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by pjc50 3901 days ago
derekp7's comment is spot on: most workplaces have restrictive IP clauses. I've negotiated mine away so as not to impair spare time projects, but it's been years since I've had the inclination for serious recreational programming. Not that I don't have a couple of ideas. I have seriously considered making a 'portfolio' project if I were to start looking for jobs, although I'm now at the kind of company where I could just sit and wait out the quarter century until I retire if I wanted to. But I just regard that as pushing up the cost and effort involved in jobseeking. My most recent round of jobseeking I relied on finding a non-evil recruiter (HN passim), but I did have one company ask for my github.

TeMPOraL is correct that by "field" I meant "websites" or "ASIC design" or "CAD software" or "embedded". Even at my previous employer (small consultancy), only one of 10 of us had a github with anything on it. Currently I'm in an environment with technologies like MFC and Borland Delphi.

I have >8000 HN karma and >17000 electronics.stackexchange karma. Can I trade these internet points for job offers? Possibly the latter.

I do have a bunch of war stories ("linux upgrade escalates into needing to solder a floppy drive", "three ended ethernet cable", "structured exception handling isn't", "how many managers does it take to change an SSL certificate"), but like most people I'm not Richard Feynmann and don't think they'd be entertaining enough. I'll talk about them in interview if relevant.

(I'm hoping the 99 in your username is a disambiguation number like mine and not an age like some people's!)

1 comments

Please do share those stories. You don't have to be Richard Feynman to write something interesting and entertaining!