In my experience, even having non-trivial apps won't get you anywhere. Networking is the only sure fire way to get a position where I am, and a lot of that comes down to luck in finding the right people at the right…
I've got to admit to having something of a knee-jerk reaction to these kinds of articles, but it seems to me that the people most often decrying Javascript as ugly and horrible are the ones trying to follow OOP…
I find it difficult to believe that there is a problem with an ENTIRE generation rather than a problem with hiring practices at the kind of companies that complain about these things.
Isn't this just proving P = NP on a larger scale?
In my experience, even having non-trivial apps won't get you anywhere. Networking is the only sure fire way to get a position where I am, and a lot of that comes down to luck in finding the right people at the right…
I've got to admit to having something of a knee-jerk reaction to these kinds of articles, but it seems to me that the people most often decrying Javascript as ugly and horrible are the ones trying to follow OOP…
I find it difficult to believe that there is a problem with an ENTIRE generation rather than a problem with hiring practices at the kind of companies that complain about these things.
Isn't this just proving P = NP on a larger scale?