My background: I have a 4 year college degree, but not in computer science. I graduated in 2006. I was one of those people who taught themselves BASIC when they were 10 and have always been into programming. For reasons I regret, I decided to take another path after I graduated from high school. I now find myself unemployed with a useless degree in an industry I absolutely hate. Back in 2007, while still working in the industry I now loathe, as a "get back into programming as a hobby" project, I started writing a webapp in PHP. One thing lead to another, and 2 years later and 5 or so complete rewrites later that same project in out in the wild, and has turned into a full blown 30,000LOC GPL project that hundreds of people use, and is quite popular. It has sort of become the OpenOffice to the proverbial MS Word but for the category of software mine does(which is very niche). I also have started one other webapp, which is not as popular, as well as a few Django reusable-apps. All in all I have about 90,000 lines of GPL code out there on GitHub and various other places that I welcome any employer to look over to see what I'm capable of.
For the past few years I've been trying to get a job as a programmer, but I've been having no luck. I'm a linux person through and through, which I thought would help me, but in my area (central Ohio), LITERALLY 100% of all entry level jobs around here either require .NET. I'm in a position here that is the inverse of a lot of entry level people. I have absolutely zero academic qualification, but a buttload of real life stuff.
So anyways, I'm going to be in New York City for a Friday, Saturday, then going back on Sunday. While I'm there I want to do as much as I can in terms of networking. Should I just open up a phone book and look for "software" or "computer job recruiter", then just go down the list and visit each one? Should I even try visiting places on Saturday and Sunday, or will they all mostly be closed?
