Re: [OT] Job hunting
Re: [OT] Job hunting
- Subject: Re: [OT] Job hunting
- From: Andy Satori <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 22 Mar 2005 10:08:00 -0500
This is straying even further off-topic than it started. It's probably
about time to shuffle it off to a more appropriate locale :-)
Andy
On Mar 22, 2005, at 8:44 AM, Adam Hall wrote:
You make some good points especially about Perl and PHP. I suspect the
problem with everyone dismissing $10-15 shareware apps is that its
hard to know if selling 10,000 copies is realistic. I can tell you a
tenth of that would be a hit in my experience, but I could be doing
things totally wrong. I imagine some people on this list must have had
this kind of success, perhaps they should say something?
Adam
On Mar 22, 2005, at 8:09 AM, Charlton Wilbur wrote:
On Mar 22, 2005, at 7:22 AM, Adam Hall wrote:
You NEED more Windows and C++ experience and or Java to earn a
living in IT as a programmer in MOST cases. Just the opinion of
someone who has tried to stay exclusive to a narrow set of
technologies and learned that the rest of the world was out there
doing a different thing :-). If anyone else has experience
otherwise, I would love to hear it, as I always find it
inspirational to see the success of others, such as the recent
success of Delicious Monster etc.
While I agree with your basic point -- employment is *always* easier
for a programmer with a diverse skill set, especially if some of the
skills are buzzword-compliant fads, it's entirely possible to make a
good living as a programmer without Windows, Java, and C++
experience. You just need a different set of currently-popular
skills; at the moment, being able to write good Perl or PHP, plus a
good knowledge of databases, is enough to get you secure employment
(modulo the vagaries of the hiring process).
There seem to be two viable routes for programmers, though. One is
to work in industry, and this one requires knowledge of at least one
current buzzword-compliant language; the other is to work for
yourself. If you have an idea for a brilliant program, write it and
release it as shareware for $15. Once 10,000 people pay for your
software, you get to laugh all the way to the bank at the programmers
making only $65,000 a year. It amazes me how many people use those
little $10-$15 shareware utilities and yet completely dismiss them as
a viable source of income.
Charlton
--
Charlton Wilbur
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