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Did you get lucky and stumble on your ideal job immediately?

Did you find a local small software house and send your CV off? How?

Did you go through graduate recruitment?

Did you start on an internship?


I know this is not programming related and off-topic but it could be an interesting question to those just starting their careers.

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85 Answers

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True story:

I was in my first year of college, spring semester, when my older sister calls me to see if I wanted to apply for a summer internship at this company where she just started working. "Yes, please" I said, hoping to avoid another summer of washing dishes.

She called me back a few days later. "Can you come in for an interview?"

"Sure, when?"

"Tomorrow. 9:00am".

Luckily I didn't have any quizzes or tests the next day, so I hopped into my P.O.S. Nissan Sentra and drove 3 1/2 hours home. When I got there, I realized that the only suit I had was a tan corduroy leisure suit I last wore in 9th grade. The mall was closed, so I had to make do. Fortunately I was the same height as I was in 9th grade, but the trousers were a tight squeeze.

The next morning I showed up for the interview. I was there with a few other applicants, all smartly dressed. I looked like a reject from a Leisure Suit Larry game. We were taken into a room to do a "computer aptitude" test. We were given an hour to complete the test, but I was done in 20 minutes. I spent the next 40 minutes double checking my answers, worrying that I F-ed something up (it couldn't be that easy) and sucking in my gut to keep my pants from bursting.

We returned to the waiting area. Eventually I was ushered to an office to meet with an HR person. We shook hands, and as I went to sit down, I heard a loud ripping sound. "What was that?" the HR woman asks. Nervously I look down. The crotch of my pants was ripped wide open. Front to back.

"I think my pants just ripped."

"Oh? Let me see."

"That's OK."

She leans over her desk and can see the extent of the damage. "I think I have some safety pins here" she said, rummaging through her desk drawer. "Yes, here they are."

I stood up and nervously tried to re-attach my pants as best I could. She offered to help, and was giggling the whole time. We proceeded with the interview, which was only about 15 minutes long. I couldn't wait for it to end so I could high tail it out of there. Only I couldn't leave. That was just round 1. I was slated to interview with two managers in the MIS department, and they wanted to take me out to lunch with a few of their team leads afterwards. Great. Back to the waiting area.

A half hour later someone came down to escort me up to MIS. "So, you must be the flasher". We walked from the waiting area to the other side of the building, through the crowded atrium, up two flights of stairs, to the manager's office. It seemed that everyone we passed on the way was giggling and snickering. I was introduced to the manager, and sat down to begin the interview. "RIP!". One of the safety pins just ripped through the fabric. He laughs. I see my application on his desk. At the top, next to my name, is written "Flash".

I go through interview after interview, with managers and leads, for what seemed like hours. Finally, the interviews are over, and I head back to the first manager's office. "So, we'd like to take you out to lunch. What would you like?"

"Thanks, but I'm not really hungry," I said.

"Nonsense, it's the least we can do for all your trouble coming in on such short notice." I could see there was no getting out of it. It seemed like the whole MIS department was congregating in the halls, waiting for us to go to lunch. We piled into a few cars and went to a local restaurant. Everyone was really nice, but I knew they were laughing at me. People tried to make small talk with me, but all I could keep thinking of was to get the hell out of there. After lunch I had to return to HR, again.

"Thanks for coming in today. We'll contact you next week with our decision."

Finally, I could leave! I drove home as fast as I could and changed into clothes that fit. The tan corduroy leisure suit went right in the trash. I drove back to school, throughly exhausted and dejected. There was no way I would get the job. It was looking like another summer of washing dishes.

I got a call in the middle of the next week from the woman in HR. "Congratulations! We'd like to offer you one of our summer intern positions."

"Wow! Really?" I said. "I must have done pretty well on that aptitude test."

"Yes, you did, but we really liked the way you handled yourself under pressure. If that had happened to me, I would have left the interview. You must have been so embarrassed." I accepted the offer, and we agreed I'd start the Monday after the semester ended. "We're looking forward to seeing you again, but you may want to buy a new suit before you start."

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Well written story, thanks Patrick. – Simucal Feb 12 at 10:25
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Damn.. In the end, the pants became your greatest asset in gaining the job. ^_^ – DyreSchlock Aug 10 at 19:38
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Standing out and being memorable are the hardest parts of any interview process. Looks like you found a novel solution. – outis Aug 10 at 21:39
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Sounds somewhat similar to the job interview scene in "The Pursuit of Happyness" movie, where he has to interview wearing painter's clothes. – Aaron F. Aug 10 at 21:58
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A more interesting anecdote than how I got my first programming job is how a friend of mine got his first programming job.

Back when Quake 2 was at the height of its popularity, my friend and I were constantly playing on our local ISP's Quake 2 server. One day the CTO happened to be playing on the server as well. He and my friend got to talking and the CTO learned that my friend liked to hack on Linux servers in his spare time. So, the CTO decided to invite him in for an interview. My friend was given a job initially hacking on some Perl code (he was 15 at the time) and he's been working there ever since. It's been almost 13 years now and he pretty much runs the show.

Definitely an interesting way to start a career.

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I was in the Marine Corps as an Aviation Ground Support Equipment Electrician. I had decided to make a career of the USMC. I had no computer experience (1986) when they introduced a dumb terminal system into our shop for the purpose of keeping track of parts and labor. They old "paper documents" were gone.

I purchased a Tandy 1000SX from Radio Shack and used it to maintain a Preventative Maintenance spreadsheet for our office. I took two college classes at night, "Intro to Computers" and "Basic Computer Programming". I still have the book from that class... Structured BASIC for the IBM PC with Business Applications by James Payne ISBN 0-87150-990-3.

Programming came natural to me. Structured thought, stepwise refinement, logical progression... I think it helped that I was good at Algebra in high school. After BASIC my instructor, Steve Payne, told me I had to move on to a compiled language from an interpreted language. My choices were C++ or Pascal. One look at the source code and I chose Pascal.

I found out that the Marine Corps had programmer jobs and I signed up to take the Electronic Data Processing test. I needed a raw score of 60. The instructor laughed at me... he said he had been giving this test for three years and no one had passed. To his amazement I scored a 68 and three months later (Jan 1987) I was off to COBOL school in Quantico VA. I've been a programmer ever since.

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In the early days I made a voluntary website for my home town. It got featured in the local newspaper, after which I got a phone call from a company with my first programing job. The rest is history!

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I got into coding in a bit of a different way then most.

I took a course for learning how to code back when the bubble burst in dotcom, after nearly being laid off at the call centre I was working at. So after graduating from there and finding that no-one was hiring junior developers, I decided to offer my services directly to potential clients and go into business for myself.

After telling this to a friend of mine, and having him sign on as my front end designer, and having his girlfriend's father be our first client, it began a three year business venture that even through a recession, kept us well payed enough to not starve. It was good times. Would probably still be doing that if he hadn't received a promotion with the bank he was working with.

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Internship at the Big Redmond machine writing test scripts for Access.

When my mentor told me how much time I had saved him after he reviewed the scripts, it was my first realization that I might actually have a clue now and then on what I was doing.

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I definately don't have any of the interesting stories posted above, but the strategy I used 3 years ago is what I tell everyone else looking for a job.

When I was finishing my senior year, I filled out all my Monster, Dice, Hotjobs, etc profiles very nicely, and got my resume as polished as one can get.

Then I clicked "programming", and applied to EVERYTHING.

*click, ok, click ok, click ok" I probably applied to 2-300 jobs in the span of about 6 weeks. I got probably 10-15 calls a day, and Most of them were completely unrelated and I was unqualified for. A simple apology and a "have a nice day" did the job just fine.

I've been with the job I'm at currently for 2.5 years and love it. If I didn't use the strategy, I never would have gotten it. The HR lady wrote 2-5 years experience on the job request; but in her words, "it was just a suggestion". I'm sure this discouraged a lot of greenhorn programmers and were put off by the requirements.

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I got drafted. I was a mainframe console operator in civilian life. When I got drafted and sent to my first duty station (an arsenal in Illinois), they didn't need operators so they sent me to programming school. When I got back from the school, I was placed in a programming pool - my first programming job.

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I hacked Internet dialup account in my school and used it for about 2 months from home. Then i was caught and paid for this Internet usage. Then my school IT teacher recommended me to his friend in IT company (web-studio) and told this story to her. And she hired me :)

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That was back in '88. I was enrolled in a computer school, and to obtain the diploma, we also had to have a work term of a duration of at least two months (could be more.) We could either let the school find us something, or find something on our own. Back then my sister worked for a large employer, so I asked her if they had summer student jobs (we were in May.) Summer hirings were already over, but there was this one department that had been unable to find a student with the necessary qualifications (or so I was told.)

On the Wednesday I get a call from a woman (that department's LAN admin) and for a few minutes she asks me a few questions (a lot of "do you know this or that", and I remember a good number of answers being "no". :)) I don't remember how long this lasted, but it couldn't have been more than 10 minutes. At some point she said "can you start Monday?", which really took me by surprise. We're Wednesday. I'm in school, in the middle of completing one of the courses. I said I needed to clear this with the school and would call her back.

This job was 3-months and paid, while jobs available through the school were usually NOT paid and 2 months in length, so a good number of my friends were envious. Anyway, I ended up starting on that Monday.

A little over 21 years later I still work for the same employer. See, at the end of my work term, they wouldn't let me leave. lol (The computer school I was in had to close, so I was paperless for a while. Eventually I took a leave without pay and went to university to obtain a B.Sc. in Computer Science.)

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Depends on your definition of job. When I was in high school I co-founded a media company. (Legitimately, that is. We had a few servers servers, were invited to shows, movies, etc.) Some people don't consider that a "real" job, so I'll also offer you this.

Between my junior and senior years of high school I worked at a startup in downtown Bellevue as an web developer / intern. My dad knew the CEO, and I sent them my resume. I went in for an interview one morning and I met with their web development team. They asked me a lot of regex questions and it turned out that the guy I would be working with had started out programming in Perl like I had. So I worked there for the summer.

(I had actually applied for the Microsoft High School Internship program earlier in the year, but they took six months to get back to me and sent me a form-letter rejection which didn't even know which grade I was in, which isn't that hard to write into a letter when the program only accepted two grade levels. As it turned out they didn't actually accept any juniors that year, they only accepted seniors who had worked there the year prior. Still upset about that - good going, Microsoft.)

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During my freshman year in engineering, I pestered the professor of the introductory fortran course with questions so throughly that he passed me off to a prof who gave me a summer job. The task was writing an input routine for a program that found eigenvalues and eigenvectors of a 500th order matrix on a machine with about 32 k of memory. Turns out that code still exists in some form all these decades later, and is a teeny part of the system that helped decide where Argonne National Labs would be located. (I didn't discover the longevity of the code until recently, but that was a bit of a thrill.)

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I started computing quite late by most standards. My parents got a computer for their business in the early nineties, but I only played Ultima and X-Wing commander. When I was 15, my parents thought it was a good idea to get me a computer to do my homework, oddly enough, as I was barely passing most subjects. I didn't do anymore homework than I did and eventually flunked out of the private highschool I was at. I did eventually get bored of playing counter-strike, and started doing something somewhat productive. I started playing around with Linux and programming. When my dad realized that I had a server rack in my closet (router, firewall, dns, smtp, http etc) he made a few phone calls, and got me an internship. I started out writing a bugtracker for this company in ASP (VBS) with Access, then jumped onto working on ad-hoc tools for the application they were developing. It came to an abrupt end when they got me working on crystal reports and were starting to hesitate to pay me, I bailed. I got screwed money wise, but I got 4 months of experience, had great coworkers to harasss and ask questions ranging from the inane to existential and knew I wanted to stick to programming. I have, and i'm happy about it :)

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Did you start with internships?

Apart from some basic SQL queries (picked up from my limited MySQL experience at the time) I ran to help my manager at an electronics store estimate profit gain from merging stock my first programming job was an internship. Well - it was my industrial placement year that was an optional part of my BSc between the 2nd and final years but it was paid (and the highest paid placement available).

Did you get lucky and stumble on your ideal job immediately?

I don't like to put it down to luck only. The placement was with a British governmental department and was renowned as one of the best placements available, particularly for someone interested in programming. To ensure they got good students every year they were usually one of the first to hire since it gives them the best choice.

I went along for the interview in front of 3 people who asked questions ranging from business to technical. I sat an hour-long technical test which included questions on some technology that was not expected of a student to know but I later found out I scored the highest anyone had ever scored on the test (it was basically to filter out those who were clearly not programming inclined, I saw some awful answers when I marked the exams the following year).

Did you find a local small software house and send your CV off? How?

Did you go through graduate recruitment?

During my placement year with the government I met and worked with a group of guys who had recently formed their own start-up. I guess I must have done something right during my year because they offered me work during my final year of University and I came back as an employee shortly after I graduated. I have been happily working there since (1-2 years now) and would also thoroughly recommend working for a start-up for someone beginning their career. It can be quite hard work but you definitely feel like you are contributing and it's exciting to see the company grow.

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Technically, it's for my second programming job, since there's no interesting story with the first.

I had been laid off from my first programming job, was weeks away from losing our house, and was desperate to find any job. Along with the desperation was a lot of nervousness and a tendency to forget the answers to easy questions, like "Name as many SQL keywords as you can."

I didn't forget my ability to read upside down, and my future boss had her answer key laid out in front of her across the table, so with my head in my hand like I was in deep thought, I read every keyword off her sheet, upside down, from 7 feet away, in random order.

It turned out I was by far the best candidate, and I probably would've gotten the job had I just said "SELECT," and they learned to cover their answer sheets for future interviews.

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I graduated with a EE degree in 1994, which wasn't a hot time for hardware engineers (only 3 of 45 classmates had job before graduation). Took a job at Kinko's doing graphic design while looking for an engineering job and moved to Silicon Valley just to be closer to where the job might be.

One day at the mighty Westech job fair in Santa Clara (seriously this was the start of the internet boom and it was packed with employers), I handed my resume in for a small software house, right at the same time that some guy next to me was doing the same thing. The QA manager looked at both of us and said, "Let's just do a 2 for 1 right!" and interviewed both of us simultaneously right there and then! Being a hardware guy interviewing for a software job, I basically got my ass handed to me by the guy on my left.

But then I got the callback and went in for the interview and I was a QA engineer in no time. About three months later, I started programming an automated test framework for the company; the company's only software was developed on NeXTStep which had no off-the-shelf test automation tools.

And that's how I got my first programming job ...

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A job fair was organized at the university I was studying at, about two weeks before I graduated. You could send your CV to the organizers, which would then be sent to the companies who were at the fair. I got invitations from about 12 different companies to come and see them for a short interview at the fair.

At the booth of my future first employer there was a guy who I knew, he was a few years older than me and had been the supervisor for a course that I did in my first year at the university. He recognized me, we had a short conversation, and he invited me to come for a job interview the following week.

At the job interview I got a programming test with questions about programming in C. I made the test, and then the interviewer took my answers and went away for a while. Maybe 15 or 20 minutes later he came back, asking me "Where did you learn C so well?!". I got the job.

Later the interviewer discovered that he left a paper with the answers in the room while I was doing the test. I swear I didn't see that paper while I was doing the test!

The first three or four years I programmed in C and C++, and since about 1999 I've been programming mainly in Java.

I'm no longer at my first employer, I started as an independent consultant in January 2009.

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Does selling TI-85 BASIC programs in high school physics class count? We would collect data the first half of a class and then analyze it the second. Showing all of our work, of course. Well I found it far easier to write a BASIC program that gave answers for all the intermediate steps then actually computing it by hand. I didn't make a habit of it, but on at least one occasion I accepted financial compensation for transfering my program to a friends calculator.

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I would say shoot for internships. I interned at JPMorgan, then another bank the next summer that led to a job. You applied for like 20 places and only one responded. You gotta realize even if your qualifications are great somebody has to read them.

Carpet bomb companies with internship applications. You just gotta get that first "real job" and then the experience on your resume will make it 10x easier to get the next one.

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A political payoff to my dad. Me: 16 year old BASIC hacker. Job requirements: C, Unix, SQL experience. Alternatively, know someone that wants to score some points with your father. Learned a lot.

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There are loads of pants stories. My Evil Empire interview began with me arriving, hanging up my black pleated pants, and realizing I'd packed black pleated shorts. Same problem, mall didn't open before interview, so I did it in jeans.

Also heard of a woman whose skirt fell off right in the middle of an interview. She grabbed it and ran out.

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My interviewer was a cute woman ! With big Heart !

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I did it the traditional way.

I've chatted on an online forum for years. It started as the online component of Australia's first performance computing for end users magazine (Atomic: Maximum Powered Computing) but took on a life of its own... The sort of place where you have someone you've never met ask if they can stay at your house and you say yes based on their online interactions.

I was in my final year of uni, working for a Delicatessan, which was kinda fun, and I kinda hated. I decided that I'd see if there was anywhere that was OK with hiring a part-timer with a schedule liable to change every 6 months. Most of the job ads I saw online and in the paper wanted way more experience then I had. I'd ask regardless, but got totally ignored or polite rejection letters after several months... Apparently places don't believe that people who are at uni have the ability to learn.

So I posted in the General board of thee aforementioned forums, figuring I might be able to work for one of the small business owners there on COD work, or possibly as an IT tech. As it happened, one of the people there worked for a law firm who needed a developer to create precedents for them to use. Their current precedents were all created by secretaries and, needless to say, were a mess.

After the most lighthearted, formal interview I've ever had, my manager asked me to show up next week on Monday. I had no set hours, no minimum work and was paid casual rates. It was exactly what I wanted.

'Course, then the manager forgot to tell anyone I had been employed except my co-worker who set it all up. So that embarassed the HR manager no end.

Interestingly, my current, awesome job came partly because I had experience with precedent development and one of the products we develop was used by that firm.

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I got my first programming job nearly 3 years after graduating. I got my degree in 1996, in Chemical Engineering and got a job on the graduate program of an engineering company. About 2 years in I realised that if I had to work in the chemical engineering industry for the next 40 or so years I would probably kill myself long before retirement. This was in 1998, a little before the dot com boom really took off in the UK. I spent the next 6 months scouring the few job websites that existed and sending my CV off to any agent or job opening I could find that was even slightly likely to be interested in recent graduates with little on-paper experience. It helped a bit that I'd built a few automated spreadsheets and access databases using VBA for my first job (which is how I realised I was good at this programming stuff and that I enjoyed it far more than the rest of my job).

I passed EDS's graduate recruitment program but they kept me hanging for weeks with 'we want to hire you but we've oversubscribed our graduate intake' (which I later realised probably meant they were waiting until they could ship me off to some unsuspecting client for an outrageous daily rate while paying me peanuts).

Losing patience with EDS I kept looking until I got a call from an agent who had received my CV and wanted to put me in front of a client that (I found out later) was very difficult to recruit for. The agent was very helpful and met me before putting me forward (again I realised later that this was so they could try and 'prime' me for the interview). They warned me that I would have to make a presentation to about 8 people about a technical subject. I was so happy to have an interview I didn't care (apparently quite a few applicants un-applied after they heard about the presentation part of the interview).

So the interview paperwork arrived and the scenario was 'We've got an application built using Access and we need to scale it up to a global userbase. How should we do it?'. I spent the weekend surfing the internet, discovered Oracle's website (I'd not heard of Oracle before this), did a bunch of reading and put together a presentation about how I'd port the database to Oracle etc etc. The company was a MS/SQL Server shop so naturally one of the questions they asked was 'Why Oracle and not SQL Server?'. I told them that Oracle happened to be the first RDBMS that I found during my research and that I was basically winging the whole thing. Which was obvious from my CV so I had no qualms about stating my lack of experience.

Anyway some combination of honesty, courage and trying to solve the problem got me the job. I was told later that even though my inexperience was very obvious I stood out by simply addressing the problem I was given. Apparently quite a few applicants used it as an opportunity to push their own favourite technology or area of expertise and didn't actually address the requirements, or perhaps tried to read too much into it and be too clever.

I was there for a 12 months, learned tons and had a (mostly) great time. After a year it was time to move on but once I had that first 'proper' software job on my CV it got much easier.

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I had studied programming at university, but couldn't find a programming job. After several months I managed to get hired as a draftsman (had some experience from high school) and managed to wiggle my way into a programming job at the same company because they only had one programmer and he was working part-time remotely from the other side of the country while finishing his bachelor's degree.

The job was far from ideal. When I left, it was partly sad to leave certain things unfinished, but glad to be out of there.

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Did you get lucky and stumble on your ideal job immediately?

Yes, my job is awesome. I work for a small startup, which I highly recommend. You have to work your ass off, but (at least in my case) it's self-assigned work and really rewarding. This is my first job out of college and I manage entire sections of our codebase on my own, do user support, write documentation, do outreach-y things, and write tests (ugh... but it's like eating your veggies, it's good for you). Other than the testing, it's so much fun.

Did you find a local small software house and send your CV off? How?

I actually went through a recruiter. I posted my resume on dice.com and a zillion dumb recruiters left messages for me about job opportunities where my cell phone was from, not where I was. However, one recruiter left a detailed message and named some interesting companies. I called him back and he set up a bunch of interviews for me.

I ended up getting job offers from a couple different companies. The one that I liked the best was a bit risky, it was a startup and I would be the 2nd "real" (non-founder) employee. I decided to go for it, and I'm so glad I did.

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I was in the Army (in 1970) and there was a computer on our base. The programmer rotated home and there was no one to take his place so I got roped in to it. After a few months I decided that I liked it, so I went to school on the GI Bill after I got out of the service. I graduated from college in 1974 and I have been programming ever since except for a wrong turn into management in 1985. By 1987 I was back into programming, this time in a UNIX environment, I do not ever want to do anything else.

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I had just graduated with a degree in Creative Writing (Poetry), and was working IT at the university. Granted, I'm not exactly Microsoft's wet dream, but I think I have a talant for this sort of thing (Compsci and I just didn't get along).

Two days after the iPhone was jailbroken, I got fedup with not having an Instant messenger client and decided to take what Cocoa I knew (which was embarrassing, in comparison to what I know now) and wrote ApolloIM, the very first instant messenger for the iPhone. It taught me a lot - more or less everything I missed in the remaining years of my abandoned Compsci major. A few months later, I was bored and looking at Craig's List LA (for no reason at all), and I saw an ad for iPhone developers. They called me up and hired me on 24 hours notice, and it's become the greatest job ever.

The startup life is a hard one - tough hours, unorthodox thinking helps and that's what I'm good at, and very patient coworkers got me feeling like I'm a professional at this point.

While all that is a nice story, I say take it with a grain of salt. Serendipity doesn't happen every day - get an internship, but most importantly, look at open source projects. Get your code out there and get people using it, and that'll get you motivated enough to get a programming job - and maybe if you're good / lucky enough, it'll happen.

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Grumman Aerospace came to my college campus to recruit (1983). It was the first interview I ever had. A week later, I got a letter saying I was hired. The rest, as we say, is history.

I was doing avionic software in AYK-14 assembly language for missile guidance.

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I started programming a website for a potential client 5 years ago. I knew little of programming (it was procedural php, yuk), but the client was impressed. He paid me well, and I'm still working with him now. Since then, I've worked in several companies as consultant, and today I got a 'lead developer' offering at a rate I couldn't dream of one year ago. I'm finally getting close to the position of 'work 3 months, leisure 9 months'. Harvest time.

By the way: One piece of advice: don't assume it's normal to become a "loan slave". Almost all IT jobs need independent professionals sometimes. It creates confidence, determination, passion, and a lot of free time. Be who you are, take the risk!

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