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by lsc 5021 days ago
huh. Cool. I was born in Missouri[1] - I didn't stick around too long, though, and don't really remember what it's like. Ticks and hippies, I remember. oh man. or are they chiggers? either way, they creep me out. burrowing insects. guh.

But yeah, the dot-com bubble had a tremendous effect on my life; if I waited four years to get a job, degree or no, it would have been many years before I would have been able to find proper employment. I was incredibly lucky in that I came of age just in time to leverage the low standards of the height of the dot-com boom. (I was then able to gain enough knowledge, experience and connections that I was able to continue working through the crash. I think I can take credit for making good use of the opportunity; but I wouldn't have had the opportunity if I tried to start doing the same thing in 2001 or 2002.)

California really is all about the boom and the bust. But this part of California, specifically, is interesting in it's cultural makeup. I can go to parties where I know one person, and I'll meet three customers. I sell a product targeting highly technical users, and I feel that it's reasonable to advertise in the local Safeway. (I'm not the only one that feels this way; recurrent, a company that refurbishes old Ciscos and other 'enterprise' kit advertises in another local Safeway. I don't know if they started doing it after I did it, or if I just didn't notice them until after I started doing it, but either way, it's not a crazy idea like it would be in Sacramento.)

There certainly are good technical people elsewhere in the world; I didn't mean to say that there aren't, though I can see how my comments could be read that way, but the density is tremendous here, and the expectations really are higher. (note, when you say "a player" it's like saying 'C-level" - you sound like a suit.) From what I've seen, people in the midwest that are really, really good? they can telecommute to here. The standards, from what I've seen, for the telecommute jobs are even higher (well, that or the pay is lower. Sometimes both! companies recognize and exploit the fact that many people would much rather work from home and would much rather live in a place with a lower cost of living.) I'm just saying, the kid who wasn't quite good enough to get a job here? is probably good enough to get a job just about anywhere else. (of course, what you really want are the people that don't get the job, not because they aren't technically good, but because they don't have the social bullshit down or something like that.)

[1]http://eastwind.org/ moving back there would be, perhaps,