[PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-26 Thread Manuel Lemos

Hello,

Vincent Stoessel wrote:
 
 On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
 statement:
 
 I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
 experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
 going to land you a job  [;)] 
 
 now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
 web application development last year and now among the jobless I am beginning
 to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux apache mysql 
php)
 basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development on. I still 
have
 not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien. Has anyone 
else
 out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the bills.
 Thoughts?

Since the massive bankrupcy of many Internet companies, LAMP is no
longer so much on demand. What happened is that most of those companies
were technologically aware of the choices and were choosing LAMP
products because they have proven suitability for Internet development
and besides that they are inexpensive.

Many of the technology dependent companies that survived do not depend
on the Internet. Often Web development is for internal consumption. Many
of those companies used Microsoft products. People in charge of those
companies often only know about Microsoft's and other comercial products
that are well marketed. So, it is very hard to penetrate in those
companies with LAMP products.

There are certainly a reasonable number of companies that use LAMP
products, but they do it mostly for economical reasons. Therefore they
don't have a great budget to pay good salaries either.

For bigger companies, one of the main limitations of PHP and other Open
Source products is that, unlike commercial competitor products, they do
not add as much business value to somebody selling PHP solutions because
PHP costs nothing so there is no profit margin to earn by the people
that want to sell it even as a part of something else.

PHP needs to be better marketed or else it will fade from the well paid
job world. As I said, Java jobs are much more well paid, not only
because Java is harder to program and requires better prepared
developers, but also because Sun marketed Java so well that it was
created a demand for Java projects that nobody from the PHP world is
doing anything like that.

Despite PHP can be used for more than just Web applications, many PHP
developers are not making an effort to advertise it for more than just
Web development. This needs to be changed, because the world has changed
and those that don't adapt will not survive.

Java was also advertised initially for browser applets but Sun had to
adapt the strategy to the needs of the real world, they advertised and
made it suitable for mobile computing, server side Web scripting and Web
services. Mobile computing is a closed market. Server side scripting is
the only thing that PHP is advertised for but its position is seriously
threatned. Web services, PHP is not yet quite there nor there is a
perspective if and when it will ever be.

I don't want to be pessimistic, but in a couple of weeks .NET will be
officially released as the big thing that Microsoft will make it echo
everywhere with their raw marketing power. ASP.NET is catching up on the
huge delay that it used to had compared to PHP and other alternatives.
Web Services will be even more hyped than today.

Microsoft will try to make it evident that .NET is the most profitable
way to make money from Web development but only using .NET. It does not
matter how much of that will be effectively true. What matters is many
people that today still fall for LAMP/WAMP will reconsider and move to
.NET world because they will be convinced that is where they can make
money unlike with LAMP.

So, what do you do? For now, I just advise you to stay where you are if
you can live from what you are doing because we have to see how much of
this will become true. Anyway, I am afraid that part of it will become
true as advertised. If you want to stick with LAMP/WAMP, you'd better
check it out to see if you can developed what will be in demand. Here
some buzzwords to pay more attention: Web services, SOAP, WSDL, UDDI.

Regards,
Manuel Lemos

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[PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-26 Thread michael kimsal

Manuel Lemos wrote:

You seem to be just a bit 'doom and gloom'.  Perhaps you're just in 
'realist' mode, but I don't think it's a 'fait accomplit' just yet.

 
 Since the massive bankrupcy of many Internet companies, LAMP is no
 longer so much on demand. What happened is that most of those companies
 were technologically aware of the choices and were choosing LAMP
 products because they have proven suitability for Internet development
 and besides that they are inexpensive.
 
 Many of the technology dependent companies that survived do not depend
 on the Internet. Often Web development is for internal consumption. Many
 of those companies used Microsoft products. People in charge of those
 companies often only know about Microsoft's and other comercial products
 that are well marketed. So, it is very hard to penetrate in those
 companies with LAMP products.
 
 There are certainly a reasonable number of companies that use LAMP
 products, but they do it mostly for economical reasons. Therefore they
 don't have a great budget to pay good salaries either.


True to some extent, but its not always purely economic.  There are real 
security threats in MS stuff (previous at least).  Even if W2k and XP 
are 100% safe, their reputation preceeds them and it'll be a long time 
before MS overcomes that reputation.


 
 For bigger companies, one of the main limitations of PHP and other Open
 Source products is that, unlike commercial competitor products, they do
 not add as much business value to somebody selling PHP solutions because
 PHP costs nothing so there is no profit margin to earn by the people
 that want to sell it even as a part of something else.
 


I somewhat need to take exception to this - I think.  Perhaps this is 
just semantics, but people selling products are doing just that - 
selling products.  Whatever they are based on is somewhat immaterial.  I 
can't 'markup' PHP (a language) NOR can I 'mark up' Java (another 
language).  People are building packages on top of Java and selling the 
packages.  I'm not saying the underlying language is completely 
immaterial - there are pros and cons to Java, PHP, Perl and other 
languages.  But simply because it's 'open source' doesn't mean you can't 
add business value in PHP solutions.

It's hard, I think in part, because of the reputation PHP is getting in 
some circles.  Many of the people evangelizing it don't know anything 
else, and simply extoll all the 'wonderful' virtues of it.  No sarcasm 
meant - it's a great platform.  But it has its limitations.  When people 
with more experience come across PHP proponents, more often than not 
they get bombarded with half-truths and anti-MS stuff.  There's always 
at least a grain of truth, but it's often not enough, or not presented 
properly.

The fact is, most languages have these enthusiasts - it's a good thing 
to have them.  However, other languages usually also have big marketing 
dollars behind them.  Notice I said 'big.  Other competing 'platforms' 
such as ihtml and htmlos are hardly even on anyone's radar because (1) 
they cost money and (2) they don't have enough marketing muscle to go up 
against MS, Allaire, Sun, etc.PHP AT LEAST has 'free' on its side.



 PHP needs to be better marketed or else it will fade from the well paid
 job world. As I said, Java jobs are much more well paid, not only
 because Java is harder to program and requires better prepared
 developers, but also because Sun marketed Java so well that it was
 created a demand for Java projects that nobody from the PHP world is
 doing anything like that.
 


It's not that no one is doing anything like Java projects.  We've done 
some immensely large projects in PHP (migrated from ASP no less) 
handling commerce transactions in excess of 7 figures per month. 
Needless to say, the client is happy, and they actually had a similar 
sized project done in Java with a large team of developers which 
completely and utterly flopped (only after the 30+ consultants had been 
paid for months of work which was simply shut down).

People don't KNOW about what projects are going on, large OR small. 
I've asked repeatedly in the past for success stories (large and small) 
to register at phpshowcase.com, but I get barely one reply whenever I 
ask.  Perhaps NO ONE is actually using it?  I know that's not true, even 
though the successes are probably more often than not small ones. 
Someone able to get up a dynamic page in a few hours of poking around 
rather than shelling out for Access and slogging through ASP, for 
example.  Not a big success, but the company gets to continue on with 
its plans - probably oblivious to the fact that PHP is being used.  It 
just gets in and works (similar to the 'stealth' success of Linux in 
many organizations, I'd think).




 Despite PHP can be used for more than just Web applications, many PHP
 developers are not making an effort to advertise it for more than just
 Web development. This needs to be changed, 

RE: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-26 Thread Chris Lott

 It's hard, I think in part, because of the reputation PHP is 
 getting in 
 some circles.  Many of the people evangelizing it don't know anything 
 else, and simply extoll all the 'wonderful' virtues of it. 

YES! This poisoning of the well has happened and continues to happen. The
problem is that being an evangelist is a wonderful thing-- but you have to
be quite skilled at communication to be a successful one :) Otherwise the
person attempting to spread the gospel simply becomes looked at as an
annoyance or, worse, becomes marginalized.

I have dealt with a lot of folks in companies who have a negative view of
PHP, MySQL, Linux, BSD, etc. simply because they have had their intelligence
insulted, or been irritated, or been completely confused, or been preached
to one too many times by well-meaning proponents of Open Source solutions
who are either unable to communicate or simply victim to their own
enthusiasm.

There is probably nothing that doesn't have an Open Source solution in the
abstract sense-- but in the real world of existing systems, personnel, and
politics, the best solution may not be technically the fastest or even the
most stable. The right tool for the job is my motto, and that might mean SQL
Server, it might mean MySQL. It might mean a Linux server, it might mean
Win2K. There is no single panacea.

c
--
Chris Lott
http://www.chrislott.org/ 

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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-26 Thread michael kimsal

Chris Lott wrote:

It's hard, I think in part, because of the reputation PHP is 
getting in 
some circles.  Many of the people evangelizing it don't know anything 
else, and simply extoll all the 'wonderful' virtues of it. 

 
 YES! This poisoning of the well has happened and continues to happen. The
 problem is that being an evangelist is a wonderful thing-- but you have to
 be quite skilled at communication to be a successful one :) Otherwise the
 person attempting to spread the gospel simply becomes looked at as an
 annoyance or, worse, becomes marginalized.
 
 I have dealt with a lot of folks in companies who have a negative view of
 PHP, MySQL, Linux, BSD, etc. simply because they have had their intelligence
 insulted, or been irritated, or been completely confused, or been preached
 to one too many times by well-meaning proponents of Open Source solutions
 who are either unable to communicate or simply victim to their own
 enthusiasm.


Right on.   It's doing far more damage than all the stuff MS, Sun, 
Allaire and others can conspire to throw at our community, imo.

Perhaps we should get together on a 'PHP advocacy HOWTO' ?  :)

 
 There is probably nothing that doesn't have an Open Source solution in the
 abstract sense-- but in the real world of existing systems, personnel, and
 politics, the best solution may not be technically the fastest or even the
 most stable. The right tool for the job is my motto, and that might mean SQL
 Server, it might mean MySQL. It might mean a Linux server, it might mean
 Win2K. There is no single panacea.
 


Amen - except that you need to be able to discern WHY something is 
'right'.  If a consultant tells one of my clients that SQL Server is the 
way to go, I have to explain to my client (1) the benefits/drawbacks of 
SQL Server and (2) whatever other agenda that consultant may have. 
What's the 'best tool' for HIM/HER may not be for us.  I've come across 
this more times than I care to recall.

And yes, our recommendations are loaded towards what's best for us, no 
doubt, but we generally have price on our side to start with (lower or 
no licensing fees) and a satisfied clients who've 'taken the PHP plunge' 
before them, so they don't feel like they're the first ones trying this 
'new fangled PHP stuff'.

Michael Kimsal

http://www.tapinternet.com/php
PHP Training Courses
734-480-9961



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RE: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-26 Thread John Lewis

I like this view. It's not so much a technology we're all speaking as much
as a language. Computers are computers and while linux is fun and kick's ass
sometimes you just need to get a job done. 

tools are tools and php rules until php rules!


john l

 It's hard, I think in part, because of the reputation PHP is 
 getting in 
 some circles.  Many of the people evangelizing it don't know anything 
 else, and simply extoll all the 'wonderful' virtues of it. 
 
 YES! This poisoning of the well has happened and continues to happen.
 The problem is that being an evangelist is a wonderful thing-- but you
 have to be quite skilled at communication to be a successful one :)
 Otherwise the person attempting to spread the gospel simply becomes
 looked at as an annoyance or, worse, becomes marginalized.
 
 I have dealt with a lot of folks in companies who have a negative view
 of PHP, MySQL, Linux, BSD, etc. simply because they have had their
 intelligence insulted, or been irritated, or been completely confused,
 or been preached to one too many times by well-meaning proponents of
 Open Source solutions who are either unable to communicate or simply
 victim to their own enthusiasm.
 
 There is probably nothing that doesn't have an Open Source solution in
 the abstract sense-- but in the real world of existing systems,
 personnel, and politics, the best solution may not be technically the
 fastest or even the most stable. The right tool for the job is my
 motto, and that might mean SQL Server, it might mean MySQL. It might
 mean a Linux server, it might mean Win2K. There is no single panacea.
 
 c
 --
 Chris Lott
 http://www.chrislott.org/ 
 
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/*
J. Lewis
lamp/php developer
livingpages.com
*/


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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-25 Thread Erik Price


On Thursday, January 24, 2002, at 09:32  PM, Michael Kimsal wrote:

 Being able to positively improve an employer's bottom line is always a 
 plus you can bring to any 'job' - you're there to do work and make them 
 money too.  If you can help by furthering the use of Linux/PHP/etc due
 to the licensing cost issues, so much the better.



This is a good point.  I'm using the LAMP scheme right now for my 
employer (though I haven't yet explained the advantages).  I'm hoping 
that, when I'm done, I can provide a report explaining how much was 
saved by going with open source solutions -- right now the only two 
purchases made specifically for my project were

1) Mac OS X 10.1
2) Extra memory for the Linux server

(and I'd like them to buy me the full version of BBedit so I don't have 
to use the lite -- $89 upgrade)

Is there a resource that helps me weigh the cost-effectiveness of the 
choices I made?  (Note that the savings aren't as great as you might 
think -- we already have Oracle and a hosting service that provides ASP, 
but I wonder what the licenses would have cost us.)




Erik



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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-25 Thread Michael Kimsal

Erik Price wrote:

 

 
 
 This is a good point.  I'm using the LAMP scheme right now for my 
 employer (though I haven't yet explained the advantages).  I'm hoping 
 that, when I'm done, I can provide a report explaining how much was 
 saved by going with open source solutions -- right now the only two 
 purchases made specifically for my project were
 
 1) Mac OS X 10.1
 2) Extra memory for the Linux server
 
 (and I'd like them to buy me the full version of BBedit so I don't have 
 to use the lite -- $89 upgrade)
 
 Is there a resource that helps me weigh the cost-effectiveness of the 
 choices I made?  (Note that the savings aren't as great as you might 
 think -- we already have Oracle and a hosting service that provides ASP, 
 but I wonder what the licenses would have cost us.)
 
 


I don't think there are any resources that address that because it's 
really very broad and to some extent a bit subjective.  Your point about 
your hosting provider already providing ASP is part of that.

It's already provided for free - well, you're not getting 100% of that 
machine.  There may be 200 other accounts on there, all of which affect 
your performance.  Same is true in shared linux accounts, no doubt, but 
my experience has been that LAMP is better at resource sharing/balancing 
without bogging down (anecdotal only - I have no hard proof).  But if 
you're noticing slow downs on your site, especially if you're getting 
decent traffic, you have to upgrade to a dedicated machine.  At that 
point, the licensing costs come in to play, although MS has extremely 
competitive ASP (app service provider) plans for hosting SQLserver, ASP, 
etc to try to minimize the cost for hosting providers doing dedicated 
machines.  Free is still free, and they can't quite beat that yet.  :)

If you're stuck in 'hosting' environments, you'll be hard pressed to 
show the cost savings, because it's often $5-$10/month difference for 
comparable ASP or LAMP setups.  The difference comes in, imo, in 
upgrading to full server(s).  You've got the one time hit, plus the cost 
of PCAnywhere or something (you could live with VNC I guess) to do 
remote admin, plus the security track record.

I'd be happy to discuss more of this with you if you want to take it off 
list if this is getting too offtopic.

Michael Kimsal
http://www.tapinternet.com/php
PHP Training Courses
734-480-9961


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[PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Mike Frazer

Just got a job as a PHP Programmer, actually.  Kinda rare in this area, I
guess it was a matter of being in the right place at the right time with the
right skills.  I've been hired twice in the past based at least in part on
my PHP skills, as well.

Mike



Vincent Stoessel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
 statement:

 I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
 experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
 going to land you a job  [;)] 

 now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
 web application development last year and now among the jobless I am
beginning
 to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux
apache mysql php)
 basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development on.
I still have
 not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien. Has
anyone else
 out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the
bills.
 Thoughts?


 --
 Vincent Stoessel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Linux and Java Application Developer
 (301) 362-1750
 AIM, MSN: xaymaca2020 , Yahoo Messenger: vks_jamaica




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[PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Michael Kimsal

Vincent Stoessel wrote:

 On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
 statement:
 
 I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
 experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
 going to land you a job  [;)] 
 
 now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
 web application development last year and now among the jobless I am 
 beginning
 to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux 
 apache mysql php)
 basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development 
 on. I still have
 not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien. 
 Has anyone else
 out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the 
 bills.
 Thoughts?
 
 


This really depends on how you want to work and/or approach 'jobs'.

Do you consider a job a place to go for 40 hours a week and get a 
paycheck?  Or is it more than that?

Being able to positively improve an employer's bottom line is always a 
plus you can bring to any 'job' - you're there to do work and make them 
money too.  If you can help by furthering the use of Linux/PHP/etc due
to the licensing cost issues, so much the better.

I will never again (bold words I know) *merely* have a job where I'm
told what to do by someone who doesn't really give a rat's ass about me. 
  :)  (been there done that too many times).  When approaching a job 
now, I would be more proactive about what impact I can make in a 
company, and  the Linux/PHP skills/experience would be a facet of that, 
no doubt.

Sure, there are many people advertising for ASP developers, etc. 
Perhaps they're not finding qualified people, and need to advertise? 
I'd say PHP/MYSQL won't land you a job, but neither will CF, or Java, or 
anything else.  You need to sell YOURSELF, and if you sell your ability 
to further a company's objectives (make money) many won't care what you 
use, or at least won't care to the point of restricting you.  There will 
always be shops that are CF only, or MS only, or whatever.  But there's 
a (growing, I think) number of businesses out there that simply need to 
have things work - be the person who helps them achieve their goals, and 
you'll succeed just fine.

Michael Kimsal
http://www.tapinternet.com/php/
PHP Training Courses
734-480-9961


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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Michael Geier

I had previously been hired by a CBS affiliate/sporting news provider and 80% 
of the reason was my knowledge of PHP.  Although I am no longer with that job, 
I found it to be extremely valuable for my resume.

While you won't find PHP on their main website (they use Vignette Story Server 
and Oracle), a large chunk of backend code and system management utilities, 
including a trouble ticket system, were written with PHP.  

Quoting Mike Frazer [EMAIL PROTECTED]:

 Just got a job as a PHP Programmer, actually.  Kinda rare in this area, I
 guess it was a matter of being in the right place at the right time with
 the
 right skills.  I've been hired twice in the past based at least in part on
 my PHP skills, as well.
 
 Mike
 
 
 
 Vincent Stoessel [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
  On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
  statement:
 
  I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
  experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
  going to land you a job  [;)] 
 
  now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
  web application development last year and now among the jobless I am
 beginning
  to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux
 apache mysql php)
  basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development on.
 I still have
  not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien.
 Has
 anyone else
  out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the
 bills.
  Thoughts?
 
 
  --
  Vincent Stoessel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Linux and Java Application Developer
  (301) 362-1750
  AIM, MSN: xaymaca2020 , Yahoo Messenger: vks_jamaica
 
 
 
 
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 To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Ben Turner

I am actually an ASP developer who is trying to take my current company in
the LAMP direction.  I have been working on ASP/Win32/Just about everything
else Microsoft can throw out, and now I am really realizing the benifits of
a LAMP environment.  I think during the gold rush, a lot of small businesses
went with the MSSQL platform and all the cronies surrounding it because it
was very quick, rather cheap (initially) to fill the positions and the only
stick was with licensing.

Now you are seeing companies with huge overheads and low income falling to
the floor.  Those that always tried to maintain an equal overhead versus
income (a business plan), you see all that many more Win32 people (like
myself) branching out in ways to help the company to grow yet not incur more
expenses as it does. (Didnt I hear the licenseing of MS products in going
up?)

So I do believe that the true time for LAMP is coming.  Heck, it may
actually be the thing that can pull the IT industry out of the slump if
adopted by more companies.  Dollars can better be spent paying bright
individuals like all of us to be more creative with less overhead.

Just my 2 cents anyways :P
Ben


- Original Message -
From: Michael Kimsal [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; Vincent Stoessel [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Php General Mailing List [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 24, 2002 7:32 PM
Subject: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy


 Vincent Stoessel wrote:

  On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
  statement:
 
  I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
  experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
  going to land you a job  [;)] 
 
  now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
  web application development last year and now among the jobless I am
  beginning
  to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux
  apache mysql php)
  basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development
  on. I still have
  not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien.
  Has anyone else
  out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the
  bills.
  Thoughts?
 
 


 This really depends on how you want to work and/or approach 'jobs'.

 Do you consider a job a place to go for 40 hours a week and get a
 paycheck?  Or is it more than that?

 Being able to positively improve an employer's bottom line is always a
 plus you can bring to any 'job' - you're there to do work and make them
 money too.  If you can help by furthering the use of Linux/PHP/etc due
 to the licensing cost issues, so much the better.

 I will never again (bold words I know) *merely* have a job where I'm
 told what to do by someone who doesn't really give a rat's ass about me.
   :)  (been there done that too many times).  When approaching a job
 now, I would be more proactive about what impact I can make in a
 company, and  the Linux/PHP skills/experience would be a facet of that,
 no doubt.

 Sure, there are many people advertising for ASP developers, etc.
 Perhaps they're not finding qualified people, and need to advertise?
 I'd say PHP/MYSQL won't land you a job, but neither will CF, or Java, or
 anything else.  You need to sell YOURSELF, and if you sell your ability
 to further a company's objectives (make money) many won't care what you
 use, or at least won't care to the point of restricting you.  There will
 always be shops that are CF only, or MS only, or whatever.  But there's
 a (growing, I think) number of businesses out there that simply need to
 have things work - be the person who helps them achieve their goals, and
 you'll succeed just fine.

 Michael Kimsal
 http://www.tapinternet.com/php/
 PHP Training Courses
 734-480-9961


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[PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Mike Frazer

We're all in a good position right now.  The economy is beginning a strong
rebound, the pretenders have been weeded out, and a lot of companies are now
beginning to see both the technical AND financial benefits of open-source
technology.  No buying licenses for server systems that provide less
stability and a lot more fluff (draw your own conclusions from that :) ).
Open source systems may require a little more configuration and actual
effort to get off the ground, but if done right they will stay where you put
them instead of crashing back down and validating Newton's law of gravity.

Finding a LAMP job (or something including any of those components) will
become easier as the positions become more plentiful.  Come March you'll see
a noticeable change.  Please mark my words :)

Mike Frazer



Michael Kimsal [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
 Vincent Stoessel wrote:

  On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
  statement:
 
  I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion  Oracle or MS SQL server
  experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
  going to land you a job  [;)] 
 
  now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
  web application development last year and now among the jobless I am
  beginning
  to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux
  apache mysql php)
  basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development
  on. I still have
  not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien.
  Has anyone else
  out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the
  bills.
  Thoughts?
 
 


 This really depends on how you want to work and/or approach 'jobs'.

 Do you consider a job a place to go for 40 hours a week and get a
 paycheck?  Or is it more than that?

 Being able to positively improve an employer's bottom line is always a
 plus you can bring to any 'job' - you're there to do work and make them
 money too.  If you can help by furthering the use of Linux/PHP/etc due
 to the licensing cost issues, so much the better.

 I will never again (bold words I know) *merely* have a job where I'm
 told what to do by someone who doesn't really give a rat's ass about me.
   :)  (been there done that too many times).  When approaching a job
 now, I would be more proactive about what impact I can make in a
 company, and  the Linux/PHP skills/experience would be a facet of that,
 no doubt.

 Sure, there are many people advertising for ASP developers, etc.
 Perhaps they're not finding qualified people, and need to advertise?
 I'd say PHP/MYSQL won't land you a job, but neither will CF, or Java, or
 anything else.  You need to sell YOURSELF, and if you sell your ability
 to further a company's objectives (make money) many won't care what you
 use, or at least won't care to the point of restricting you.  There will
 always be shops that are CF only, or MS only, or whatever.  But there's
 a (growing, I think) number of businesses out there that simply need to
 have things work - be the person who helps them achieve their goals, and
 you'll succeed just fine.

 Michael Kimsal
 http://www.tapinternet.com/php/
 PHP Training Courses
 734-480-9961




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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread John Steele

Mike,

  While I sure hope you are right, could you please try to send the message to this 
list only once (i.e. check your To: to make sure you aren't doubling up on the list 
address).

  I might add to your comments the recent security problems with almost every one of 
M$ internet products - not that I'm complaining, it does generate some consulting 
business for me on the client side :)

Thanks,
  John

We're all in a good position right now.  The economy is beginning a strong
rebound, the pretenders have been weeded out, and a lot of companies are now
beginning to see both the technical AND financial benefits of open-source
technology.  No buying licenses for server systems that provide less
stability and a lot more fluff (draw your own conclusions from that :) ).
Open source systems may require a little more configuration and actual
effort to get off the ground, but if done right they will stay where you put
them instead of crashing back down and validating Newton's law of gravity.

Finding a LAMP job (or something including any of those components) will
become easier as the positions become more plentiful.  Come March you'll see
a noticeable change.  Please mark my words :)

Mike Frazer
--
/* SteeleSoft Consulting John Steele - Systems Analyst/Programmer
 *  We also walk dogs...  Dynamic Web Design  PHP/MySQL/Linux/Hosting
 *  www.steelesoftconsulting.com [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread Robert J. Cissell

Just out of curiosity, has anyone ever compiled an extensive point-by-point
comparison of the advantages of LAMP vs. the other alternatives?  If not,
I'd be interested in starting something along those lines.  That would be
helpful to many people I think, so anyone who has ideas on what specifically
to compare, ie learning curves, license fees, performance, etc, please email
me with them, and we can put together a comprehensive document which will be
beneficial to all of us.

Robert

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Re: [PHP] Re: getting a LAMP job in this economy

2002-01-24 Thread michael kimsal

Robert J. Cissell wrote:

 Just out of curiosity, has anyone ever compiled an extensive point-by-point
 comparison of the advantages of LAMP vs. the other alternatives?  If not,
 I'd be interested in starting something along those lines.  That would be
 helpful to many people I think, so anyone who has ideas on what specifically
 to compare, ie learning curves, license fees, performance, etc, please email
 me with them, and we can put together a comprehensive document which will be
 beneficial to all of us.
 
 Robert
 

If you get something, please share it.  I suspect that pretty much 
anything you compile will be akin to a religious war no matter what, 
because once you get past licensing costs, everything else is fairly
subjective.

learning curve is a huge one.  ANYONE can be up in a few days with 
ASP, CF, PHP, whatever.  And some people can be very proficient quickly
in each, but it depends on your background.  VB people will flock to 
ASP, C people will go to PHP, etc.  Each side claims 'learning curve'
benefits, and it's pretty much hogwash, imo - you can learn something 
easier if you're already familiar with something else that's similar.

You will most likely end up preaching to the choir.  :)

The eweek article from Oct 2000 showed PHP beating CF - PHP being about 
95% fast if I recall, and in price.  But the editors awarded CF 'top 
choice' because of 'ease of development'.  Personally, I'd skip the CF 
licensing and pay someone a bit more to learn PHP or Perl and have a 
better grasp on what they're doing ($=incentive) in most cases, but hey, 
  I'm not eweek.  CF must be *REALLY* easy to develop to justify that cost.

So, you can generally show LAMP to be faster and cheaper than most 
alternatives for *most* web projects (leaving aside the one high-end 
example someone would always throw in).  Faster and cheaper - 
anecdotally fewer stability issues.  Of course there's no 'scientific' 
proof (which MS would demand) so you're stuck with anecdotes - but there 
are hundreds of thousands of anecdotes of LAMP stability to choose from 
- I've got several if you want them.  :)

In the end it'll come down to religion and a price/performance argument, 
and religion will win more often than not (but hopefully that's changing!)

Michael Kimsal
http://www.tapinternet.com/php
PHP Training Courses
734-480-9961


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