On 11/11/2010 11:50, lurker wrote:
ruben niemann Wrote:
Diego Cano Lagneaux Wrote:
Well, I think a simple look at the real world is enough to agree that you
need several years of experience and good skills. Moreover, my personal
experience is that it's easier to get a job (and therefore the much needed
working experience) when you have a 3-year degree than a 5-year one, at
least in Spain: I've been told at many job interviews that I was
'overqualified' (I didn't care about that, just wanted to work, but they
did)
Same happened to me. I've MSc in computer engineering from a technical
university. I began my PhD studies (pattern recognition and computer vision),
but put those on hold after the first year because it seemed there isn't much
non-academic work on that field and because of other more urgent issues. Four
years after getting my MSc I'm still writing user interface html / css /
javascript / php in a small enterprise. Hoping to see D or some strongly typed
language in use soon. I'm one of the techies running the infrastructure, I
should have studied marketing / management if I wanted to go up in the
organization and earn more.
It's usually your own fault if you don't get promotions. My career started with
WAP/XHTML/CSS, J2EE, Tapestry, Struts, then Stripes, Spring, Hibernate, jQuery, and
few others. Due to my lack of small talk social skills, I was frist moved from client
interface and trendy things to the backend coding and testing, later began doing
sysadmin work at the same company. My working area is in the basement floor near a
tightly locked and cooled hall full of servers. It's pretty cold here, I rarely see
people (too lazy to climb upstairs to fetch a cup of coffee so I brought my own
espresso coffee maker here) and when I do, they're angry because some<foobar>
doesn't work again.
So "lurker" is actually also your job description? :P
--
Bruno Medeiros - Software Engineer