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by bitsweet
5420 days ago
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I agree that for most companies, it should only make you a more attractive candidate. On the other hand I have found that learning new tech void of solving a real-world problem can only get you so far. My suggestion is to focus on a real problem and use new technologies to solve it to gain the exposure your looking for. Once you've learned what you want to learn, contact me, we are always looking to hire people that truly love programming. |
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Working on real problems is definitely my intent. I have background in developing shrinkwrap enterprise applications, which I believe is a dead industry going forward. I need to get experience in the way business is done these days, which is web-scale backends dropped right on the internet, and iphone/web front ends. My current job won't get me that experience, so I figured that now is the best time to strike it on my own, and build the entire infrastructure on my own and/or with my other programming friends. I'm treating this as a real project, not just a hobby, and my milestones involve releasing working, quality products, so I agree that solving a real world problem will get me the best experience.
Thanks again for your reply!