As others have just said, a portfolio may or may not matter.

The polished product isn't the issue, though. It's skills, principles and knowledge you pick up while experimenting.

Whether or not you share a spare-time project with a potential employer, having spent a bit of time on your own learning about this stuff will make you a stronger candidate & a better interviewee. You'll be able to speak that much more confidently and persuasively about a broader range of technologies, which will almost certainly help you in the job market.

-Corey

On 5/6/2011 4:06 PM, Ceci Land wrote:
I like this.  Maybe it's because it's what I was already thinking about doing.  
I have 3 project ideas twirling around in my head at the moment.  I can't do 
them at work, but perhaps the systems department could give me a dataset to 
play around with in my spare time.  I already have a good dataset for one of 
the projects that I harvested via OAI-PMH.

Do these spare-time projects get any respect from the "real world" when it comes time to 
apply for a job? ....particularly if you focus on really making it as polished as possible (within the 
limitations of a non-work environment)?  I remember building my own darkroom as a teenager and doing 
B&W and color slide and print processing. (yes, I still love the smell of D76 and stop bath.  I can 
bring up the smell purely from memory :)  ).  I did manage to work for a while in photography because 
of my original personal investment of time and energy into it as a hobby.  I'm just concerned that the 
things may not work that way any more.  Life was not only slower paced back then, but having an exact 
skill match wasn't required to get a foot in the door.   Plus, I'm no Mozart so it's not likely that 
I'll come up with something uber creative or so nifty that it's used by a community at large.  But I do 
good technical work.  I tinker...I make things "go".

Thanks for the advice.  I'm going to start playing with the projects I have in mind.  One 
is already done as a JSP, but I think I'll convert it to something else and "clean 
up" the compromises I had to make to get it done in a limited time.

Ceci


   >>>  On 5/6/2011 at 2:31 PM, in 
message<[email protected]>, Devon<[email protected]>  
wrote:

My answer to this question changes every time it gets asked.

These days, my thinking is that focusing on skills/tools is backwards.
Instead, focus on a problems and solutions. Pick something you want to
do, then do it. Figure it all out on the way. If you don't know where
to start, build and deploy a simple website. Try a solution. If it
doesn't work, try a different solution. Keep trying. Don't be afraid
to toss all your work away and start over. Make the website more
complex as you go. Add a database. Switch the whole thing to jQuery.
Then switch to something else. Just keep going.

/dev


--
Corey A Harper
Metadata Services Librarian
New York University Libraries
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[email protected]

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