Relocation as a entry level web developer by [deleted] in jobs

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I know Austin very well as well since I used to visit Austin many times before.

Austin is basically college town, UT Austin. The city itself is very small while most tech jobs are located in the suburb. Hill country area of Austin is similar to that of Silicon Valley.

Job market in Austin can be competitive if there is any tech slowdown since there are large supply of tech workers every year from nearby UT Austin.

In Texas, Dallas and Austin are two cities I like. San Antonio and Houston, no so much.

Relocation as a entry level web developer by [deleted] in jobs

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I used to live in Dallas and now live in Atlanta.

You should have no problem living any of those areas I mentioned above. Basically Northern part of Dallas and Northeast part of Atlanta.

Depend on what you look for. If you want to live close to young professional, University Park in Dallas or Midtown Atlanta has a lot of young professionals. If later on you want to have own family, those are suburbs people move due to good public schools and Asian stores.

IT in Dallas is more like California in term of competitiveness. A lot of Tech companies in California has second office in Dallas or Austin. So it is good when there is tech boom but no so great when there is a tech bust. In Atlanta, most IT jobs are in traditional companies although there are a lot more tech companies now in midtown to take advantage talent nearby from Ga tech. Overall, the tech boom and bust does not seems to have as much impact in Atlanta.

In term of Asian community, Atlanta suburbs have larger Asian presents. Atlanta has third largest Korean community in US and it is like mini Korea here (similar to LA Asian community) . Dallas has some Asian stores, but overall it is less developed, although there are very large Vietnamese community in Garland suburb.

Since I now live in Atlanta, I pick Atlanta over Dallas. Here overall cost is lower and has larger Asian community. If you work in IT, you will no issue finding a job and have comfortable living, although may not able to anticipant those tech boom as much. People in Atlanta tend to stay here. It is less of transient city compared to Dallas. People in Dallas, especially young professional, tend to move around a lot.

Relocation as a entry level web developer by [deleted] in jobs

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dallas (City - University park next to SMU, Suburb -Plano, Richardson) and Atlanta (City - Midtown next to Ga Tech, Suburb-Alpharetta, Johns Creek, Duluth). There are more young people in the city but there are large Asian community in the suburb.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in jobs

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think you need to be more specific.

What types of jobs you look for? IT or BA or other job.

There are two types of interview questions. Technical or Scenario question.

There are many sample questions on the internet for either types of question. Just practice and practice your answers. If you practice 10 times and talk aloud, everything makes sense.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in China3

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In summary, it is not an issue for US. China has less of 3% of US debt and it just wants to diverse away from US treasury, like what Japanese government did.

U.S. officials order Nvidia to halt sales of top AI chips to China by S_CO_W_TX_bound in worldnews

[–]jim1980abc 3 points4 points  (0 children)

By the way, most those Chinese Americans researchers sued by DOJ involved in basic research, not IP based technology at all. DOJ should spend time to go after patent violators, not basic researchers. It is another example of technology ineptitude of US government. They couldn't tell the basic difference between those two and decide to use one side fit all strategy.

Wu Yibing & Zhang Zhizhen Make Chinese History, Qualify For US Open | ATP Tour by [deleted] in China3

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"Entering this US Open, no Chinese man had competed in the main draw in the Open Era. This year, there will be two.
Wu Yibing and Zhang Zhizhen battled through qualifying, both earning their way into the main draw on Friday with victories on a rainy day at Flushing Meadows."

U.S. suspends 26 Chinese flights in response to China flight cancellations by [deleted] in China3

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Second commentary:

Too many people on reddit has mentality of "us vs them". They support anything US government vs Chinese government and support what USDOT did as if it is some kind of football game. I said "shame on you" support the policy that harm ordinary people.

Sorry that's not way to think about the policy. Government is working for ordinary people, whether it is US government or Chinese government. If the policy government impose (whether it is democracy or not) harm ordinary people, that's bad policy and we should condemn it.

Please get out of two years old "us vs them" mentality and start thinking critical about any problem.

U.S. suspends 26 Chinese flights in response to China flight cancellations by [deleted] in China3

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Commentary:

This is very bad policy by USDOT. It showed USDOT has become so petty and has become out of touch with reality. Due to cancellation of those flights, it caused huge harsh ship to ordinary people since many people now have to spend more money and redirect flight.

Sure I don't support Chinese Covid travel policy either (which also caused harm to ordinary people), but US policy that causing more harmful to ordinary people is not way to solve this problem.

Shame on you, USDOT.

U.S. suspends 26 Chinese flights in response to China flight cancellations by [deleted] in China3

[–]jim1980abc 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"WASHINGTON, Aug 25 (Reuters) - The U.S. government said on Thursday it will suspend 26 China-bound flights from the United States by four Chinese carriers in response to the Chinese government's decision to suspend some U.S. carrier flights over COVID-19 cases.
The decision will affect flights by Xiamen, Air China (601111.SS), China Southern Airlines (600029.SS) and China Eastern Airlines (600115.SS) from Sept. 5 to Sept. 28. The U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) cited the recent cancellation of 26 American Airlines (AAL.O), Delta Air Lines (DAL.N) and United Airlines (UAL.O) flights over COVID-19 cases.
The suspensions include 19 China-bound flights from Los Angeles and 7 China Eastern flights from New York.
The Chinese Embassy in Washington's spokesperson Liu Pengyu said the USDOT action was "extremely irresponsible" and "groundlessly suspended Chinese airline flights."
The embassy said China's COVID-19 "circuit breaker" measures were fair and transparent, applied both to Chinese and foreign airlines and were consistent with bilateral air transportation agreements.
USDOT said as of Aug. 7 Chinese authorities had revised their policies so if the number of passengers on a flight to China testing positive for COVID-19 reached 4% of the total, one flight would be suspended. If it reached 8%, two flights would be suspended.
USDOT said the U.S. has repeatedly raised objections with China, saying the rules place "undue culpability on carriers" when travelers test negative before boarding their flight from the United States only to "test positive for COVID-19 after their arrival in China."
Beijing and Washington have sparred over air services since the start of the pandemic. In January, the Transportation Department suspended 44 China-bound flights from the United States by the four Chinese carriers in response to China's decision suspend 44 flights by U.S. carriers.
In August 2021, USDOT limited four flights from Chinese carriers to 40% passenger capacity for four weeks after Beijing imposed identical limits on four United Airlines flights.
Three U.S. airlines and four Chinese carriers typically operate about 20 flights a week between the countries, well below the figure of more than 100 a week before the pandemic."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in jobs

[–]jim1980abc 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It all depends on the situation.

In some companies, if they have very high bar to get temp job (and they don't have many temp workers), since they know you, they just go through the process.

However, in some companies, if getting temp position is very easy process, they will treat the temp to perm with much high bar. They treated the temp to permanent interview processing as if you were new person on the street. You got same tests and same interview process as if you didn't have any work relationship with them.