active questions tagged career-development - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-11-30T12:44:21Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/career-developmenthttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/1798552/staying-relevant-as-a-programmer3Staying Relevant As a Programmer [closed]surfrbum2009-11-25T17:25:08Z2009-11-30T12:21:46Z
<p>I am interested in hearing how various people remain in the Software Engineering industry for so long in their careers. I am at a crossroads myself as I have worked with Network Engineering, Communications, VoIP, Parking, Government Contracting, and Military related projects.</p>
<p><strong>Question: How does one manage to stay relevant as a programmer while bouncing between different engineering areas (Testing, Integration, etc) and remaining motivated in the profession?</strong></p>
<p>Old questions:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Do you bounce between pure Software Tester, Integration, and back to straight coding? </p></li>
<li><p>How do you prevent being a one-hit wonder in this economy? </p></li>
<li><p>How do you find your passion ?</p></li>
</ol>
<p>Edit: I know there are similar questions here (see Shog9's comment).</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1710600/is-26-too-young-to-become-a-technical-manager7Is 26 too young to become a technical manager?Jon Seigel2009-11-10T19:35:43Z2009-11-30T11:24:26Z
<p>I'm 26. Long story short: I've been programming for over half my life all the way from 8088 ROM BASIC to TP to VB to C++ to C#.</p>
<p>Lately, I've been less interested in coding, and more interested in overall project design (particularly UI design), managing a team, and taking care of clients. Don't get me wrong -- coding is still fun and I'm effective doing that -- I just feel more drawn towards a managerial role. I'm targeting a technical management role such as program manager, not a purely project management role. There are different, difficult, and exciting challenges there.</p>
<p>I know that even asking this question means I have some inner work to do, but I'd like to know the community's opinion on issues like:</p>
<ul>
<li>How can I be hired for such a role, never having been explicitly in this role before?</li>
<li>Will I be taken seriously by my subordinates? Co-workers? Superiors? HR (see 1st point)?</li>
<li>Am I making a big deal out of nothing?</li>
</ul>
<p>I have a little bit of team management experience from my latest project (5 months)... and that's all the management experience I could put on my CV. There aren't any more projects here where I have the opportunity to gain more experience. I've been actively reading books on management theory to lay some formal foundation that I can use every day.</p>
<p>All thoughts on the subject would be appreciated, as I think I'm in a relatively rare situation.</p>
<p><hr></p>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1533588/im-a-developer-how-do-i-become-a-technical-manager">Related question</a></p>
<p><hr></p>
<p><strong>UPDATE:</strong> Thank you all very much for your ideas and encouragement! I've added comments to most of the replies here. You've all given me a lot to think about, and even more work to do. ;)</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1178244/is-doing-a-bit-of-freelancing-while-working-full-time-a-good-idea16Is doing a bit of freelancing while working full time a good idea?marcgg2009-07-24T14:58:50Z2009-11-30T09:05:58Z
<p>I'm a web developer and I've always been doing some personal projects to learn new technologies and keep myself busy. I also did some minor freelance work (create a website for the small association Y, for the artist Z...).</p>
<p>As time passes and I build up my network, skill set and resume, I get a lot more offers that could take more of my time and I'm not willing to be only a freelancer since I need to have to go to work to avoid going crazy and asocial... so I'm asking myself this question: is doing a bit of freelancing while working full time a good idea? </p>
<p>The obvious pros are:</p>
<ul>
<li>More money </li>
<li>More experience (on time management, technologies...)</li>
<li>Possibly interesting projects</li>
</ul>
<p>And the obvious cons are:</p>
<ul>
<li>More work </li>
<li>Less personal life</li>
<li>Possibles issues such as a project that takes too much time compared to the original estimate</li>
</ul>
<p>... but I'm sure some of you are in this situation on thought of it more than I have. So, what do you think? If given a freelance opportunity, should one turn it down because of a full time job?</p>
<p>Maybe there are some kind of freelancing job that I should refuse and other I should accept? How can I tell?</p>
<p><hr></p>
<p><strong>Bounty: Added a bounty to get more feedbacks (answers and votes on the answers) and finaly closing this question.</strong></p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1811842/switching-jobs-how-to-learn-new-technologies-and-get-to-work-in-them0Switching jobs - How to learn new technologies and get to work in themcrashpoint_zero2009-11-28T07:11:55Z2009-11-30T08:07:29Z
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I have been reading stackoverflow's posts for quite some time. And I think that all you guys are doing a great job by giving your time to answer queries. </p>
<p>I am currently working as a Perl developer. I've been working on building mailing system solutions and tools for around 3 years. I want to switch jobs because I want to work in a different environment and learn new things - basically to get out of my comfort zone and work on maybe a new paradigm. The problem is that being tagged with being a Perl dev for 3+ years, its hard to convince employers to give you a job on any other technology. I don't want to get a lock-in in the safe compartments of a language forever. I want to explore more and get a broader experience of what's out there. My queries are:</p>
<ol>
<li>If you want to work in a new language or a different tech while doing your job, how would you go about it?</li>
</ol>
<p>I am thinking of working on C++ or Python or Ruby. My initial thoughts were to learn one of these, work on some self created assignments, maybe search an open source project I could contribute to. Maybe a certification would also help in convincing the employer to at least take it to the interview level. What do you guys think?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1817858/whats-a-fun-high-level-programming-language-to-learn5What's a 'fun' high-level programming language to learn? [closed]Drew2009-11-30T04:33:50Z2009-11-30T06:10:57Z
<p>I know HTML, CSS, PHP, SQL, and a decent bit of JS. I've had a good bit of fun learning all of them, but I want to move away from languages that are so web-based and aren't <strong>real</strong> programming languages. </p>
<p>I want to learn a higher level programming language, but I don't know which one to start with. I'm not quite sure what I want to do career-wise (software, web, etc.), but hell, it can't hurt to learn something now.</p>
<p>Anyways, what's a good higher level programming language to learn, and do you know of any books/online documentation that isn't a complete bore to read while learning it.</p>
<p><strong>Note</strong> - I'm a junior in high school, so I figure I have time later to figure out what I want to do exactly, but I should be spending time now preparing for whatever that is.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/111161/large-or-small-company8Large or small company?James2008-09-21T14:51:49Z2009-11-29T12:33:32Z
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I would like to hear some opinions regarding working in small companies versus large corporations.</p>
<p>So far, my personal experience has been that esp. for junior programmers small companies have given a more solid background, as follow-up is with experienced workers.
In larger corporations on the other hand, the experienced have already worked they way way out of reach.</p>
<p>Is this a general feeling or just my bad experience?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1814083/what-is-more-important-domain-or-the-technology2what is more important Domain or the technology?Hemant2009-11-28T23:14:29Z2009-11-28T23:54:38Z
<p>As it's very difficult to focus on the both,
what is more important as a software engineer for the long term? Is it the domain, like finance , telecom etc... or the technology like C/C++, Unix etc.?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/48997/what-programming-language-is-most-popular-today4What programming language is most popular today?John Meagher2008-09-08T01:54:17Z2009-11-28T14:26:54Z
<p>Based on the tags page here, C# is the big winner.</p>
<p><a href="http://freshmeat.net/browse/160/" rel="nofollow">Freshmeat lists</a> far more C projects than anything else. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/273299/how-do-you-pull-yourself-out-of-a-programming-slump51How do you pull yourself out of a programming 'slump'?DaveK2008-11-07T19:24:47Z2009-11-27T16:44:51Z
<p>I've been programming professionally for about 8 years now. I started back in the 2001 working in c# and .net development. The past few months, I've found myself in what I would describe as a slump or rut. I'm having a hard time working up the level of passion I used to have for programming. Instead of wanting to stay up late figuring out a problem, I'd rather just go to bed. I have a hard time staying motivated at work even when presented with the opportunity to work in new technologies (WPF, Silverlight, etc). I really do love programming, and would be seriously depressed if I've somehow lost my spark. </p>
<p>Has anyone else been in this situation? Any pointers for pulling myself out?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/205474/which-certifications-are-worthwhile-and-useful-on-a-resume10Which certifications are worthwhile and useful on a resume?DocileWalnut2008-10-15T16:45:23Z2009-11-27T16:11:00Z
<p>As a web developer with zero formal training, my resume relies entirely on the "experience" portion. But I'd like to get some accreditation in the languages and skills I'm good at. And more than that, I want some feedback to know that I'm actually learning these things properly. </p>
<p>So, <strong>what are good certifications for your standard web developer/designer's skill set</strong>? (XHTML, CSS, AJAX, PHP, MySQL, Rails, Apache, SEO, Google Analytics/AdSense, Photoshop, etc) </p>
<p>And more importantly, <strong>will the value they add to my career/knowledge/ego outweigh the cost of taking the exam?</strong> For instance, I know Zend certification can be around $500 to take the exam, but will it be worth it in the long run? </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1797553/what-are-the-biggest-hurdles-to-overcome-from-being-a-desktop-programmer-to-a-web7what are the biggest hurdles to overcome from being a desktop programmer to a web programmer?michelle2009-11-25T15:09:47Z2009-11-27T12:25:34Z
<p>I've been an java programmer forever. Now I want to go web. </p>
<p>What mental leaps should I be expecting?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1741579/what-benefits-do-you-get-from-your-blog7What benefits do you get from your blog? [closed]ForeverDebugging2009-11-16T11:23:18Z2009-11-27T08:57:30Z
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I've heard from a number of sources that reading blogs helps to keep you up to date with the industry and pick up new tips and tricks.</p>
<p>What benefits do people get from actually writing blogs?</p>
<p>Do people include links to their blog on their cv?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1806300/what-to-do-in-a-job-with-little-coding-and-not-really-allowed-to-read-up-on-the-n2What to do in a job with little coding and not really allowed to read up on the net?dotnetdev2009-11-27T00:44:39Z2009-11-27T03:01:52Z
<p>In my current job, the nature of the business and the nature of the development I do (in that it is simple/mostly chopping and changing values of HTML/CSS/Javascript to reflect a client but not actually writing anything despite being a C# coder) means I spend 9 hrs a day at work, read plenty on C#/SQL Server/ASP.NET etc etc, but I don't actually write code.</p>
<p>At home I have 1 hr once I get back, which is spent revising. Obviously I have a lot more free time to code on the weekends, but that is still not enough especially when I compare that to the chance of coding every day at work, which I did in a previous job but left with valid reasons. If I did code everyday, I'd learn a lot.</p>
<p>While I have done coding at work, this is all provided and then changing the code to make optimisations which means that the code provided is poor and if that is in place somewhere, it also has to be changed (this is funny when my colleague says my code is messy yet he provided it to me). This also means that I learn very little because I may miss chances to do debugging, and there's many ways to do the same task. Programming on big projects is an issue as one big project is finished and then there is a gap for a few months till the next big project and until then, you might write the odd 100 lins here and there, but you've literally got free time. As the company does hosting, this sort of line of business/this industry means there's an orientation to support so I need to respond to tickets which are system admin related (firewall changes - not coding at all and this is not a transferable skill) while other members of the team do ASP.NET coding. And speaking of ASP.NET, we are hiring ASP.NET developers and I am wrapping up my revision on the ASP.NET exam by MS, so I can forget about doing any of that.</p>
<p>This makes me think that the whole idea that work = experience is rubbish. I took a day off work recently and I did so much stuff, that I didn't seem to match that productivity/level of business at work.</p>
<p>Also bare in mind, reading a lot doesn't leave a good impression on my boss as he said "You read a lot and it doesn't look good if someone sees but if that's how you learn than that's fine with me" (my boss is laidback like that and he means if senior management sees me constantly reading because we have to look "busy" - give the tasks and I won't need to act). Since then, it's always a bit awkward reading a lot at work but if there's nothing to do and future work is not yet approved then what can you do? I guess the problem is it looks like you've got no work if you read so much (but this is pointless if you can't apply it there and then at work - any practise I do that is seen will also not go down well as my tasks have to be "authorised".</p>
<p>My main problem is if I don't do much coding here then in my next job the assumption that I have got experience will be expanded (this is not my first job and I am not a pure junior) and therefore any coding tasks I get I could find very difficult, unless I work efficently at home and do proper coding/testing/etc. </p>
<p>In this situation, what can you do to keep up? You're being left behind as I am learning a tech I've never done before so 2 people who already know this tech do all the work on it whereas I do the stuff they don't want to do. I am looking at other jobs as my heart wants me to change but then I have to do the whole "I'm new I need to get used to internal procedures" thing.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1805306/should-i-pursue-java-or-php-for-a-career-path-in-programming0Should I pursue Java or PHP for a career path in programming? [closed]neochap2009-11-26T19:25:50Z2009-11-26T21:42:41Z
<p>I've spent the last eight months working in the <code>LAMP</code> stack. </p>
<p>Since I just graduated college with a degree in Computer Science, I'm still very new to programming. I've looked at the trends, and for non-Microsoft development stacks, Java and PHP top the list. </p>
<p>Given that most of the Java positions in my area (Toronto, Canada) are for Senior level programmers, should I choose PHP since I see more junior level positions in my area?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1001494/being-a-lone-developer78Being A Lone DeveloperRonnie Overby2009-06-16T13:31:29Z2009-11-26T19:09:01Z
<p>What are some of the pros & cons to being a lone developer?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/535980/how-did-you-get-your-first-programming-job90How did you get your first programming job?Mark Pim2009-02-11T08:59:37Z2009-11-26T12:43:21Z
<p>Did you get lucky and stumble on your ideal job immediately?</p>
<p>Did you find a local small software house and send your CV off? How?</p>
<p>Did you go through graduate recruitment?</p>
<p>Did you start on an internship?</p>
<p><hr></p>
<p>I know this is not programming related and off-topic but it could be an interesting question to those just starting their careers.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1797546/learning-c-xna-as-a-first-language-for-indie-games-dev3Learning C# / XNA as a first language for indie games devJoeBeez2009-11-25T15:07:53Z2009-11-25T16:31:31Z
<p>Hi all,</p>
<p>I'm really wanting to get into game development (childhood dream!) and i think I'm now in a position to finally invest enough time into it. However i have a few questions and I'd really like some feedback from some guys already involved in development, so i thought i would ask here :)</p>
<ol>
<li><p>How easy is it to learn?<br><br>
I have some programming experience: VB.net applications (only small ones), and a little C#, but I have never really been able to commit to learning a language to proficiency as i find reading from books etc very hard to concentrate on. <br><br>I made most of my VB apps from finding snippets and bodging them together, understanding what the code did as i went along. However XNA/C# games development is a lot more closed off, people don't seem to post a lot of their code the the internet (understandably), and I worry this might slow me down somewhat.</p></li>
<li><p>What sort of time frame should i be looking at to get a good understanding of the language?</p></li>
<li><p>Will XNA/C# stick around?<br><br>
Am i going to spend years learning the language only to find out that the C#/XNA combo is phased out for the next gen Microsoft devices?</p></li>
<li><p>How relevant is C# to the professional game studios?<br><br>
OK sure saying you've released a dozen highly popular Indie games looks great on your resume, but is it really going to land you a job? Don't big studio's mostly use C++? How much of C# is relevant to C++?</p></li>
<li><p>Finally, if I do decide to learn it, are there any books/sites/tools you reccomend for learning it?</p></li>
</ol>
<p>If your still reading this then thanks for taking the time, i know its a little drawn out but I would really like to know these things before putting in some serious time!</p>
<p>Any answers to any of my (many) questions are very appreciated!</p>
<p>Joe</p>
<p><strong>EDIT</strong></p>
<p>Thanks for all the answers guys it means a lot! I'm bookmarking all these sites :)</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1787079/do-you-actually-remember-all-of-the-different-ways-to-progam-via-many-apis0Do you actually remember all of the different ways to progam via many API'sRecursion2009-11-24T00:38:10Z2009-11-25T15:27:54Z
<p>I ask because I simply cant and when I go to a job interview I feel like a idiot. I simply cannot remember how to program in all of these different languages, let alone even one. I can remember the general idea of how to format a given program or how to do basic stuff, but I need access to the api whether it be from the Internet, a book or included documentation. Can you? </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1791232/i-am-not-the-most-logically-organized-person-do-i-have-any-chance-at-being-a-goo6I am not the most logically-organized person. Do I have any chance at being a good 'low-level' programmer?worried programmer2009-11-24T16:30:53Z2009-11-25T13:59:22Z
<p>Background: I am entering college next year. I really enjoy making stuff and solving logical problems, so I'm thinking of majoring in compsci and working in software development. I hope to have the kind of job where I can work with implementing / improving algorithms and data structures on a regular basis.. as opposed to, say, a job that's purely concerned with mashing different libraries together, or 'finding the right APIs for the job'. (Hence the word 'low-level' in the title. No, I don't wish to write assembly all day.)</p>
<p>Thing is, I've never been the most logically-sharp person. Thus far I have only worked on hobby projects, but I find that I make the silliest of errors ever so often, and it can take me <em>ages</em> to find it. Like anywhere between three hours to a day to locate a simple segfault, off-by-one error, or other logical mistake. (Of course, I do other things in the meantime, like browsing SO, reddit, and the like..) It's not like I'm 'new' to programming either; I first tried C++ maybe five years ago.</p>
<p>My question is: is this normal? Should a programmer with any talent solve it in less time? Having read Spolsky's <em>Smart and gets things done</em>, where he talks about the large variance in programming speed, am I near the bottom of the curve, and therefore destined to work in companies that cannot afford to hire quality programmers?</p>
<p>I'd like to think that conceptually I'm okay -- I can grasp algorithms and concepts pretty well, I do fine in math and science, although I probably drop signs in my equations more often than the next guy. Still, grokking concepts makes me happy, and is the reason why I want to work with algorithms.</p>
<p>I'm hoping to hear from those of you with real-world programming experience.</p>
<p><b>TL;DR:</b> I make many careless mistakes, should I not consider programming as a career?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/231951/whats-the-next-thing-on-your-list-to-learn30What's the next thing on your list to learn?HenryR2008-10-23T23:29:01Z2009-11-25T09:31:31Z
<p>Subject line says it all. What's next on your list of things to tackle and get to grips with? Got a language you want to learn? Want to grok dynamic programming? Think it's about time you understood type theory?</p>
<p>What's next? And why?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1703298/how-to-not-be-an-it-programmer6How to not be an IT programmer?Joey Green2009-11-09T19:49:12Z2009-11-25T04:37:31Z
<p>I'll make this short and sweet. I like working with technologies that I'm currently not working with at my full time job. I like working with technologies that you don't usually see in a typical IT department( objective c, RoR, objective j/cappucino ). How do I move to a job that uses these technologies? </p>
<p>I feel like I'm in quicksand and when my head goes under this will mean I'm stuck doing boring .NET/Java IT business web app programming for the rest of my life. Right now, I can only see two options:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>Develop a portfolio of projects that I create using the technologies I'm interested in.
To me this seems like the obvious choice but it still seems to me, and I may be wrong, that it may not be enough.</p></li>
<li><p>Go back and get a MSCS. Now I know that I probably won't be using these technologies in any of my classes, but the masters may get me on interviews that I may not get on otherwise. </p></li>
</ol>
<p>I don't know if you were hiring someone would you want someone with projects that they've built with the technology that your hiring for or someone with more education? </p>
<p>I could do both but then I will be spreading my self then and I won't be able to do either very well probably.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/296563/how-to-make-up-for-lack-of-a-computer-science-degree17How to make up for lack of a computer science degree?Jared2008-11-17T19:18:40Z2009-11-25T02:29:09Z
<p>I’m a telecommunications major who has taken the two intro programming classes as well as a data structures class. I’m not sure if I want to do networking or software development. Although I know several languages and am able to throw together quick and dirty solutions I don’t have a strong theoretical backround. What topics would you recommend I learn to become a better developer since I already have the skill of looking things up on google down to an art? Any resources would be appreciated.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1794093/development-scene-in-australia0Development scene in Australia [closed]grenade2009-11-25T01:24:06Z2009-11-25T02:01:27Z
<p>I've worked in the UK for most of the last 10 years aside from a brief stint in Costa Rica. I have recently been approached about a role in Sydney that seems to be a good match for my particular expertise. I lived in Oz as a kid but that was a different sort of experience. Company, money, quality of life and all that looks good but I wanted to ask if anyone can share a perspective of the development scene in Australia with regard to Agile/Scrum, XP, continuous integration, Microsoft technologies, etc... Is takeup of these methodologies and technologies good in Australia? Are dev's (for the most part) enthusiastic about Agile or is there a Software Craftsmanship vibe or dare I say it, is Waterfall all the rage?</p>
<p>Is there much in the way of DDD / TechEd type days or localised dot net user groups (with meet ups)?</p>
<p>I just really don't know what to expect from the dev culture and whether I'm letting myself in for a nasty surprise. On the flip side, maybe you're light years ahead of the UK dev culture and I'm about to have my mind blown. Enlighten me please.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/556062/do-you-consider-performance-reviews-useful-and-why7Do you consider performance reviews useful and why?Rorick2009-02-17T09:19:21Z2009-11-24T23:40:03Z
<p>Hello, all,<br />
It looks like performance reviews are used in virtually any organization. You know, those lists of objectives, values, estimates (achieved, partially achieved, exceeded etc.) And then you'll get bonus and (or) promotion by results. Or won't get. </p>
<p>But there are certain objections against these reviews.
E.g. from Joel Spolsky: <a href="http://www.joelonsoftware.com/news/20020715.html" rel="nofollow">Measure</a> or <a href="http://www.inc.com/magazine/20081001/how-hard-could-it-be-sins-of-commissions.html?partner=fogcreek" rel="nofollow">Sins of Commissions</a>
As far as I remember, <a href="http://rads.stackoverflow.com/amzn/click/0932633439" rel="nofollow">DeMarco and Lister</a> also criticized performance reviews. Nevertheless, there are tons of management and HR books about performance reviews and appraisals.</p>
<p>So I feel confused. Obviously, there should be some way to promote software engineers. But performance reviews seem to be extremely subjective, error-prone and demoralizing. I have not enough experience to form my consistent opinion, so I'd like to read opinions of others on this matter:<br />
Are performance review useful and why? What are alternatives?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1793536/dream-financial-firm-vs-a-leading-product-company0dream financial firm Vs a leading product company [closed]CuriousTiger2009-11-24T22:59:02Z2009-11-24T23:25:43Z
<p>I am a recent CS graduate student in a dilemma about which career path to choose. I successfully defended my master's thesis yesterday and did couple of internships during my MS. </p>
<p>Few weeks ago I got a technical analyst offer from a wall street leader, kind of a dream company, the one that shows up in best companies to work for list. I am in process of getting another offer (in reference check stage) from a leading GPS navigation products company that is not as big as the previous one, but is good at what it does and is nice place to work too.</p>
<p>Both jobs are similar in a way i.e. both are entry level s/w development positions. </p>
<p>Comparison:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>With first company my ideal career path looks to be an MBA (although it will pay for non job-related courses). The location is near a good university, where I can think of pursuing further studies. I have to reply these guys soonest possible. The work conditions are pretty dynamic and requires one to be ready to work all the time (To be frank I enjoy it like this and have always worked best in such conditions)</p></li>
<li><p>Second company is also good, few of my friends have given good reviews. Location is fine. The product line they have is pretty good (recently came up with new GPS phone), and have some parallels with my research work and interests.. </p></li>
</ol>
<p>I have following questions:</p>
<ol>
<li><p>How easy it is to go from a financial company to s/w product companies like MS, Google, down the line? will I be tagged as a financial s/w developer? The company has dedicated technology division and great range of financial s/w solutions and technologies and impressive perks too.</p></li>
<li><p>If I choose to go to PhD in future, first company might fund that too. But MBA seems like a better option after working with this company.</p></li>
</ol>
<p>Personally, I enjoy the innovation part of research, but I found that I am not suitable for an environment that lacks deadlines. I would love an MBA with focus on technology (becoming an architect, rather than a manager). I am not interested in becoming a professor, and my interests in PhD are confined to becoming an expert in what I would work on and work in industry-research environment later.</p>
<p>Thanks in advance for your help, do let me know if you need any particular information.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1787396/what-would-happen-if-i-re-apply-the-job-that-i-failed-the-interview-previously1What would happen if I re-apply the job that I failed the interview previously? [closed]Jeffrey2009-11-24T02:24:09Z2009-11-24T02:38:09Z
<p><strong>Situation:</strong> I recently applied developer position at 2 reasonably good companies. One being small/medium software product oriented company, the other being software consulting company. I went through the phone screenings and was given out programming questions to be completed in the next few days. I spent not much time (excuses...blah...) finishing both questions and a few days later realized I failed both of them. At first I was very upset that I couldn’t even succeed the programming questions. It was until a few days later when I review what I had done to the questions that I should have put more effects into it. There are 2 scenarios here, first I really should have spent more time that at least I would have had a higher chance of succeeding the programming questions, second I may just be incompetent, not smart enough and not up to the level required by the companies.</p>
<p><strong>Question:</strong> now one of the companies had re-posted the same ads that I had applied (and failed), if I re-apply, would I even get another phone screening chance?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1780198/zend-certification3Zend Certificationmattbasta2009-11-22T22:17:05Z2009-11-22T22:55:14Z
<p>Hey all, I'm looking to get my Zend certification soon for PHP5. Has anybody that's taken the exam come out of it with good advice? Are there any useless/nonsense/obscure/esoteric topics covered on it?</p>
<p>Thanks</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1778397/what-are-the-best-tags-to-follow-on-stackoverflow-for-computer-science-students1What are the best tags to follow on stackoverflow for computer science students? [closed]Navin2009-11-22T10:46:18Z2009-11-22T11:00:54Z
<p>I believe that reading all the questions for a specific tag on stackoverflow is a great way to understand how that topic plays out in real life. Thus, if you're learning python from a book and/or online tutorials, you should also subscribe to the <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/python">python tag on stackoverflow</a>.</p>
<p>So the question I have is this: for computer science students who are still doing their undergraduate degree in computer science, what are the best tags to follow? I find that <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/algorithm">"algorithm"</a> is great. It's largely language neutral, contains stuff that all computer science students must know, and in most cases does not bog them down with unnecessary details (unlike the python tag that often contains questions about language arcana).</p>
<p>What other tags should a computer science student follow?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1778373/has-your-stackoverflow-reputation-helped-your-career0Has your StackOverflow reputation helped your career? [closed]Talvi Watia2009-11-22T10:31:27Z2009-11-22T10:56:09Z
<p>I know there is a similar question here:</p>
<p><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/279157/is-stack-overflow-reputation-marketable">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/279157/is-stack-overflow-reputation-marketable</a></p>
<p>However, I am curious if fellow SO members have any examples or stories about how it has helped them in the past. </p>
<p>I noticed the flair system to show your SO rep and was wondering if it was worth the hassle...</p>
<p><em>..it could help or it could hinder.</em></p>
<p>I am a contractor so I am thinking it is possible to win some contracts possibly I wouldn't normally otherwise, should a client take a look at my portfolio and actually notice me because of it. </p>
<p>I've already received referral traffic off my profile here.. but nothing that has found me a new client. </p>
<p>------------------update-----------------</p>
<p>did not know about <a href="http://meta.stackoverflow.com">meta.stackoverflow.com</a> thanks!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1699766/what-happens-to-older-software-engineers31what happens to older software engineers?Yaron2009-11-09T08:37:21Z2009-11-21T22:17:59Z
<blockquote>
<p><strong>Possible Duplicate:</strong><br>
<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/972611/old-developers-any-future">Old Developers - any future ?</a> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Hi </p>
<p>I have been programming most of my adult life, but as I get closer to the dreaded 40's people around me keep telling me that there is no such thing as an old software engineer, you either become a manager (pointy haired ??) unemployed or finish you career in a slow agonizing death maintaining some old boring code. </p>
<p>can this be really the true? thinking about it I know people find it more and more difficult to find a job as they grow older. I must admit that most the people working in my current workplace are younger then me and above all I don't think I know many engineers much older then me, so what happens to them? </p>
<p>I would greatly appreciate your thoughts and advice on the subject</p>
<p>-Almost Middle aged Engineer </p>