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[personal profile] chipotle
Today I had a group breakfast with the people I used to work with at Intermedia. Nearly the entire group was given notice two weeks ago, and today was their last day.

It's the sort of thing that should make me feel happy I have a job, but spending four hours this afternoon trying to track down stupid bugs in our code kind of took that edge off. The trouble ticket was on a basic function of the box that, if our testing department actually worked from even a half-assed excuse for a plan, they'd have caught a long time ago. And for some reason the network was incredibly slow today. Not the internet, the LAN. I'm talking "10 minutes for a 256K file transfer between two PCs on the same hub" slow. This turned the most basic testing I was trying to do into exercises in hair-pulling frustration.

But that's not all. The directory I was working in had files with names like "fs.php3" and "fs1.php3", and "file_share_shared_tab.php3" and "file_shared_tab1.php3." It seems "fs1.php3" is a rewritten version of "fs.php3," and isn't being used anymore, but was left in CVS anyway. After deciphering this and cleaning it up, I realized that "file_share_shared_tab1.php3" was not a replacement for "file_share_shared_tab.php3"--it was an almost identical file being used for a different case.

In addition to this, one of our management types was talking with a big potential customer testing our remote monitoring "product." (I put it in quotes because despite the fact that we've installed it at their site and are trying to sell it to them, it has never been put in beta, much less production.) The customer wanted to know how to do something--I'm not sure what--that our GUI wouldn't let them do, so Management Type told them the monitoring system's root password so the customer could proceed to render the system inoperable.

"That's okay," Management Type says. "We can sell them a training class in how to use the back end."

A co-worker who has this job as his first serious one out of college asked me if all places were like this. "Was Intermedia this confused and screwed up?" he asked. I thought for a moment, and then said, "Not really, no."




I bought the scanner I'd written about waffling over. It's a good scanner but I can't say I'm not having second thoughts about the purchase for financial reasons. Between scanner, laptop and the trip to Further Confusion, I've run up about $3200 in debt in two months. That's more money than I have in savings, and for a guy who's afraid that his company might be going away in four months the wisdom is... questionable.

Part of me thinks this makes getting another job--while I still have this one, so it can be a direct transition with no loss of income--more imperative. But I don't want to have an "anywhere but here" attitude.

Of course, the question is whether it's even possible for me to find a job that I'd like and that has a comparable salary to what I'm making now. The opportunities for un-degreed quasi-programmers have become few and far between, and you can generally forget about relocation--increasingly employers aren't even interested in talking to people outside their local area, because they don't feel they need to.

Well, it's been a long day, capping a mostly inspiration-free week. Off to curl up with a book and some coffee before bed, maybe.

Date: 2002-03-01 19:09 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gen.livejournal.com
For some reason the phrase "coffee before bed" sounds horribly wrong ;)

Good luck...

Date: 2002-03-02 00:41 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipuni.livejournal.com
I don't know what to say, other than good luck. You know your strengths, Watts, and your talents. Let me know whether I can help in any way...

Date: 2002-03-02 06:33 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipotle.livejournal.com
Heh. Caffeine doesn't generally keep me awake; in fact, I've cut back on it partially to increase my energy levels during the day--and partially because it seems enough of it makes me jittery, so I get the drawbacks without the benefits. The coffee I have now is decaf, from Dunkin' Donuts.

Date: 2002-03-02 06:44 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipotle.livejournal.com
The problem with that, in my experience, is that even though "you get what you pay for" isn't consistently true, it isn't consistently false, either. You need to do your research. I'd been seriously looking at a ScanJet (I can't remember which model at the moment), but based on user comments and reviews from serious photographers, I went with the Epson 2450 instead, even though the Epson is more expensive and doesn't have an automatic document feeder. Interestingly, the lower-end Epsons have more buttons on them than this one does. Epson's own software does have a "let me do everything for you" automatic mode, but you can switch it to a manual mode which works pretty well.

My frustrations with the scanner so far have come from trying to use third-party slide scanning software which theoretically should give you better results scanning color negatives--they can be told that the film you used is Fuji Sensia 100 or Kodak Portra 160VC or whatever, and adjust their color curves accordingly the way a good photo printer would. Unfortunately, both the solutions I've tried--one that came with the scanner in a "limited bundle" version (the equivalent of Photoshop LE) and another shareware one I'm trying in demo form--are braindead about usability features. They'd probably be worth the pain if I was trying to scan for production of a 16x20 enlargement, but if I ever take a picture that good, I'm not going to end up doing the scanning myself--whoever's doing the enlarging will.

Re: Good luck...

Date: 2002-03-02 06:46 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipotle.livejournal.com
Those are good things to say. Thank you.

I'd say that if you come across a technical writing job or non-Microsoft web development work at your company, let me know, but I think you're thinking about changing career fields in a much more serious jump than I am. :)

Re: Good luck...

Date: 2002-03-02 11:24 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipuni.livejournal.com
Unfortunately, I'm also talking with another friend who does technical writing. Half of his department was laid off.

Roche doesn't do much web development work. (I'm actually doing a small bit now, but web development work for me means JSPs using lots of SQL on very complex databases.)

I'm sorry.

Re: Good luck...

Date: 2002-03-02 20:10 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chipotle.livejournal.com
That's okay--I wasn't being particularly serious. I'm undecided on how much I want to pursue "complex databases" as far as they go, either--it's been pointed out by others that my past experience actually deals a lot with data mining and analysis (although not using JSP like you are). It seems that most analysis positions want experience with Crystal Reports, though, something I've never had any call to use. Like Visual Basic, it's something I'm not sure I actually want to know enough about to get a job with, because it means I'd end up with the kind of job that makes you use Visual Basic or Crystal Reports all the time. :-)

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