At the beginning/early part of your career, certifications matter more. If you can prove that you can code in Java or PHP or whatever, you can gain entry to entry level positions. Getting a certification at this stage will reduce the risk to a person who is considering hiring you, because they have no other way of evaluating your resume.
Later, your reputation becomes more important. You want to become known as an expert in... something. Lets say you like Linux... being "the" expert in Linux is hard... lots of competition for that title... instead become the expert on real-time Linux in toy race cars. That's a much smaller pond, and it is easier to be a big fish there. Determine what your interests are early and develop a reputation in that sub-industry. If I am starting a game developing company then I want a game developer, not a generic developer. If I am starting a finance software company, then I want a finance software developer, not a generic developer. Certifications become less important at this stage, when people are much more interested in your domain knowledge and reputation.
Who you know matters more than what you know. But if the people who know you do not respect you, it does not really help. Often, your co-worker today will be your boss at a different company ten years from now. You want to come across as professional and diligent. The business community has great difficulty determining who good programmers are, they will use things like "shows up on time" or "does not smell badly" as a proxy for "proficient in php". Just recognize that it works that way and act accordingly.
Your plan should not just be to get a job, but to find a job in which you will eventually become valuable. Avoid work where you are permanently expendable. And you really should change your nickname ;)
HTH,
-FT