doolox wrote: » I was in a similar situation, I had a level 7 qual in Electronics and a level 6 diploma in IT all terribly out dated and little or no up to date experience etc so not wanted. I can get much more from working free lance in a completely unrelated area of work making my own way and working my own ( much shorter) hours in something I LOVE doing. Too many people are jumping on the technology/programming hi tech bandwagon without realising how difficult, demanding, time consuming and low paid it really is. Think sport, art or music. SOME people, the very lucky few , make good money at it but most people scrape by with a bare living wage if they get any pay at all. The trick with technology jobs seems to be to research a certain area of science or general knowledge and then to turn that body of scarce and arcane knowledge into a computer application without your competitors stealing it and copying it before you can turn it into money, either by securing and selling the rights to the program by licence or outright sale. This is the hard part of making money and is not for everybody. Great coders do not necessarily make big money. Experts on contract law and monetisation do.
quinnd6 wrote: » I got my degree in 2006. I worked for 9 months from 2007 to 2008. I went to a good few interviews in 2008 and couldn't manage to get any work out of it. The last interview I did I think was in 2012. I don't know what was stopping me I suppose I was a bit nervous at interview stage. I don't have a portfolio. My certs aren't that old I have a Java SE7 Professional Programmer cert from last year and MySql 5.0 certification from 2012. I apply for jobs and hear nothing back. I might get the rare call from an agency but it never results in anything. It's looking kinda grim. Apart from applying for any internships I see I really don't know what else I can do. Someone suggested helping out on open source projects online but that's more about fixing bugs, I don't think that would get me the kind of experience necessary to get a job. I'm open to suggestions.
quinnd6 wrote: » Someone suggested helping out on open source projects online but that's more about fixing bugs, I don't think that would get me the kind of experience necessary to get a job. I'm open to suggestions.
Stheno wrote: » What have you worked at since 2008?
SimonTemplar wrote: » I think you are painting a very negative picture of a development career. Developers aren't super rich but I wouldn't say they are low paid.
youcancallmeal wrote: » I think you're leaving out some crucial piece of information? I've been working in the IT industry for a long time and I can't think of anyone I know at any level from entry right up to architect who were any more than a couple of months looking for a job in the past couple of years.
Musicman2000 wrote: » Depends on experience really. Its not as easy as it was. In Dublin its probably handy enough to get something its a different ball game outside Dublin.
youcancallmeal wrote: » Yes perhaps location is the key, seems to be booming in Dublin the last few years
quinnd6 wrote: » I've been looking specifically at Dublin and it's far from booming for someone like me.
quinnd6 wrote: » Does it have any practical experience?