Working on my tricky Curriculum Vitae, any advice? - Off-topic

As the holidays are over, they barely have any work left for me at my current job and I must start looking for another job to make some money for college.
I've made a CV before, but it wasn't exactly a great one and I've gained lots of new experiences since then.
I have some experience in application development, I've messed with servers, Wordpress, PHPbb boards, Linux and I'm learning C++, but I don't know if it's a good idea to include all of this in a CV for a college job (probably in some store or something). That's the tricky part: you don't need to be a rocket scientist to operate a cash register, but on the other hand, it's a considerable experience.
I'm pretty sure you guys have useful advice to share and I'd love to hear your thoughts.

that was quite useful knowledge
will help me in future

Related

an advice to the future

Hi there all the comunity
this is my second post but was meant to be first.. never mind.
For first I want to thank you for this forum i have found, loots of usefull info all over. well... straight to the point... After a small reading around the forum i decided to ask here.
Actually im an electrotechnician (specialized secondary school) with some experiences (about 5 years working with analog devices and little with digital) and i decided to go to college (electronic engineering) to keep me in this industry in further life. There is my question: If i'd like to stay working around mobile devices such as pda's or so what should i concentrate on at the college? I also want to do some self-studyind and spend my time right way till i finish the course. (4 years front of me). thank you for the answers.
Enginering
PROGRAMING?
SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT...
SPECILIZATIONS AND SO MUCH TUTO COURSES ABOUT NEW WAYS TO MAKE IT... NET VISUAL AND SO MUCH MORE. I GUESS
erm.. Que PPC i think you forgot to turn your Caps Off
Pick up a couple of basic programming courses, if you're into that. C++, Java, Linux, Windows...stuff like that. The market is moving towards the mobile phone area, and that'll demand a lot of software work for applications and the like. Programmers make big money too and are adored on XDA :].
lukekirstein, thats all i needed to hear. thanx fort that.

Anyone here in the I.T Field?

Hey guys, I just had some quick questions for anyone here that may be in the I.T field..
Im 23 years old and ive decided to go back to school.. so currently im working on an Associates Degree in I.T and trying to get my certs out of the way (CCENT, CCNA and CompTIA A+) But im not going to stop here... computers are a HUGE interest of mine.. I plan to continue on for a bachelors degree in I.T and possibly even a masters after that..
Basically for anyone in the field, do you like what you do? Do you find it interesting? How is the starting pay rate? I live near a major U.S City (NYC) And dont mind commuting back and fourth into the city for work... I was HOPING to start out making 50+ a year with just my associates and certs.. is this being unreasonable?? Someone told me that I.T professionals only start at like 30 grand a year which seems pretty scary to me
My ultimate goal is to be a Database Administrator and run / manage a companys servers / network, however I dont expect that with an Associates, most likely a bachelors+ would be needed??
Basically if anyone has any info about the field that theyd like to share with me, im open ears becaue im extremely interested in this career and any insight would be appreciated.. thank you
I would love to give you some advice, but I mainly work in the S.H.I.T fields
Scent phrum mie fone!
I have a Bachelor of Engineering in IT. There's such a vast range of areas in IT, that there's always something different or exciting, depending on what you like.
But regarding salaries...doesn't matter what qualifications you have, it's experience that people want, so yes you'll start pretty low if its your first real job in IT, unless you get lucky.
I have done quite a bit of studying for the career because I want to get into it myself. But usually the minimum requirement is a bachelors degree in that field. The starting salary for where I live is 80k which is a lot more than 30k if you ask me haha It's a wide career of choice and you'll always be needed somewhere. Just make sure you keep learning.
the_scotsman said:
(snip)
But regarding salaries...doesn't matter what qualifications you have, it's experience that people want, so yes you'll start pretty low if its your first real job in IT, unless you get lucky.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1
In my experience, it is better to know that most sysadmins don't document their fixes because IT support is very often undermanned. That's why my boss was very glad that I have some IT background (for some basic troubleshooting at least) and can take quite a load off my company's IT department (combination of cluelessness, lack of cutting edge knowledge AND turnaround time).
Another thing you might find frustrating is that users=stupid. Unless they are smart, then they try to be too smart and you'd get more interesting cases
Last but not least:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/odds/bofh/
As somebody who has been in IT for 13 years. (Holly Crap~!) I would suggest getting a job now. Doesn't matter where who why what and when you need experience. When I hire people I first look at their resume and look for progression. If they are just starting out that isn't as big of an issue. I then look at the descriptions of their jobs, I and most other Managers or Directors are fairly good at detecting BS at least in my experience. I then look at certifications, and this goes back to progression. If you got an A+, and a bunch of other certs in 2000, that isn't nearly as appealing as somebody who shows progression but doesn't have as many certs. Last I look at what if any degree's they have. In the interview I require people to take a simulated test, if it is a basic tech, then its a basic test. For a Network Admin they better be able to console into a switch and find and fix a vlan problem. I don't know how common this is in the industry but it blows me away how many people appear to have the skills required for a position and then fail to do the most basic of tasks for the job they are applying for. This is where experience is KEY! For the most part I don't value a degree, some do but I find that most of the skills required to be successful come from personality and experience.
Also there are TONS of different categories/specialties in IT, Most DBA's don't actually know much about infrastructure, etc.
And then beyond all that different industries have different demands for IT. For instance I worked in the dot com era eCommerce industry for a while, then in the construction (Architectural), and now in healthcare. If you have experience in a particular industry outside of IT I would suggest trying to get into IT in that industry.
I hope all of this helps.
PS For a specialization I recommend virtualization. I had to take my Resume down from careerbuilder because of all the people contacting me based on my VMware / HyperV Experience. I like my job now and don't plan on moving but there seems to be a high demand for that now.
job experience and certs and probably in that order. Degree's in IT are about as useful as coasters, job experience and core competency is what matters and you get almost none of that from a degree
Software developer here with a BENG in Computer Communications - Degree + experience = the big bucks but still depends what area you go into, currently looking at £30k + (UK) with a 2:1 and 3+ years experience for programming but it's only going up from here.
Love what I do gets stressful at times but you just need to find an area you enjoy and stick with it.
sakai4eva said:
+1
Another thing you might find frustrating is that users=stupid. Unless they are smart, then they try to be too smart and you'd get more interesting cases
]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm a sysadmin. This comment is my bread and butter for advice
I'm a software developer in england. Primarily self taught and no real qualifications to speak of.
Experience trumps qualifications in my experience.

Computer Science Degree! Help!

Hi there, I was wondering if anyone here may have done a computer science degree and was able to help me answer a couple of questions:
1. Does it matter which university I go to? ( I'm thinking UCL, would that mean I would get paid more than going to like Nottingham?)
2. How is the job market?
3. Whats the best job that I can train to do to give me the highest salary?
4. Can anyone get me some work experience for a couple days or a week, as I would really like to see If I could handle it and if I like it?
Thanks
PS: I love computers and fascinated about developing programs like software engineering, but I have other interests to within the industry and open to any go jobs which offer a good salary of about 50k year.
Some universities have a better reputation than others but in my experience all the course will teach the same fundamentals. You'll have module choices etc so you can choose a specific direction in final year. Most graduates will go into a graduate development job. The direction you take from there will depends on the company you chose. I did Electronic and Software Engineering and it was mostly java. When I graduated and started work, I was doing a lot of web work, JavaScript etc. Now I'm shifting to a java development role.
I can only speak for Northern Ireland, but the job market is pretty good here for experienced developers.
Salary wise, most grad jobs will be similar. You won't go in to a "best salary" job right away, it will be dependant on the experience you gain. Its hard to pick a best area. Mobile development is pretty big now and a lot of web app development for stuff in the cloud. Pretty much everything I do is for web applications or web services.
Oh and good luck on getting a job after the degree is completed on 50k a year. You have virtually nil chance of that in the UK.

Advice

Hello guys, recently I have joined the community , im very pleased to find a place like this to get as many useful information as possible, thanks to all for that, although I really need some piece of advice from a professional developers around the world, if it is not a place for that I will remove my post asap. Im living in UK at the moment and this year i will apply to university for a computer science degree , which i believe is the best possible option for me. I am constantly improving my english to pass an ielts exam and basically I have almost a year from now on till I start my course, during that time I am willing to develop my skillset to become a part time developer which I see is the best option so far to support myself during my studies in UK (no , I dont want to work as a bartender, I already did that...) . I would like to get an advice from a professional, what kind of industry should i get myself into, in the list below a have some specifications that needs to be checked:
1. Part time work
2. Easiest to get into the industry
3. A year would be enough to get the right skill set.
At the moment im learning web development at udemy.com, currently in the javascript section. I was wondering if I am going the right way to get what I need, because I still have enough time to switch to app development, c# or cloud etc. Which area of work would give me the most when I will be looking for a part time job? I dont need a lot of money, minimum salary of part time is more than enough for me, please give a future student an advice, I would appreciate any kind of information, opinions, cause god damn I am lost at the moment... Thank you for reading this and as I have said before I am constantly improving my english so please do not judge me bad if your see a grammar error or anything else. Thank you so much for your time.
Sent from my HTC_A9u using Tapatalk
How About Free Knowledge!
I can't yet posts links ... however.. copy & paste this in your browser and take out the @ symbol
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) offers Open Courseware.. in other words, free knowledge.
Their supply of courses span a vast number of subject matter and it is all free. I am quite certain that you can find a number of courses in regard to the subject you mention in your OP and likely then some.
Heres the link (remove the @ symbol): https:/@/ocw.mit.edu/courses/
...and good luck

Introduction

Hey guys I am from the U.S out of Michigan and I am pretty new to this stuff so I hope I can get accurate knowledge and helpful information on accomplishing everything I would like to accomplish from being a little bit more involved in the community. I like haging multiple rooted android devices to play around with, although I currently just have my primary device atm. I also want to get into the Cybersecurity field, so I am just beginning to learn programming languages, starting out with Python, and have plans for obtaining a MicroBachelor's degree on the subject of Cybersecurity.
n1ghtmar3s0nwax said:
Hey guys I am from the U.S out of Michigan and I am pretty new to this stuff so I hope I can get accurate knowledge and helpful information on accomplishing everything I would like to accomplish from being a little bit more involved in the community. I like haging multiple rooted android devices to play around with, although I currently just have my primary device atm. I also want to get into the Cybersecurity field, so I am just beginning to learn programming languages, starting out with Python, and have plans for obtaining a MicroBachelor's degree on the subject of Cybersecurity.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Welcome to the forums!,
Youll find great stuff all around, enjoy!

Categories

Resources