When you first hear that you've got an interview, start writing down why you are an awesome candidate. Brain dump all the cool projects you've worked on, even if they are silly. Ask your mom (sometimes she'll remember cool stuff you've done that you've forgotten about). The edit it down to a list of 10-20 things you are really proud of. Now, the day of the interview, pull it out, and voila: instant confidence.
You only have 18 months to account for. I'd say give a brief summary, mentioning some really cool projects you did and the stuff you enjoyed. I'd say 5 minutes, at most (they have your resume, right? They know what you did, they want to see how you express it.) If anything catches their interest, they'll ask for more detail. In fact, if they don't ask for more detail, try a new summary for next time.
I'm looking for someone who was passionate about at least one of their former projects. Positively or negatively (preferably positively).
They're not just interviewing you, you're trying to see if you'd like working their there and they are trying to sell you on the company. I dunno don't what you should ask, what's important to you? Good coffee? Flexible hours? A Wii? Try to frame questions in a non-lazy-bastard way. Instead of, "How many hours do you work?" try, "Can you describe a typical day?" or something. Also, "What do you like best/least about working here?" is a good, general one.
If you could get a raise at your current company, it sounds like you'd stay there. Thus, maybe you could say something about how there wasn't enough opportunity for growth or advancement or whatever.
You can compete by answering questions better than the other candidates at that level. If you've been in a low-level IT position, you may have to just take a non-senior level position, pay some dues, impress your bosses, present that master's degree when you're done with it, and get promoted to the position you really want.
Also, keep in mind, most of the people interviewing you are probably programmers with no social skills, too.
Finally, as a female geek myself, I'd recommend looking nice. Not sexy or slutty or anything, but most of the people interviewing you will probably be male it'll give you an edge, make you memorable, and probably make you feel more confident. Gah, I hate ending with "look pretty." Sorry.
Good luck!
