the crossing (and hence are very hard to stop), and turning the Mexico-Texas border into a massive Berlin Wall would cost insane amounts of money yearly. The Border Patrol arrests and turns back Mexican citizens all the time.

    (Actually agricultural lobbyists pay American politicians to look the other way on this issue and are the ones promoting this propaganda.)

    Sure, there's some under-the-table crap going on that I wish was gone. But would you be willing to pay...oh, I don't know, ten or twenty percent more for your fruit to know that the guy picking it is named Joe Smith instead of Pedro Martinez? No? Well, that's why they do it. The judge and jury of companies is the consumer, who has spoken with his wallet. Farm owners that hire illegal immigrants are at a significant advantage.

    I just saw a program today about women in labor on a cable channel. They focused on a South-Western state. Interestingly most of the women were in their teens and were from South-Of-The-Border. (Gosh, maybe they and their parents had to come up here after the car companies shut down over there.) Do I honestly believe these teens are paying health insurance that will pay for the cost of their pregnancy? No. Who then is paying this? It's the American Tax Payer.

    You mean legal immigrants here, or else they wouldn't be getting financial aid. Look, if the United States refused to do work outside of the country (Mexico or Vietnam or wherever), demand to get in would be even worse.

    Let's take this a step further. These newborns will attend school here. Every homeowner knows this raises taxes. Uncle Sam and the state governments are not turning around and saying, "Gee, we know you've been displaced from your good job and now you have a lesser one. Don't worry everything's cheaper now. We'll even lower your property Taxes." No, No, No, this is like automobile insurance - it only goes up especially when migrant workers are adding more kids to the system.

    That can just as easily be caused by Joe Smith in Kansas being a good Catholic and having eight kids. Unless you want to take the China route and have the government regulate and enforce the number of kids you can have, there's not a lot you can do to put a cap on the growth rate.

    The point is the cost of producing that apple cheaply comes from somewhere else. Nothing's for free. What good is an inexpensive fruit or vegetable or keyboard if I can't afford to live somewhere, buy gasoline, or own an auto?

    Can't do much about living in a beach house in Santa Barbara...land's a limited resource. However, autos have gotten *far* less expensive, as has gasoline. If we wanted to just subsidize American workers, we *could* use only Texan and Alaskan oil (and probably avoid a ton of Middle East issues). Of course, we'd be working with a much smaller supply, and prices would be far higher.

    I mean, don't get me wrong. I'm sorry you're not in work at the moment. However, neither are you going to starve, though you might have to do something drastic like take a severe pay cut or work in a different field.

    The guy in Vietnam that you're complaining about working for a quarter a day...*he's* looking at starving.

    When all is said and done, in a ten years, whatever happens, your buying power isn't likely to be significantly lower than it was, because stuff keeps getting cheaper.

    BTW, I was born in a communist country. Many people in this country have an out-of-touch view with the rest of the world. There's a lot of hatred for this country - some of it justified and some of it not.

    Yup. I know well two people in the same boat.

    Large companies will do whatever they need to do to keep their investors happy. If this means taking sensitive technologies to China, Russia, Poland, India, Pakistan or some other place hostile to this country, they will do it.

    Yup. If it becomes a national-security issue (exporting certain types of tech or eliminating domestic infrastructure required to fight a war), the government frequently steps in, though.

    It's all for short-term profit.

    Well...no, I can't agree. I'd say that moving from country to country pretty much guarantees a short-term loss. Setting up relationships if you're subcontracting (maybe getting burned on the first few deals you do), paying out to set up a foreign plant...it's good in the long run for the company, though.

    Sometimes companies *do* focus on the short term -- a failure to follow a purely capitalistic model -- because a manager's interests may not be aligned with those of the company. For example, he may want profits *this year* to get a promotion. But companies try to discourage disaligning individual interests with company interests as much as possible.

    What does this really mean in the long run? For example, if there's a political crisis between the U.S. and say China then what? They shut down Intel's chip producing plants and a huge part of the tech sector collapses. Gee, where did all the short term profits go then? Down a Chinese toilet.

    Yup. Some industries are subsidized here to maintain national security issues.

    However, in general the building of trade just makes war less and less profitable, and tends to discourage countries from doing it. You notice how we rarely threaten people we have serious economic ties with?

    "US: Boeing, Hughes Helped China Illegally WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The State Department said on Wednesday it had charged Hughes Electronics Corp. and Boeing Co.'s Satellite Systems unit with illegally sharing sensitive space technology with China in the 1990s that may have helped Beijing fine-tune its missiles"

    Yup. Like I said, national security is one of the few exceptions the US maintains to allowing companies to do what they want (environmental issues are one of the other ones). And if the issue is serious, its likely that some people are going to get into hot water over this.

    On a final note, I'm not proposing any solutions other than to say, we need a new system.

    Mmmm...personally, I don't think so. I think capitalism can go a long ways before it realy requires fundamental changes. Maybe the introduction of nanotech would do it. A lot of governments have modified, less pure capitalist societies (Europe tends toward more socialized economies than the United States). I expect that even if production starts to outpace consumption, little tweaks like introducing public health care would keep things running.

    One where people are more important than profits and one that is in tune with the environment.

    Maybe. No one's come up with anything like this, though. Marx thought he had something, but it turns out that his system tends to fall apart when corrupt people are introduced into his system, whereas capitalism is pretty robust.

    Maybe the current system has to crash before this is obvious.

    Prolly.

    BTW, life in these countries is cheap.

  252. Re:Yes, getting India into IT *was* a good idea. by _EternaL_ · · Score: 1

    1) FUCK YOU.. I don't expect to work for an inflated salary, but WORKING would be nice...
    2) FUCK YOU!!! Why dont YOU try losing everything once!
    and 3) ??? JUST PLAIN FUCK YOU!!!

    --
    -=+=-=+=-=+=-=+=-
    following my instincts not a trend...
  253. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    Review Questions

    (1) If Nerd on the planet Nutley starts out in his spaceship at 20 KPH,
    and his speed doubles every 3.2 seconds, how long will it be before
    he exceeds the speed of light? How long will it be before the
    Galactic Patrol picks up the pieces of his spaceship?

    (2) If Roger Rowdy wrecks his car every week, and each week he breaks
    twice as many bones as before, how long will it be before he breaks
    every bone in his body? How long will it be before they cut off
    his insurance? Where does he get a new car every week?

    (3) If Johnson drinks one beer the first hour (slow start), four beers
    the next hour, nine beers the next, etc., and stacks the cans in a
    pyramid, how soon will Johnson's pyramid be larger than King
    Tut's? When will it fall on him? Will he notice?

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...

  254. Last Post! by alpg · · Score: 1

    According to convention there is a sweet and a bitter, a hot and a cold,
    and according to convention, there is an order. In truth, there are atoms
    and a void.
    -- Democritus, 400 B.C.

    - this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...