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User: SolarStorm

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  1. Is it worth a Cappuccino per day? on Ask Slashdot: Have You Tried a Standing Desk? · · Score: 1

    I personally bought one last year. I look at it this way. I could battle the company to get me one, however, I would probably loose that battle after much grief and anguish. I stop at starbucks every day for a Venti Cappuccino for a bit over $5 CAD without even thinking about it. I spend approximately 2000 hrs at the office per year. I ended up getting a VariDesk Pro (I HIGHLY recommend it) but there are other players in the game too. Landed in the door was $700 CAD. So if I do the math. Thats about 35 cents per hour, or $2.80/per day. One half of my coffee addiction (which probably isnt near as healthy) So why will I spend the money without thinking for a the coffee but flinch at the desk? One of the better purchases I have made. I feel more energetic during the day, and my back doesnt get as sore. So the choice becomes, wait for the Co. to save my life, or take charge of my own health to counteract the coffee/day habit... Plus when I change jobs, I simply take it with me, the way I would take a picture on the wall.

  2. Re:As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    like attracts like :) Seriously, I dont befriend the people, I just do a bit legwork to find out who. But yes it also helps to make friends. I attend user groups, conferences, workshops, and code camps. When you do that, your circle increases dramatically

  3. Re: As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    Start some open source project. GitHub, code pen. Just something you can show. To me it's as important as your resume

  4. Re:As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    Everything is a choice. networking is a skill just like coding. There are even classes you can take. They are typically targeting sales people, but when you are looking for a job, you ARE selling. The product is YOU. Also like I said, use the good head hunters. Their job IS networking. The good head hunter will meet with you find out your goals and skills, then meet with the hiring managers. If all the head hunter wants to do is shop your resume, then move on to the next one. But all he will still do is get you an interview. It is still up to you to impress the interviewers with your skill set. Show up with something to show. Bring a laptop. Know how to tether it to your phone for a connection, show some of the finished projects you have worked on. Highlight how YOU, not the team you were on, leveraged the desired skills and technologies. Tell me what you can do for my project, not what kind of job you want.

  5. Re:As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    as easy as it sounds, ask. But I like to do it in person. Not over the phone or email. To easy to ignore. Finding a good job can be more work than the job itself, but is worth it when you land that position. I always start by trying to find someone I know at the company. Anywhere in the company. Then work my way closer. If you go through a head hunter and they dont know who it is, then you need another head hunter as you dealing with a resume collector, not a good head hunter.

  6. Re:As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    First off, one of the best devs I have hired was legally blind. He used the largest monitor we could buy, had to a wild color scheme, and stared at the monitor from 5" away. Wrote "Brilliant" code. I myself spent some time in a wheel chair, and 6 years on crutches, though not nearly as difficult has made me appreciate someone who wants a job. If you like this career, you will find a way to make it work. If you are waiting for someone to give you a job, a career change might be in order. I find the software game to be aggressive. We are competing with world here. It is still one of the careers where you can earn $200 - $300k without Doctorate Degree, simply by being good at your job. Remember: "You are never given a dream without also being given the power to make it come true. You will however, have work for it.". The job boards being filled with head hunters is a good thing. Look at the jobs posted, quite often is is 6 of the same job, slightly reworded. Then google the job and you can usually find the same job on the companies web site. From there, do a bit of research on the company. Call the front desk, or even better yet, hand deliver a resume, and talk to the person at the front desk. Ask if you can deliver your resume, with custom written cover letter, to the person doing the hiring. Make sure you are carrying a laptop to be able to quickly show some of your brilliant work. Lastly, if you are handicapped, ensure you know, understand, are able to tell the employer about any govt programs available for hiring someone with a handicap. The guy I mentioned above, we didnt know it at the time, but the govt and CNIB had help to purchase the extra equipment he needed.

  7. Hiring managers perspective on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 1

    Ouch on the age move there. I am in my mid 50s and I will pit my skills up against a 35 year olds any day. But I do take my tradecraft seriously. I try and do at least one pluralsite course per month. Attend at least two dev conferences per year. I am fluent in .NET, iOS, and Java (android). I have tried the management game, and was a portfolio manager for a couple of years managing $10.2M in projects. I was grumpy, and hated work. I jumped at a greenfield team lead dev project and like a kid back in the playground. Some of us old guys just like coding...

  8. Re:As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 2

    I agree that networking is a skill set. however if you choose not to network, you need to learn how to write resumes and cover letters that satisfy the job description. In a large org, those descriptions are quite often canned and cannot be changed even I wanted to. I have also found the head hunters useful. They are networking specialists. That is their job. When I need someone I will have coffee with 2 or 3 to discuss what I really want. All that being said, I have been suitably un-impressed with a lot of "senior" guys that come to the interview without a laptop and nothing to show. The last guy I hired pointed me to his github work and said, "here is what I can do". I hired him. lastly, I would put an onus on the interviewee to at least know a few basics. As I said, I just hired a senior web developer. The number of "senior" guys that couldnt tell me the difference between a Post and a Get was astonishing. "Here endith the interview". One guy even told me the MVC stuff was just a fad, and another told that writing tests takes too long. "Here endith the interview" If the job add states we are doing an MVC project and demanding TDD with some mocking tool experience and desiring to try delve into BDD. Please learn what these terms are before coming to the interview.

  9. As a guy working on both sides on The Great IT Hiring He-Said / She-Said · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you are simply responding to job postings, you have to play the job posting game. The best jobs and hires I have done have come from a little bit of let work. Find out who the guy "really" doing the hiring is and get an email/phone call/coffee with that guy. 90% of the time, if he likes you, he will get you on the interview list.

  10. 3520 bottles of beer on the wall on Study: Compound Found In Beer Boosts Brain Function · · Score: 1

    3520 bottles of beer on the take on down...

  11. My job is interesting to other people on Lies Programmers Tell Themselves · · Score: 1

    Believing this while starting in a pale face with glassy eyes, and a small tear while explaining what I did today to my wife

  12. Where no connection has gone before on Ask Slashdot: What Magazines Do You Still Read? · · Score: 1

    I still read some magazines. But only where I am disconnected. I have two that I like, "Dirt Rider". I read while out at our lake lot where I have made a conscious effort to NOT connect the cabin to phone and internet (no TV either). I like to sit around the campfire and read a Dirt Rider. The other I read is Alert Diver, typically while on a Dive vacation where again an internet connection is not always guaranteed. I do read books online, but still find it hard to replace the magazine at some locations. I can be sitting on the beach, throw the magazine on the towel, go for a swim, come back and the magazine is still there. I am not really interested in trying that with my iPad.

  13. See what happens.. on GitHub Registers Its 3 Millionth User · · Score: 1

    When you offer free beer! Waiting for the next drink up.

  14. Re:any questions? on Ask Slashdot: How To Avoid Working With Awful Legacy Code? · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I guess I would never work for you. I view the 3 month probation as a probation for both parties. Not only are you evaluating the employee, but I am evaluating the company. If we both like each other its a marriage. If one of us has issue we shake hands, part company and go for a beer. Currently we are in a situation where talented developers are in short supply. I am actually interested in a person who is asking questions about our work environment. It shows that they are looking for a place to stay, instead of the next pay check. Honesty in an interview, by both parties, is what will create a successful work relationship. Mistrust and deceit will invoke the probation clause.

  15. Not until 2012 on Geologists Say California May Be Next · · Score: 0

    Duh, I thought everyone figured this out once they released the movie!

  16. Re:Star Wars on Ask Slashdot: Worst Computer Scene In TV or Movies? · · Score: 1

    Prototype for "WIFE"

  17. I would be very concerned on Electronics In Flight — Danger Or Distraction? · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Personally, I find it hard to believe that a cell phone or wireless device can bring down an airliner. Why would a terrorist use a bomb? Why not simply turn on your iPhone?

  18. TFS vs ... on Open Source More Expensive Says MS Report · · Score: 2

    If I add the lost productivity using TFS vs any of the FOSS SDLC or even simple version control software. The only statement we have been hearing from our MS tickets is "It shouldnt do that" Or "That was by design"... So far I a loosing about 1 man day every 4. And now that we have an "expert" on site, I am full time trying to debug this for MS.

  19. Handicap Interface? on Kinect Creators To Make PC Controller · · Score: 2

    Just think of what this could mean to a handicapped person! Clunky interfaces can no be replaced with gestures! Having helped a couple of handicapped users, this is a dream come true.

  20. Clickity click click clack on Should Colleges Ban Classroom Laptop Use? · · Score: 1

    This drives me absolutely insane. I am well past my college years, but still attend/teach the occasional course/seminar. Use what ever you want, but if I hear the clicky click click click of your keyboard and trackpad. I WILL ask you to stop (both as lecturer, or student). With the tablets and handwriting recognition available now this issue will quickly disappear.

  21. Re:The problem isn't the scanner (IMHO) on Making Airport Scanners Less Objectionable · · Score: 1

    Because the plane is VERY crowded. Most Mr. Smiths have little or poor weapons training, heck even a number of police officers have trouble maintaining their permits. Because a stray bullet can do a lot of damage. IE puncture a window and watch. So even if Mr. Smith misses all of the people on the plane, he has the potential to do just as much damage as the original terrorist. At least the ground wont crash (in most cases) if Mr. Smith misses.

  22. Re:The problem isn't the scanner (IMHO) on Making Airport Scanners Less Objectionable · · Score: 1

    So how do you identify the terrorists from your own citizens? With a little bit of makeup we can look like anyone...

  23. Re:The problem isn't the scanner (IMHO) on Making Airport Scanners Less Objectionable · · Score: 1

    I agree, the "air marshal" works, but imagine the mayhem if there were no security, and everyone was allowed to board with "whatever" they could hide under a jacket. Mr. Smith with his .38 and 1 hour of training is not who I want on board if a situation starts to arise.

  24. The problem isn't the scanner (IMHO) on Making Airport Scanners Less Objectionable · · Score: 1

    I travel a reasonable amount and for the last 20 years haven't been able to walk through a metal detector anywhere. I have enough metal parts to excite most scrapyards. I know security is a little bit of a placebo for the public. But what is the alternative? Let anyone walk on with anything? This light measure of security means that we at least stop some of the armatures and make the pros look for easier targets (and their are lots!). I continually see people getting upset over being searched. Why? Should we simply racially profile and only search those that "look" guilty? Look at the "Old" man that just boarded a plane with a great makeup job. My take is that when they search me, and they ALWAYS do because my cyborg joints and parts, I feel like they are actually catching the obvious. When someone is searched, I am not sure why they are getting upset. The reasons are: Look guilty, interesting items, a random number, or a targeted demographic. At least there is some measure of security. To these workers, they don't necessarily think YOU are guilty, you just have something (even the random number) that has triggered a search. The problem I see is the perception that the security people are not viewed as professionals. The media has us convinced that they are all unemployed street junkies that got the only job they could. So far everyone that has searched me, and I fly 3 - 4 times per year, has been more than professional and discrete. If we as a public helped them instead of fighting them, security would probably increase. The media could choose to help, but it easier to find fault than help. Think about how many people fly each day, how many "Terror" incidents there are. Are they successful? When there is a failure, how much is it publicized? When there is a success, where is the publicity? We also need to decide how much security is worth. Are you willing to spend and extra $20 per flight for enhanced security? What really scared me was last Christmas there was an orange alert, and for the first time I walked clean through the scanner without a sound in Cancun. Personally I'm up for the $20.

  25. What a great Bus. Op. on US May Disable All Car Phones, Says Trans. Secretary · · Score: 1

    Seriously, when they started scrambling sat tv. The descramblers crawled out of the wood work. So how much do you think it will cost for a hidden kill switch for descrambler? It needs to be a hidden kill switch so that if you are pulled over, you can point to your inactive cell phone and shrug. Lastly, I am sure they wont pass the cost of the cell phone blocker on to the customer. That will simply be donated by the WeBocCells company and installed as a public service...