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[nycphp-talk] NYC economy for web developers

Adam adam at ecamp.net
Fri May 10 15:04:53 EDT 2002


Haha. No I listen to Stern as well. I mean the ads are targeting bottom
of the barrel.
"Tired of hearing your best friend having this great job while you hate
your job and cant wait for the weekend..."



-----Original Message-----
From: Jaz-Michael King [mailto:JMKing at ipro.org] 
Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 2:40 PM
To: NYPHP Talk
Subject: RE: [nycphp-talk] NYC economy for web developers

I lucked out, at my last interview I ended up fixing their formmail. I
was hired on the spot :o)

I listen to Stern... am I really bottom of the barrel?

J

******************************
Jaz-Michael King
Online Services Manager
IPRO
http://ipro.org
******************************


>>> "Adam" <adam at ecamp.net> 05/10/02 12:48PM >>>
My friend interviews people in DC for his company.  
He had a woman come in for a programming position, but more doing
advanced JS and a little CF.  He asked her to write a simple JS function
to count 1 to 10 and display the results on the browser.  She started to
cry and say that she thought it was very unfair that they ask this hard
of a question on an interview... As she was stressed out enough.

Tho that doesn't beat the ex biker transvestite turned web developer who
barely knew what a <title> tag was trying to ask for a 60k salary at my
company. :)

It doesn't help on Stern every morning you hear ads to become an IT
professional and make the big bucks... Advertising to bottom of the
barrel folks.  Oh well.

I think in the consulting world, its all about word of mouth these days.
If I put an ad in the paper I will be flooded with so much garbage it is
near impossible to find the needle in the haystack.



-----Original Message-----
From: David Sklar [mailto:sklar at sklar.com] 
Sent: Friday, May 10, 2002 12:30 PM
To: NYPHP Talk
Subject: RE: [nycphp-talk] NYC economy for web developers

> From: Hans Cathcart [mailto:hans at cathcart.org] 
>
> People with deep technical skills in
> Databases and Application development will make a come back.
> Good designers will be OK.  But, people who just know how to
> code HTML and use Dreamweaver are a dime a dozen now.

I think this is the crucial point. The explosion in need for "web
programmers" caused a lot of people to go into the field without a lot
of
the industrial base of skills that are useful (necessary?) when jobs
aren't
so plentiful, like now.

The worst I saw this was at my old company in Boston, after an interview
with a potential programmer. He did the standard 1 or 2 programming
questions we asked and we talked about various things. At the end, he
asked
me if we always ask programming questions in interviews. (Yes). He said
he
thought that was very tough of us, since this was the first programming
interview he'd been to where he'd actually been asked to write code!

-dave










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