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by amyjess 3660 days ago
I've lived my entire life in Dallas, and I can confirm as well.

I was unemployed from February 2010 to March 2012 because of the recession. What I'd observed was that if you had skills that were in high demand in enterprise environments, like Java with J2EE/Spring/Hibernate or the .NET stack, then you'd land on your feet, but if you specialized in something less common, then you were out of luck. My experience was all specialized in Linux platform and Python development, and I only had a little over 2.5 years (since I graduated college in 2007, right before the recession hit), which meant I was in the worst case scenario.

It was tough. I applied for job after job after job, was rejected constantly, had a few interviews that never panned out. It took a terrible toll on my mental health. Eventually, I found a very young startup that needed a Linux platform person and couldn't afford someone with a lot of experience, which was what saved me from homelessness. I spent a few years there, picked up a lot more experience with Linux platform work and Python, got some Java under my belt as well, and eventually moved on to greener pastures (because they were still a skeleton-crew startup that couldn't afford to pay much when I left in late 2014).

Still, there's a lot of shortsightedness here. I'm just coming out of another, much shorter (2.5 months), unemployment spell, and I learned that I shouldn't even bother applying to Java positions anymore. My Java experience is all core Java, with no J2EE/Spring/Hibernate/other web frameworks. I spent quite a bit of time doing Java for both the above mentioned startup and the company I went to after there (hell, I was the one who put together materials educating my entire company on Java 8), but almost nobody counts it as valid experience because it doesn't involve a big web framework.

It's aggravating, really. For most companies here, it's "big enterprisey web frameworks or bust", and if you didn't get into that straight out of college, you're screwed because no employer's going to bother training you later on, because now you're considered locked into some other development track. I _want_ to broaden my experience so a few years from now, I can tell employers I've got some of everything under my belt, but here, once you're considered locked into something, that's it.