active questions tagged employment - Stack Overflow most recent 30 from stackoverflow.com 2009-11-29T14:59:45Z http://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/employment http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1798780/using-a-take-home-coding-component-in-interview-process 10 Using a "take-home" coding component in interview process Jeff Sargent 2009-11-25T17:56:00Z 2009-11-27T12:09:39Z <p>In recent interviews I have been asking candidates to code through some questions on the whiteboard. I don't feel I'm getting a clear enough picture of the candidates technical ability with this approach. Granted, the questions might not be good enough, maybe the interview needs to be longer, etc, but I'm wondering if a different approach would be better.</p> <p>What I'd like to try is to create a simple, working project in Visual Studio and have it checked into source control. The candidate can check that code out from home/wherever and then check back in work representing their response to the assignment that I'll provide. I'm thinking that if the window of time is short enough and the assignment clear enough then the solution will be safe enough from all-out Googling (i.e. they couldn't search for and find the entire solution online). I would then be able to review the candidates work. </p> <p>Has enough worked with something like this before, either to vet a candidate or as a candidate yourself? Any thoughts in general?</p> <p>P.S. my first StackOverflow question - hi guys and gals.</p> <p>EDIT: I've seen comments about asking someone to work for free - I wouldn't mind paying the person for their time.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1777519/how-much-should-i-stretch-the-truth-on-my-resume 2 How much should I "stretch the truth" on my resume? [closed] Robert Fraser 2009-11-22T01:51:17Z 2009-11-24T23:43:13Z <p>Hi,</p> <p>I'm just about to graduate and was wondering how much I should um... "stretch the truth" on my resume. Obviously, flat-out lying is probably a bad idea since (as well as many other reasons) it might come up in the interview, but I don't have too much experience to pad out my resume.</p> <p>For example, I learned some Ruby in one of my classes and totally forgot it, but if I'm applying for a position where I'm <em>not</em> going to be using Ruby (so hopefully it won't come up in an interview), should I put it down to seem more well-rounded? Similarly, I've really only used ORM wrappers but I can probably throw together a simple SELECT statement, should I mention "some SQL" if it's unrelated to the job and unlikely to come up?</p> <p>I talked to a college admissions officer a while back who said she never checks up on anything people put on their college applications unless it's really extreme (i.e. national merit scholars, etc.).</p> <p>Again, being flat-out untruthful is wrong for a lot of reasons, but having a resume that has "went to school, know C, Java, and C#, 3 month internship, some open source" is going to be a little short.</p> <p>Thanks!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1000349/good-ways-to-earn-income-as-a-self-employed-developer 9 Good ways to earn income as a self employed developer nullptr 2009-06-16T09:07:19Z 2009-11-22T16:00:23Z <p>I was just wondering if people could share their experiences and ideas about generating / earning income from a software product or service they have personally developed.</p> <p>To me this seems like a good way to earn a living while doing what we love (programming) and working on projects and problems which interest us. Ie, NOT boring bank or marketing software etc 9-5 all week...</p> <p>Some ideas I have are things like web 2.0 style sites (Facebook,Youtube,Twitter,Digg) etc etc... - These can be very very profitable as we all know but can take years to take off. Are there ways to survive until/if this does happen?</p> <p>Mobile applications. Iphone, Google Android and the new up coming Nintendo DS app store. These have good potential to make it easy to find a market for your application and make selling it easy. </p> <p>Shareware/PC software. A bit 80's and 90's and you kind of need to be a salesman/marketer to sell it but its the only other thing I can think of.</p> <p>Also im not talking about doing freelance work. Im only interested in idea's you can come up with and develop your self (not other peoples ideas or problems which are you are payed to develop).</p> <p>Things that a sole developer or at the most 2 developers could work on and have good potential for high returns on investment (in terms of time) would be great.</p> <p>PS, I wish I thought of stackoverflow!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1739553/how-do-you-find-outside-programming-help 1 How do you find outside programming help? tylerl 2009-11-16T01:02:39Z 2009-11-16T01:25:31Z <p>Where do you go to find high-quality outside development help? Alternately, if you are a high-quality independent developer, where do you go find projects to work on?</p> <p>I own a software and IT consulting and development company, and occasionally we get requests for projects that would require more resources than my team has to spare. My own experience with outside developers has been that despite their lofty endorsements, certifications, and accolades, the work they deliver is unusably poor.</p> <p>So, if you're a developer who really knows his craft, or a small business in search of a developer you can trust to do the job right (not just well enough to get paid), how do you meet up?</p> <p><strong>Please, don't post your contact information here.</strong> The question is about the way you find independent developers, not a call for bids or resumés.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1739531/education-how-much-how-little 0 Education.. how much how little? [closed] Mike 2009-11-16T00:50:58Z 2009-11-16T00:50:58Z <p>Hi Everyone,</p> <p>So a little background. Started out in construction and completed my apprenticeship over a 6 year period. Got married, bought 2 houses and decided I wanted to switch to computers. I started working on a certificate program through a university about 18 months ago and am just coming up on completion of it. I've also been employed as a software developer for the past 10 months with no end in site.</p> <p>So my question.. Should I just concentrate on work and stick with the cert? By doing this I get to enjoy more life on the weekends and evenings with my wife..</p> <p>OR</p> <p>Do I push another three years, 40,000 dollars and probably 5 years time to complete the bachelors?</p> <p>Whats your thoughts everyone? Hoping to hear form people with lots of experience..</p> <p>BTW I've gotten to par with what I was making as a ticketed carpetner now so the money isn't bad at the moment.</p> <p>Thanks, Nalid</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/294967/maintainable-programming-jobs 9 Maintainable programming jobs? John T 2008-11-17T05:48:07Z 2009-10-30T16:06:45Z <p>I am currently in my first year of college for computer science, and at the end of this month I must make the decision to enter the networking stream or the programming stream. The advantages i've seen with networking are that you usually have work at hand. Network administrators seem to have multiple tasks besides just networking to do (at least the ones i've seen working at my college) such as maintaining installed software, configuring new systems, repairing systems, and general IT work. With programming jobs, how could you maintain your work if the project is complete? is there any way to maintain a programming job if you don't work at somewhere like google/microsoft? because most of the jobs i've seen on sites like workopolis only hire programmers for a few months until the work is done, then you're contracts up and you're out of a job again. With networking, sure sometimes there isn't a problem with the network itself, but there is usually general IT help required in the workplace (which net admins seem to take care of). </p> <p>So what i'm basically saying is that I really want to go into programming, but for the programmers of SO, are most programming jobs temporary? Is there any way i can seal myself a job with a firm? because the only way i can see maintaining a job with programming is getting a job with a company that is CONSTANTLY developing new software. Not many of those big companies seem within my reach. Am i going to constantly be changing employers in the field? Because i really enjoy it much more than networking but to support a family i will need a steady job.</p> <p>Thanks SO.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/483573/what-to-do-with-a-bad-job-reference 11 What to do with a bad job reference? David 2009-01-27T14:25:30Z 2009-10-30T05:46:04Z <p>I worked for a company for 18 months as a full-time consultant developer doing R&amp;D and architecture design and the things I wrote for this company literally runs the company. I'm still good friends with most of the senior development staff but considered the anti-christ by the company owners. My crime, refusing to sign a non-compete agreement.</p> <p>Now maybe not so mysteriously while looking for new contracts and positions, all of them have followed the same pattern: "Wow your a perfect fit for what we're looking for, lets schedule an interview" then dead silence. It doesn't take a rocket scientist to know that something is scaring these potential employers away and since I haven't killed anyone lately my only thought is that I'm getting slammed when they call my prior employer.</p> <p>What the hell do I do? Do I tell potential employers my concerns, change my resume to not include the companies name ( losing a year and change of important milestones in my professional development) or start the ball rolling of hiring an reference PI and lawyer?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/555532/source-check-in-analysis-software-installed-now-what 1 source check-in analysis software installed ... now what? JoelFan 2009-02-17T04:30:47Z 2009-10-28T04:54:01Z <p>I just found out that my workplace has installed software that analyzes source check-ins for such things as who checks in the most lines, when they mostly do their check-ins, which files have the most changes, etc. I'm a bit concerned that this has something to do with the economic situation, and they are looking for a way to measure "developer productivity".</p> <p>Does anyone have any experience or advice for dealing with this unsettling situation? Just ignore it?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1615726/what-is-a-rule-of-thumb-ratio-of-alpha-developers-okay-developers-and-newbies-ne 3 What is a rule-of-thumb ratio of alpha-developers, okay developers and newbies needed for a great web application team? Phil 2009-10-23T20:29:40Z 2009-10-23T21:17:18Z <p>This question seeks a rule-of-thumb answer so I avoid details. In recruiting a development team to develop and maintain a web application (or windows, whatever); what is a good ratio of alpha-developers (very brilliant developers who are geniuses) to okay developers (experienced-developers whose intelligence will not blow you away) to newbies (junior/inexperience/newly-minted developers)?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1541157/finding-software-development-contracts 3 Finding software development contracts Mike 2009-10-08T23:47:45Z 2009-10-09T00:16:59Z <p>For the last few years I've been working as a self-employed software developer. Doing various gigs as they came my way. For the most part I've been fairly lucky, as my own personal network has yielded all the work I need to sustain myself and then some. As I said, I've been <em>lucky</em> to get all my contracts, I haven't had to put any real effort into finding work yet.</p> <p>Although I'm currently employed, I'm unhappy and thinking about moving on.</p> <p>My question is for the experienced self-employed contractors, how did you find your contracts? Are recruiters/headhunters/agencies helpful? What is the best way to expand your professional network? Can the internet be useful? </p> <p>Thanks for the tips</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1501841/appropriateness-of-contacting-workers-for-a-job-you-are-phone-interviewing-for 2 Appropriateness of contacting workers for a job you are phone interviewing for? GordonG 2009-10-01T04:04:13Z 2009-10-02T15:34:57Z <p>Is it appropriate to contact programmers who work for a company you are applying to? </p> <p>I am really excited about a certain programming job that I am interviewing for soon, and I am reading a few blogs by the guys who work there. Is it inappropriate to send them an email telling them I am having a phone interview with their company, telling them I'm excited about working for their company, and asking them for any advice? </p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1102212/next-steps-after-being-fired 22 Next Steps After Being Fired? Fired Programmer 2009-07-09T06:50:12Z 2009-10-01T22:10:44Z <p>I was fired from my job this morning, after an incident on Monday night for which I was suspended yesterday. I've contacted an appropriate government agency to look into the matter, given the circumstances surrounding my termination.</p> <p>I'm determined to make the best of this situation, and as I've been looking to move to newer technologies after a three year tour of duty in a world of legacy Cobol programs. I'm in my mid-twenties and the job I was in was not what I was looking for. I've been seriously looking to quit that job anyway, but a lack of other options kept me in the position until now.</p> <p>I figure I've got enough in my bank account to pay my bills through September, and after that I've accepted that I might have to use my credit line for a little while.</p> <p>I'm inexperienced with OO languages, like .Net and Java, but am doing what I can to teach myself on my own. I'd like to find a company I can learn with, and am willing to work for a drastically reduced wage, or even as an unpaid intern, for a short period of time if that's what it takes, with the endgame of me becoming a full-time, full-paid developer with that company.</p> <p>Is this a realistic goal? If so, how does one go about approaching companies for this sort of opportunity? What is my best approach to handling my previous job experience and reasons for leaving? </p> <p><hr /> <strong>Details</strong>:<br /> I was dismissed for 'unacceptable behaviour' due to an outburst in front of one of my superiors, after being provoked by certain comments he made to me. I have a history of showing my temper when I get really stressed. My doctor says my stress is/was caused by the job, which I would then say is directly related to the aforementioned superiors micromanagement and disrespect for those under him. My doctor further categorized my condition as situational depression. I was medicated for this, briefly, and my former employer knows this. These facts have been reported to a government agency, along with certain other factors, and they seem to believe I have a case.</p> <p><hr /></p> <p><strong>Full Disclosure</strong>:<br /> Although Jeff doesn't like the idea of throwaway accounts, that is exactly what this account is. Given information in this question (my termination), I'd rather not have this as a permanent part of an account proudly displayed on my blog, etc. There will be ABSOLUTELY NO VOTING from this account. Any answers I feel are helpful will be voted from my normal user account, with the exception of the accepted answer should the need arise.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/777896/java-aptitude-test-tips 0 Java Aptitude Test Tips ajushi 2009-04-22T15:40:46Z 2009-09-25T19:14:23Z <p>Hi, I'm applying for as a Java software engineer in a company in a couple of days. I really want to get hired in this company. Do you guys have any suggestions on what I should review or learn so that I'll be prepared? Also do you guys have any tips? Thanks in advance!</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/566662/how-to-handle-people-who-lie-on-their-resume 19 How to handle people who lie on their resume Juliet 2009-02-19T18:55:56Z 2009-09-22T15:54:47Z <p>I'm conducting technical interviews to fill a few .NET positions. Many of the people I interview really <em>do</em> know .NET pretty well, but I find at least 90% of embellish their skillset anywhere between "a little" and "quite drastically". Sometimes they fabricate skills relevant to the position they're applying for, sometimes they not.</p> <p>Most of the people I interview, even the most egregious liars, are not scam artists. They just want to stand out among the crowd, so they drop a few buzzwords on their resume like "JBoss", "LINQ", "web services", "Django" or whatever just to pad their skillset and stay competitive.</p> <p>(You might wonder if a person lies about those skills, whether they are just bluffing their way through a technical interview. My interviews involve a lot of hands-on coding and problem-solving -- people who attempt to bluff will bomb the hands-on coding portion in the first 3 minutes.)</p> <p><hr /></p> <p>These are two open-ended questions, but it would really help me out when I make my recommendations to the hiring managers:</p> <p>1) <strong>Regarding interviewing etiquette, should I attempt to determine whether a person really possesses all of the skills they claim to have? Can I do this without making the candidate feel uncomfortable?</strong></p> <p>2) <strong>Regarding the final decision, should I recommend candidates who are genuinely qualified for the positions they're applying for, even if they've fabricated portions of their skillset?</strong></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/106917/what-do-webdeveloper-employers-look-for-most-in-website-contracting 1 What do webdeveloper employers look for most in website contracting Nelson LaQuet 2008-09-20T03:15:21Z 2009-09-19T18:21:25Z <p>I am a software developer looking to make money. I have been self-teaching myself C++, C#, PHP, [X]HTML, CSS, Javascript and SQL for the last four years and am very comfortable with each language listed. During those four years I was living at home; which made it easy to focus on programming more then if I had to support myself.</p> <p>My problem is that the place where I work (a local tech repair/website development company) does not bring enough income. The place has a lot of potential and good people and I believe in its eventual success; but eventual is not good enough compared to what I should be making considering my daily responsibilities.</p> <p>So going on a full or part time job that requires relocation is not possible. What I am looking for is to develop web applications for people over the internet, but have yet to find a site that provides good opportunity and reasonable pay.</p> <p>So my question is this: What would a person looking to either outsource or contract a web developer look for? I have no website, no portfolio and little money.</p> <p>What should I focus on the most to make a person say "this is the guy I want - and I trust him enough to contract this deal over the internet instead of in person"?</p> <p>What I don't want to do is "build a 30k-line CMS for $500" that ends up being "built" by some out-of-country freelancer who puts some special branding on Joomla. I want serious, down-to-earth people who know what a web developer is worth and respect them as much as an employee that they would hire.</p> <p>I have a few ideas of pre-building software and selling it, including hosting, for a monthly price. Which market should I go after?</p> <p>The reason why I am asking help here is because I know many people are in the position I am in; and I think it is a good resource for any programmer who needs income on the side.</p> <p>I would be grateful for any help on this subject.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/172668/full-time-programmer-or-software-development-consultant 18 Full-time programmer or software development consultant? DV 2008-10-05T21:05:19Z 2009-09-19T18:03:21Z <p>In your opinion and experience, what's best - working full-time and long-term for one company, or part-time short-term on many smaller projects or parts of projects? What do you think are the pros and cons of both?</p> <p>I heard that being a consultant is more profitable and one would pick up more experience. Does that beat an 8 hours by 5 days (thanks to Jon Limjap for correction :)) job of coding in a cubicle?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1315459/job-offer-dilemma-dubai 0 Job offer dilemma - Dubai [closed] webwalker 2009-08-22T08:04:05Z 2009-08-22T08:04:05Z <p>Hi guys </p> <p>I know this isn't asking how to solve some coding problem but I do believe its programming related as it employment and career development which there are a heap of questions here on. </p> <p>I have been offered a full time software development job in Dubai for 12 a min of months. It is an intermediate to senior consultant/development job, working with the latest Microsoft technologies. The company is a European based company which has offices Dubai. </p> <p>Now I live in the states and would be leaving behind a job that I like and a tone of friends and family. I was just wondering if anyone else has done something similar and how they found it and if anyone has any ideas on what package one would expect in taking this sort of work.</p> <p>Thanks</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/611233/am-i-obligated-to-fix-a-software-error-after-i-left-a-company 24 Am I obligated to fix a software error after I left a company? Anonymous 2009-03-04T16:05:59Z 2009-08-06T03:36:43Z <p>In my last job at a small firm, I was paid in billable hours. I was not a contractor; the firm provided an office, computers, software, books and customers. They also took taxes out of my check. If I bid 30 hours on a job, the company would bill the customer for 30 hours at their rate and I would get paid for the same amount of time at my hourly rate. If I 'finished' a project, but it had an error, I would make my repair at no charge to the client, which means that I did not get paid for that time repairing the error. Problems like this were typically simple but I occasionally dealt with a gun shot wound to the foot.</p> <p>Now then -- some time ago a client came to have software written for his business. We worked out a deal, I wrote the application for him, delivered it and supported it. The last update I applied to this software was approximately five months ago. I left this job about four weeks ago to pursue a research project, and the customer found an error two days ago. My ex-boss emailed me and told me to contact the customer so the problem can be resolved, and to let him know how it goes.</p> <p>I have no contractual agreements with this employer or the customer. Am I obligated to fix this error? I've talked to my former employer about it, and he believes I am. What would you do? </p> <p>Edit:</p> <p>Some of you need to read more carefully. As stated above, I have no contractual agreement with the employer or client. Some others made some very compelling arguments. Thanks to all of you for your input.</p> <p>My opinion -- I submit to you that the employer is responsible for supporting their customers. I am not obligated to fix the error, though it may be in my best interest to fix it because of my previous personal interaction with the client.</p> <p>Why? Do former Microsoft employees get called when an error they introduced is discovered? I do not know for sure, but I would bet the farm that the answer is a resounding 'no'. The position I held was an internship. I was well known as "the intern" at this office and treated as a remedial employee. I do not own any rights to the software and I have no contractual agreement with my former employer or the client. I do not know the details of the error, but the short description I was given makes me believe it is a misunderstanding of the requirements, but it could very well be a stupid mistake on my part. This employer has another programmer on staff that could fix the problem and I made it clear when I left that I was going to pursue another project that would consume a lot of time. </p> <p>I'm considering fixing the problem because I am sympathetic to the client who paid money for an error. I am not sympathetic to my former employer who is obviously unprepared to handle an issue related to a software error. If I were unscrupulous, I would fix it myself without the intervention or supervision of my former employer.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1163183/checklist-for-knowledge-transfer 5 Checklist for Knowledge Transfer NinethSense 2009-07-22T05:18:42Z 2009-07-23T21:28:03Z <p>Say, one Employee is leaving the company in one week. What all we must demand from this employee before he leave?</p> <ul> <li>Documentation of Application/Module he was handling</li> <li>Source Code</li> <li>Source Code must be well commented</li> <li>Access details of Machines, FTP, etc.</li> </ul> <p>What else?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1143964/do-you-check-out-potential-employers-on-the-review-sites-are-they-accurate 5 Do you check out potential employers on the review sites - are they accurate? Keith Bentrup 2009-07-17T15:22:39Z 2009-07-17T22:24:21Z <p>I've recently checked out some reviews of potential employers on sites like <a href="http://www.jobvent.com" rel="nofollow">JobVent</a>, <a href="http://www.telonu.com" rel="nofollow">Telonu</a>, and <a href="http://www.glassdoor.com" rel="nofollow">Glassdoor</a>. The reviews <strong>tend to skew negative</strong> as might be expected, so I'm wondering how useful they are for job expectations and a metric of morale in the company?</p> <p>What I've seen in a couple different interviews seems to be very different than what I'm reading online.</p> <p><strong>If you checked out a company online before taking a job with a fair number of negative reviews, how did it work out for you?</strong> </p> <p><em>(If it makes a difference, remember to log out to answer anonymously).</em></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1071613/what-are-your-dos-and-donts-for-the-first-day-on-the-job-as-a-developer 8 What are your do's and don'ts for the first day on the job as a developer? rpflo 2009-07-01T22:10:20Z 2009-07-02T16:43:33Z <p>I just got hired as a web developer for a marketing company (though they do lots of things, development is the bread and butter).</p> <p>I'm a self taught developer with zero experience as a programmer other than my own freelance stuff. I've always been in the sales/consulting side of business, never been paid for being a geek really. And so I'm unfamiliar with the office environment of being a programer. What kinds of things are frowned upon? Encouraged? etc.</p> <p>I hope some of these answers can be helpful to others in my shoes later, so I've marked it as a community wiki.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1029400/a-programmers-options-for-source-of-income 7 A programmer's options for source of income beef 2009-06-22T21:07:26Z 2009-06-25T23:28:02Z <p>What are a programmer's reasonable options for a source of income? If you'd like you can include more than one, listing pros/cons, etc.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/514813/do-brainbench-certifications-carry-any-weight-with-employers 5 Do Brainbench certifications carry any weight with employers? Joshua Carmody 2009-02-05T06:32:47Z 2009-06-13T20:16:39Z <p>Back in 2000, I got a bunch of programming certifications from <a href="http://www.brainbench.com" rel="nofollow">Brainbench</a>. However, they didn't seem to be doing me any good, and they needed to be renewed every year, so I let them lapse. Recently I've been hearing more about Brainbench, and I've been wondering - do these certifications impress potential employers at all, in 2009? What has been your experience?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/775457/job-offer-dilemma 17 job offer dilemma Ten Tonne Tony 2009-04-22T02:03:01Z 2009-06-12T11:25:16Z <p>Hi,</p> <p>I started a new Java job just over a month ago and it hasn't been going well. The main problems are:</p> <ul> <li>Quality of source code is disgraceful</li> <li>No automated build/tests</li> <li>There is resistance to change/improvement and a severe case of "not invented here"</li> <li>All the experienced team members work in a remote office, which makes knowledge transfer to the people working in my office difficult</li> </ul> <p>In fact the only good thing about the job is the salary and benefits. I was recently made an offer from one of the companies I interviewed with before starting my current job. The people and technologies there seem top-drawer. By way of contrast, at my current company they write web apps by programming directly to the Servlet API, whereas at the other company they use Grails. The downside is that taking a job at the other company would require me to take a 25% drop in vacation time, and a drop in salary of at least 15%.</p> <p>I could live quite comfortably on the reduced salary under my current circumstances, but those could change (e.g. kids, interest rates). If I were to leave my current company after such a short time it's highly unlikely they would ever employ me again, but I live in a city where there's a limited number of places I can work, so it's a bridge I'm reluctant to burn. Not because I might some day want to return to this project, but they're a big company and probably have (or will have) other teams that are a better fit with what I'm looking for.</p> <p>So my current job is offering great benefits and salary, steady employment, but little opportunity for learning and job satisfaction. The other job is offering cool technology, much reduced benefits, and stability (they're a startup).</p> <p>Any advice regarding what I should do would be much appreciated!</p> <p><strong>Update:</strong> THe majority of respondents advised staying put. I decided to take their advice, and told the "good" company I would be refusing their offer due to the reduction in salary/vacation. They then increased the salary on offer (to a level I inidicated I would accept), and I've decided to accept their offer.</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/926221/how-should-an-american-software-developer-go-about-finding-a-job-overseas 6 How should an American software developer go about finding a job overseas? internationalprogrammer 2009-05-29T14:19:18Z 2009-05-31T21:21:15Z <p>Are there any tech recruiters who specialize in international placement? Any websites? I've looked around on Craigslist, but it seems like a lot of the ads in English are for American companies looking to outsource to remote workers. This doesn't seem like something that would help me.</p> <p>What are some good places to start?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/927508/whats-the-best-way-to-hand-over-code-that-you-were-the-sole-owner-of-when-leaving 4 Whats the best way to hand over code that you were the sole owner of when leaving a company? David Liddle 2009-05-29T18:42:06Z 2009-05-29T18:53:08Z <p>If you have been working solely on a project for the last 12 months and are now leaving the company what would be your steps of handing over your code and knowledge?</p> <p>Due to the business requiring quick to market solutions, very little documentation has been written. The code uses MVC with linq2sql and is very clear (in my own mind) of how the code is structured, where it is heading and also strengths and weaknesses.</p> <p>The business also relies heavily on face-to-face communication with a developer for quick improvements and longer substantial pieces of work and there are no other developers in this office.</p> <ul> <li>Would you start writing documentation now?</li> <li>Create internal wiki articles to help other developers?</li> <li>Walk through code with other developers?</li> </ul> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/927487/what-organizational-qualities-attract-top-programmers 0 What organizational qualities attract top programmers? [closed] LBushkin 2009-05-29T18:34:21Z 2009-05-29T18:37:46Z <p><strong>What qualities or traits do you think attract talented programmers to a particular company?</strong> Certainly there's compensation, and company image, location, and other factors that you can't always change.</p> <p>As a company, what kind of environment can you foster that will make talented individuals seek you out and want to work for you? What should you say in your postings (that don't sound inflated) to convey this impression?</p> <p>Conversely, as a programmer, what kinds of things should you look for in a potential employers when deciding where to apply? Once invited, what should you be paying attention to in the interview?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/157387/is-the-current-economic-crisis-affecting-your-job-as-software-developer 15 Is the current economic crisis affecting your job as software developer? splattne 2008-10-01T12:41:19Z 2009-05-28T18:56:08Z <p>I would like to know how many software developers are affected by the current (autumn 2008) <strong>financial crisis</strong> in the USA.</p> <p>So please answer my questions:</p> <ul> <li>Are there job cuts in the company you work because of the crisis?</li> <li>Are there any projects cancelled or frozen?</li> <li>How is morale about your colleagues and/or customers?</li> <li>In which sector does you or your company operate?</li> </ul> <p><em>Answers from all around the world are welcome.</em></p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/907119/useful-programming-skill-suites-that-employers-look-for 0 Useful Programming skill suites that employers look for [closed] CrazyJugglerDrummer 2009-05-25T15:16:05Z 2009-05-26T00:23:21Z <p>I've often heard that employers look for certain skill suites as opposed to certain languages. What are some common skill groups to have? PHP MySQL and Apache are a common bundle. Is C# and C++ usually a good combination? What other combinations are often looked for?</p> http://stackoverflow.com/questions/906938/is-it-possible-to-know-too-many-programming-languages 1 Is it possible to know too many programming languages? [closed] CrazyJugglerDrummer 2009-05-25T14:29:40Z 2009-05-25T14:53:32Z <blockquote> <p><strong>Possible Duplicate:</strong><br /> <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/264042/is-it-better-to-master-a-few-programming-languages-than-to-learn-many">Is it better to master a few programming languages than to learn many?</a> </p> </blockquote> <p>I am currently dabbling/planning to learn many aspects of "programming," including C++, C#, java, objective C, PHP, Html, javascript, etc. I've often heard that employers sometimes don't really look for a specific language on a resume, but rather a suite of skills. Knowing lots of languages won't hurt at all, but is there a point where more don't really help much? If one went into web-development, you would use html, javascript, php, java, maybe C# for asp.net. If you went into software design, you would want C++, C#, java, and objective C. I suppose you don't want to be too diverse, resulting in a "jack of all trades master of none" situation. But how many is good?</p> <p>How many different skills will a company usually look for? What skill sets/combinations are good/often useful?</p> <p>To those employed in programming who have knowledge of many languages: Do you actually use all of them?</p>