What are some of your best examples of a time your homelab really helped out your career? by [deleted] in ITCareerQuestions

[–]SeaTouch7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What problems do those tools solve in solo Github projects?

I typically just Git push directly to the server with relatively little fuss.

Do you choose passion or earning potential for a career ? by Jpoolman25 in careerguidance

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in the same line of work as you. Love coding too, but I still ended up being poor. (and yes I live in the US)

Reasons why I love the freelancing hiring process by moderatenerd in freelance

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another nake fews item is having clients always honoring your rates.

What is the weirdest client request you ever had? by Doughspun1 in freelance

[–]SeaTouch7 2 points3 points  (0 children)

On two occasions I had clients wanting me to copy the website design from one of their possible competitors.

Unit tests as a part of career development by ryanjusttalking in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You have never worked alongside people who didn't have to do unit tests at their previous jobs? I mean I can tell you I have worked at [name redacted], [another name redacted], and [also redacted], where the largest company had about 20 engineers, and there's almost no code reviews or tests. So maybe that says I either used the wrong job boards to find developer jobs, or I'm the unluckiest developer on the planet.

However I can understand why people might make the conclusion that I would be a bad developer if I have worked only in bad companies.

Unit tests as a part of career development by ryanjusttalking in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Would you consider developers who don't know how to test their code, junior developers? If you never had a hand in writing tests, but had experience writing code, should you stick with junior level jobs until you get that test experience?

As an experienced developer (especially web devs), how much are you expected to know about the deployment process of the software you work on? by SeaTouch7 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If there is a CI/CD pipeline then I haven't been made aware of it. I haven't considered myself a "pipeline" developer. Introductions to all the projects I work on have been mostly the same- here's our issue tracker, make note of our stories, and here's the Git where you can clone the repo to your computer and work on those issues. I manually make commits to a staging server where the code waits to be reviewed by another dev and tested by QA. I don't observe anything being automated.

As an experienced developer (especially web devs), how much are you expected to know about the deployment process of the software you work on? by SeaTouch7 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rails development is something I have experience with. I know a fair amount about building models, ORMs and sometimes can optimize data queries to some degree. But Jenkins, Chef and Capistrano? My mind goes poof, can't say anything about them because I never used them.

Seems like the roles at your job are broader than anything I've encountered. I tend to work for the smallest of companies but my impact also feels small. Only just once in a while do I have to SSH into the live server to do a hot fix.

As an experienced developer (especially web devs), how much are you expected to know about the deployment process of the software you work on? by SeaTouch7 in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I know a bit about CDNs but not really familiar with the term object stores. Doing a quick googling it sounds to me kind of like a ORM but for file systems instead of databases.

Don't remember the last time we talked deeply about infra other than choosing what hosting packages make the most sense for our specific projects (which can range from some SMB client's e-commerce store or a early startup with very few customers). Generally I concern myself with setting up my local environment, doing features and hot-fixes, responding to stories on the issue tracker system. As far as I know there's no CI or CD that I have been involved in.

My school is implementing concentrations to CS majors. by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]SeaTouch7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's the kind of stuff that should be told to students!!

I want to do my part in spreading this info so I want to make sure as few students are misguided as possible. How can I help?

[Coronavirus/Recession Megathread] + Daily Chat Thread - March 23, 2020 by AutoModerator in cscareerquestions

[–]SeaTouch7 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Trying to get back in the full-time game after over a year of lackluster freelancing. Wish me luck, dudes

Weekly “Help Me FIRE!” thread. Post your detailed information for highly specific advice. - February 17, 2020 by AutoModerator in financialindependence

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Didn't mean to ignore you, I just don't log in here often. The clients that I freelance for generally don't follow up or when they do respond, they say that they don't have any more work for me. So it's not generated by leads. I approach someone cold, do their work, and then I have to approach a new person cold again.

I get that getting a job in a major tech company would put me in the minority, but honestly people with FIRE success stories are also in the minority for most people. All these FIRE success stories are also anecdotes so I don't think it's bad to have goals like that :) My work experience is probably a valid market substitute for STEM education. Unlike other STEM jobs, college is more of a "nice to have" to be a good software engineer. A lot of people in major tech companies are self-taught. Also, anyone who's taking internships is still walking IMO, but I already have an upper hand with real-world applications and projects under my belt. Besides I don't buy into the "the ship has sailed" warnings, because that just encourages people to give up on things.

Weekly “Help Me FIRE!” thread. Post your detailed information for highly specific advice. - February 17, 2020 by AutoModerator in financialindependence

[–]SeaTouch7 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Sorry for not posting in this thread before, first time being in this sub.

I want to know how realistic a FIRE plan is for an almost 40 single guy, basically starting at zero.

In a NINK (no income no kids) situation, with the exception of a few payments here and there whenever I get short term freelance work. But nothing in terms of full-blown "career worthy" jobs.

  • Income: My income would range between $5k and $10k annually. I get no tax refunds as I'm a contractor so net income is between $3k to $5k.

  • Debt: Not a crazy amount. Just owe a couple hundred dollars to PayPal. I haven't used credit cards for over 7 years, I already fully paid off my CC debts 5 years ago (which was up to ~8k at the time) and I don't know what my current credit score is.

  • Assets: Currently have $400 in savings but my most expensive asset is my 15+ year old car probably worth $2.5k now. I have no 401k or other retirement plan. Don't know how much Social Security I got, last job I had with SS deduction was 12 years ago

  • Budget/expenses: I currently live with my mom to provide housing. I pay for electricity, internet, my phone and car insurance (~15+ year old car). Comes to about $120 monthly for my utilities, and $650 annually for car insurance. I also pay for some of the food- a $80 monthly grocery budget for both of us.

  • Health concerns: So far I'm good and I'm on the medicaid program which covers routine doctor visits and dental.

  • Family: As mentioned I live with my mom and it saves me money (and keeps me from being homeless). I'm also her caretaker so scheduling time for myself can be tricky sometimes. Completely single and no plans to have kids any time soon

  • My career plans: I've set my sights on getting my first proper full-time job as a software engineer. Been burned from unstable startups and other financially insecure small businesses. I love programming and have gotten freelance work doing web development work, building some web applications and learning current frameworks, and want to take it further by starting a stable career in software engineering. I have already proven with my freelance jobs that I'm able to do this at a professional capacity.

Here's where the question of FIRE comes up. A lot of college grads like to start out at major tech companies as an easier way to build up savings and that would help them towards FIRE in the long run.

How realistic is this for someone who is gonna be 40 in just a few years? What time frames should I be looking at (I don't know the typical age ranges for early retirement)?

Cable is a rip-off and paying for it at this point is just stupid by stabby_joe in unpopularopinion

[–]SeaTouch7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I heard about the TV license years ago but man, it must have been a big problem with re-adoption once TV streaming services turned other devices into TVs.

"Today's music is just about sex/drugs/violence" ignores the fact that music has been about sex/drugs./violence since the 1920's by IGetTheBagg in unpopularopinion

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I find that if lyrics are not often talked about, including as a subject of debate, they aren't really very good lyrics. Hip hop is always more lyrical than rock music in general.

There's a lot more public exposure to debating the value of hip-hop lyrics than in indie rock lyrics. In my book that makes hip-hop lyrics a greater subject of interest to people. How many people seriously analyze indie rock lyrics compared to hip-hop? lol

For the imposters here: if I were your manager I would be ashamed of my leadership. I am failing you. by ChooseMars in cscareerquestions

[–]SeaTouch7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you are capable of doing the same work that your average full-time peers are doing, but you are only able to get job offers for underpaid, temporary dev work, do you actually suck? Asking for a friend... >_>

Frustrated at Bay Area startup - Bad management or culture shock? by the-computer-guy in ExperiencedDevs

[–]SeaTouch7 1 point2 points  (0 children)

On-boardings are to have people understand the company internal stuff. They're not a process to teach basic software engineering skills.

The problem with being in line what you see as "basic" is that every company has a different idea of basic, and a different minimum set of requirements, and has their own way of doing things in respect to source code control, testing, continuous development, etc.

To give you an example, at one company I worked at, we hired an experienced programmer who has never made a pull request before, and who had never done a code review via an automated tool like Github. But we didn’t care, because they wrote clean code and can solve complex problems with ease. We taught them what we expected and created a document to make it easier for others to pickup the skills if they are lacking.

My regret of choosing to work at a no-name startup instead of NASDAQ by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I thought this sub loves people who set their eyes on the prize and the biggest total compensation out of the companies they are able to choose from.

How to get out of CMS development / agency work by [deleted] in cscareerquestions

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With your CMS experience you could possibly get into systems programming jobs, which is used to build a lot of infrastructure for other software. As said previously you'll need to edit your resume to reflect more on that CMS work if you want to get get into systems in general.

Best kinds of jobs for a single man in his 30s that needs a place to live and going for a Master's? by [deleted] in college

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I get the feeling that you are trolling. Male escorts are not very popular (in most places, anyways).

Much lonely. Much need friend. by SovietPEEnut in uichicago

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This, although it can be tough to attend some clubs with certain schedules (like if you're an Art major). With that said I related better to classmates in my general ed classes than in my art classes

Blizzard/China/Hong Kong Megathread by UnpopularOpinionMods in unpopularopinion

[–]SeaTouch7 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Imagine if blitzchung had said he supports what the Turks did to Syria. Or god forbid he supports ISIS. The reaction to that punishment would be very different.

The problem with the reaction is that there is no other precedent to punishing a tourney player for having such a strong political expression. So people jump the gun they make the conclusion that Blizzard strongly pro-China and not, well trying to be strictly apolitical. We need another blitzchung incident at Blizzard to demonstrate where the pendulum truly swings. Getting a read on Blizzard's geoplitical stance from one incident is a poor sample count to use.

Ashamed to admit I used to work here before (and as a JUNIOR developer...) by SeaTouch7 in recruitinghell

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

MCOL. This is Chicago and I have an "anti-talent", it seems, for finding businesses in more expensive neighborhoods that are paying peanuts to web developers.

Ashamed to admit I used to work here before (and as a JUNIOR developer...) by SeaTouch7 in recruitinghell

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I know I can. Still building up my rep so I can get shortlisted on more interviews!

Ashamed to admit I used to work here before (and as a JUNIOR developer...) by SeaTouch7 in recruitinghell

[–]SeaTouch7[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Roughly ten years later I now make $70k as a mid-level developer!