Post #26,575
1/30/02 4:06:45 PM
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It just keeps getting better
I scored an 84% on a Visual BASIC test, and I am now offered a $60K a year job as a contract programmer. They don't have any clients for me to work at yet, so they haven't hired me yet, but it looks good.
But now what do I do with the $9/hr Helpdesk job? Should I take the training and wait to get a client to work at, or see if I can schedule the Helpdesk job around the contract job? The Helpdesk job is second shift and weekends. I'd work from 1pm or 3:30pm to 10pm or 12am, about 8 hours a day.
I know for sure that I got the Helpdesk job, but the contract job depends on if the clients want me working for them. I'd have to go on client interviews.
"Will code Visual BASIC for cash."
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Post #26,580
1/30/02 4:19:47 PM
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WooHoo!
I'd take the helpdesk job because that's a guaranteed gig. If something comes up on the contracting side, then go for it. Remember to keep things like benefits in mind..does your wife have health insurance for the family? that can give you a lot more flexibility :)
Good show on the test!
----- Steve
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Post #26,583
1/30/02 4:23:28 PM
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Insurance
she has added me to her insurance at her work. I have health coverage. if I decide to get anything else, I can get it as supplimental. It might have different co-pays or cover different medicine?
"Will code Visual BASIC for cash."
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Post #26,593
1/30/02 5:47:57 PM
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HEY NORM!!!!!
You have a help desk job. You Might get hired as a contractor. take the help desk job because it sounds like they want you to pay for training then hire out BE SCAM AWARE!!!! thanx, bill
My Dreams aren't as empty as my conscience seems to be
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Post #26,652
1/31/02 11:55:57 AM
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Contact job
they don't have any client yet that I can work at, but if I sign a contact with them now they will look for clients. There was no talk about me paying for training, as I already have the skills they need. After all, I did pass that VB test. But they do offer tuition reembusment, and do have a software library that I can check out after working for them for six months or more.
Yes there are scams out there, like those "Work from home" jobs that have people stuffing envolopes, or sending out emails, to get more customers. basically that is a spam or MLM job.
"Will code Visual BASIC for cash."
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Post #26,657
1/31/02 12:49:46 PM
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Dont sign a contract until a job is offered to you
If you sign and someone else wants to hire you a non compete clause in that cntract will not allow you to go elsewhere. Tell them to come up with a client and you will be happy to sign with them. thanx, bill
My Dreams aren't as empty as my conscience seems to be
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Post #26,706
1/31/02 3:27:09 PM
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I am reading the contract the emailed me
it doesn't appear to have a non-compete clause in it, and it says I can quit when I want to. I'll have to read it over again to be sure. But I will take your advice. Thanks.
"Will code Visual BASIC for cash."
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Post #26,653
1/31/02 12:04:01 PM
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Cool.
Cautious fellow that I am, I'd grab the helpdesk job and hold on tight. The other gig sounds better, but also awfully speculative. What if it falls through? Day-to-day survival is the first priority. I say see if you can schedule the contracting interviews around the job you actually have.
Second to the above consideration, I'd never turn down an opportunity for new training and experience. But if you really want to get ahead, you might want to pursue training apart from either of these jobs. Whatever you can get on the job, take it, but don't settle for it. There's lots of stuff that you can teach yourself at home, if your spouse is sufficiently understanding. There are certifications you can pursue in your spare time, unless of course you're trying to work two full-time jobs. Maybe do a small open source project just for bragging rights.
Stuff like help desk and Visual Basic are things I'd look at as strictly temp jobs. A way to get through the current crisis. But long term, you need a broad range of skills. And these days, working close to the hardware is good. There are military contracts using COTS technology, and some of that hardware needs software. You don't even need to enlist.
[link|http://www.angelfire.com/ca3/marlowe/index.html|http://www.angelfir...e/index.html] Sometimes "tolerance" is just a word for not dealing with things.
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Post #26,826
2/1/02 8:53:41 AM
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"contract work"
That sounds awfully speculative. But 60K a year does sound good.
If you can handle the stress of a helpdesk, take it. If you can handle the stress of a contract job, take it. :=( Been there, done that, helpdesk stuff is not major fun.
"Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it." -- Donald Knuth
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Post #27,247
2/4/02 4:04:33 PM
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I refer to it as the "HellDesk."
"He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you." - Friedrich Nietzsche
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Post #27,252
2/4/02 4:35:26 PM
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Beats working on a maggot farm.
Peter Shill For Hire [link|http://www.kuro5hin.org|There is no K5 Cabal]
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Post #27,269
2/4/02 6:01:37 PM
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Good news, but bad news.
The Helpdesk job is for a company that the contracting company also has as a client. So the contracting company cannot hire me unless I quit the helpdesk job or it ends. Grrr! Can't win! They told me to call back when the job is over.
At least I will get some decent training out of it.
"Will code Visual BASIC for cash."
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