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by btgeekboy 982 days ago
There are monthly who’s hiring and who wants to be hired threads that seem to fill that niche.
3 comments

Unfortunately my tech stack isn’t very popular with HN, SQL/C#. Maybe it’s time to reskill.
Naah. C# and .NET is solid. I am doubling down on it even for startups. Doing my next product in it.
I think his point is valid though. While I see C# listed all the time on normal job posting sites, on HN it's always the sexy meme languages like Rust and Python.
None of those are “meme” languages.

I appreciate Python started-off as a toy-like language - but its utility as a glue-language for serious number-crunching (see: how almost all ML projects involve Python somehow) and the admirable community surrounding it means its credibility is established. The worst thing anyone can say about Python is that it’s the new VBA.

Rust is the new C++ - Microsoft wouldn’t be investing tens (hundreds?) of millions of dollars in enabling Rust for Windows drivers if it wasn’t serious. (Whereas it’s Zig and Carbon where I have concerns about adoption and longevity: the post-C ecosystem isn’t large enough to sustain three languages that overlap each other so much)

I'm just messing around, I use Python and Rust all the time and I love them. But the larger point is that these are not representative of the average tech job. Most of them are C#, Java, C++, JavaScript, etc. You pretty much only see Rust postings for startups. Python is more common these days, but it was also a HN meme at one point:

http://www.paulgraham.com/pypar.html

> Python started-off as a toy-like language

It did not. It started as a language do system administration for the Amoeba operating system.

Here's part of the README for the first public release (0.9p1, available from python.org):

"This is Python, an extensible interpreted programming language that combines remarkable power with very clear syntax."

"Python can be used instead of shell, Awk or Perl scripts, to write prototypes of real applications, or as an extension language of large systems, you name it."

You are correct.

What I meant was that - in the time after it was created for sysadmin tasks - but before it found it’s new home in data-science - Python was often used as a beginners’ language as a more modern and expressive alternative to BASIC - which led to its “toy” reputation - an undeserved reputation that it has successfully shed.

> Microsoft wouldn’t be investing tens (hundreds?) of millions of dollars in enabling Rust for Windows drivers if it wasn’t serious.

I'm absolutely not arguing against your point about Rust, but I wouldn't take what Microsoft is investing in as a strong signal for anything.

Calling Python a meme language has to be one of the more hilarious things I have read on HN!
Python is the original meme language!
> While I see C# listed all the time on normal job posting sites, on HN it's always the sexy meme languages like Rust and Python.

Now I'm starting to wonder if I'm caught in a job-search bubble.

Can you list a few job posting sites you consider normal?

Have you tried searching Google jobs, Indeed, or...LinkedIn? Your milage may vary, but these are typical results for large tech cities.
I love PHP and I'm unironically doubling down on it.
I have found frameworks such as Laravel to be so extensive and full of add-ons/tools, that I am really enjoying PHP development more than ever! I know PHP gets a lot of hate, but it still is such a powerful language with many great frameworks.
There's lots of good "serious" php out there, the challenge is it has been so accessible there's even more garbage php that's crowded out the go stuff.
Me too. PHP has paid bills so far for me but I am getting more into .NET for the future for various reasons and to be honest, not disappointed so far.
I supported a C#, .NET. SQL Server platform at my previous job. It was rock solid.
I've found it's highly area dependent. Basically the entire midwest is very MS heavy, and C# is still king.
Yeah not popular - it ain't Lisp :).
For me, the biggest challenge is that the job listings on whos hiring are almost never hardware based, so it pretty much completely eliminates it. There are some hardware listings on the ycombinator job search portal, but its pretty minimal and the search tags are kinda meh. Just wish there were more hardware startups in general.
I tend to see the same stuff over and over again. For example one place has been hiring their third engineer for the last 3 years. But I suppose every job site is like this.
If they've been trying to fill a single position for three years, I imagine they've tried other mediums too and the problem isn't just where they're posting the ad.
They aren't actually trying to fill the position, it is just an add masquerading as a role.