Sure sounds a bit dodge, but not having an online footprint is a good strategy for some companies.
This comment has been marked as spam
Sure sounds a bit dodge, but not having an online footprint is a good strategy for some companies.
This comment has been marked as spam
https://youtu.be/XpkNGMSWbYk brings to memory. Not sure why (yes I'm commenting on my comment for dramatic effect)
Thanks for sharing this. I really need to listen to that podcast more.
It really is a good one, entertaining and educational
I'd probably accept the job and get paid to practice in the field while focusing on finding a more permanent position. Nothing is more attractive to employers than someone working in the field they want to hire in.
If it's actual work that suits my experience and not some pitch to buy their product, then it'd be a nice foot in the door. We'll see how this goes.
Try crossposting to https://programming.dev/c/ask_experienced_devs to expand your questions' reach.
Thank you! I knew there was something, but I wasn't sure what.
You can write !ask_experienced_devs@programming.dev which is the Lemmy way of linking to a community
Not exactly. If no one on your instance has subscribed to the community, Lemmy fails to forward you to the community and returns 404. So the Lemmy way of making sure others can get to the community is to provide the URL. Lemmy has a lot of poor design in this way. It will be replaced with something better next year. Also, as a beehaw user you should be familiar broken ! links to communities that are not federated.
Oh, that's correct! Thanks for taking the time to write this clarification. And I'm not sure I've seen broken links via beehaw. I'd have to check again which instances are defederated. I'm using Liftoff and pretty sure it asks me from which instance I want to navigate to a community.
All things programming and coding related. Subcommunity of Technology.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.