Ask HN: Will you help a junior developer in need of short-term employment?
Hi!
My name is James and I'm a student at App Academy in San Francisco. We spend a lot of time working on projects in Ruby, Rails, JavaScript, and Backbone. In less than a month I gained enough skill to build a lite version of Rails' ActiveRecord in a day. We will be finishing up around the middle of next month and then I will be searching for a job as a junior engineer (not that I haven't already started looking).
Here is my problem: I want to stay in San Francisco while I look for a job, but the money is running dry very quickly. Things are more expensive here than I anticipated. If I don't find a way to get some money after I finish my stint at App Academy, I will have to move back to Florida and stay with my mom while I look.
Will you let me work with you for a month or two? Not only will this allow me to stay in the area while I look for work, but I will gain experience and you will get some cheap labor. If you are interested then I invite you to check out my GitHub and StackOverflow accounts or shoot me an email, all of which can be found in my profile. Payment is negotiable. I really just want enough to pay my bills until I search for the right job.
Hope I hear some good news soon!
James
23 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 69.3 ms ] threadside note: the link to your Twitter profile on your site http://www.brwr.org/about is broken.
Also, thanks for the heads up! I fixed the link.
Cheers!
One angle you might consider if you want to end up at NASA or SpaceX is to get a job at a University department or specific research group that has close ties. These groups usually pay pretty well and are often in need of good programming help.
Nobody cares whether you went to App Academy or learned how to code in your mom's garage.
Nobody cares if you have enough skill to rewrite the linux kernel from scratch.
If you want a job, you have to understand hiring managers needs and fears, and most importantly you need to know how to address them.
If you know how to get things done on time, and on budget then you're hirable.
While it shows passion that you built yet-another-asteroids-port it's irrelevant for the most part.
and this is coming from one 25 yo software engineer without a college degree making an income way above average and hardly 2 years of real experience.
His emphasis is on: completion, budget, and timeframe. That's pretty much accurate. Being a good salesman or marketer is nice too. Nothing else matters. Everything else is a distraction or needless worry.
Good luck.
Nowadays telling you the truth is being arrogant and rude, oh well... good luck to you boy, I'm not the one in need for a job.