No Job
Now I know what an insult is.
Ever since I was five, I've been on the computer. I started by playing with software. I configured all parts of the computer to make it unfit for normal use. Then, I put it back. I repeated it enough times I didn't have to look at the screen. I filled my hard drive with tools I could use to take apart more of my computer. The text editor, the compiler, the kernel. I programmed new parts to replace the old ones. I read technical documents and the FCCs. I could build a computer out of sand with the proper equipment. I could make a web browser for it, but it would be simple. It would run on THUMB architecture. The OS would be less than ten thousand lines of code. Any more, and a feature would be removed. It would be so consistant that the kernel would be written in the same language the shell would interpret. It would have exactly what it needed.
I couldn't get a helpdesk job. Maybe I should start a buisiness or something.
11 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 35.5 ms ] threadIf you want to do something meaningful with computers, you've probably got a better crack at it as a fireman (you'll spend most of your time just waiting around thanks to sprinkler systems) than as a tech support guy (who will be too drained from the dumpster fire we call our industry to do any productive work at the end of the day).
If you don't have experience, you need to find a way to prove that you hold the skill that you do. You'll be competing against other candidates, try to figure out how their CVs look like and try to be like them. Complaining won't solve anything.
On a practical note, in situations like yours, trying to get hired by meeting people personally and establishing rapport beforehand is your best bet.
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Check out this newly-formed community of 1100+ 'CS Career Hackers' willing to help each other get a (better) job: https://discord.gg/rGwhXJv