.net programming or other new

Sharky Forums


Results 1 to 3 of 3

Thread: .net programming or other new

  1. #1
    Expensive Sushi
    Join Date
    Nov 2001
    Location
    baltimore, md, usa
    Posts
    45

    Lightbulb .net programming or other new

    I am a system information consultant, currently programming in cool:gen 5th gen. language. Pay is ok, but business programming is boring. I want to get into some new technologies, and possiably find work with some tech company. Anybody got a clue where to start to get to these positions. What training do you need?

    ------------------
    Asus A7V266-E AMD XP 1900+...(3) 256mb Crucial DDR...Asus GeForce3 Ti200 Deluxe
    Western Digitial "Special Edition" 100Gb...3Com NIC with 3XP...Hercules Theater XP
    Lian Li 68usb - enermax EG465P-VE(FC), Pioneer 16x slotDVD
    CD/RW, Sony E-400 19", Monsoon sound system...Win XP Pro
    Asus A7V266-E AMD XP 1900+...(3) 256mb Crucial DDR...Asus GeForce3 Ti200 Deluxe
    Western Digitial "Special Edition" 100Gb...3Com NIC with 3XP...Hercules Theater XP
    Lian Li 68usb - enermax EG465P-VE(FC), Pioneer 16x slotDVD
    CD/RW, Sony E-400 19", Monsoon sound system...Win XP Pro

  2. #2
    NullPointerException rock's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2000
    Location
    York, PA
    Posts
    6,203

    Post

    I'm working for a software company, but have a background in Engineering/Research.

    Generally, from my personal experiences and also from talking to our clients, tech companies tend to look for a strong science/engineering/mathematics background above a strong computer background. Guess they assume anyone with a strong science head can pick up programming when needed, but it's harder going the other way.

    I you have a science background, this is what I'd stress most on your resume or CV. If you don't, know you know your starting point!

    ------------------
    The price of freedom is high.

    Open Source is free like a puppy is free.

    It's only when you look at an ant through a magnifying glass on a sunny day that you realise how often they burst into flames.

    Understanding Evolution

  3. #3
    Tiger Shark DeadKen's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2001
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    800

    Post

    Originally posted by kajon_patrick:
    I am a system information consultant, currently programming in cool:gen 5th gen. language. Pay is ok, but business programming is boring. I want to get into some new technologies, and possiably find work with some tech company. Anybody got a clue where to start to get to these positions. What training do you need?


    Personally, I think your going about this all wrong.

    Find something you like and try to steer yourself into that field.

    I'm sure there are some people who agree with the science/math stuff above, but I haven't found that to be the case.

    What I found helps is have your resume stacked full of projects you have completed, so they get an idea you can actually do something. (Whoops, reminder to self, update resume!)

    I have found more people with credentials stacked up the ying-yang but can't actually do something. I once heard that a masters degree is the snooze-button of life and I tend to agree with it now.

    Pick a language or two and learn them on your own. I would suggest C/C++/Java. .Net is cool, but it is too early to be useful, but if it does work as advertised, I will be happy to chuck Java in the dumpster of life!

    Working on an open-source project or two may be helpful.




    ------------------
    I want an OS, not a hobby...
    I want an OS, not a hobby...

    Theres nothing more pathetic then someone who wears non-matching socks on purpose.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •