Chris Rowson wrote: > It's not what you've got, it's what you do with it that counts ;-) > I think the country has changed in the past 20-30 years, and that is part of it... I started in IT after my 'A' Levels when I secured a job as a trainee programmer and proceeded to work for the best part of 20 years for relatively large companies, along the way managing to be part of the team that implemented the first UK production customer implementation of Oracle 7 (over New Year 1992/1993)... in the 80s it wasn't presupposed that to be a programmer you'd necessary do the University/Poly route... and I certainly did very well between the ages of 18 and 22 financially when others were struggling as students.
Upon reflection, I think I'd probably have rather enjoyed the student life, but at the time I was happy doing what I was doing. I am now effectively self-employed doing sub-contracts in php/mySQL and other database tasks, along with some website design and implementation, and I am fairly happy with that. I have done the whole interview scene and it's depressing... I discovered that in your late 30s and with 20 years' experience nobody wants you... you're potentially too expensive (even if you don't ask for money the perception is that you'll move on quickly if it isn't there)... it's cheaper to get graduates, so I sympathise with the original sentiments of this thread. But, I'd suggest, if you're good enough get out there and "make your own reality"... nobody can do it but you. Sean -- [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-uk https://wiki.kubuntu.org/UKTeam/
