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>You aren't giving examples of 1

OS kernels. Linus used to work for Transmeta (sorry if I misspelled the name) as a chips-and-assembly guy before they got enough charity funding to put him on full-time Linux kernel coding, remember? He started the kernel when he as a Master's student in Finland, too. It took until the late 2000s (after having started in 1992 or so) for the creator of Linux to be put on full-time payroll working on Linux.

>As to 2, If you code, it's a very hot job market out there right now.

It's a very hot job market but very, very specialized. I cannot tell you how many things I've applied to and never heard back, gotten interviews with and been turned down for having the wrong skills (ie: C, C++, Java, Scala instead of Ruby on Rails, HTML+CSS, iPhone, Android), been turned down from for no given reason whatsoever, been turned down from because I had admitted to applying to PhD programs (and that was simply the coolest company I ever loved interviewing with that turned me down like this, and a HN-featured start-up too!), and just generally not had offers forthcoming.

Honest to God, if you'd like to see my resume so you can tell me what the fuck's wrong with me that's creating this pattern, I'll send it to you, have at it.

Oh, and then there's the companies with broken jobs websites. There's nothing I hate more than trying to apply for a job I'd love and finding myself facing a page that says, "Oops, an unexpected error has occurred!"



>some projects cannot be done as day jobs >OS kernels

It's funny you mention that one: My day job for a number of years to was to do linux kernel drivers and other patches.

The fact that Linus didn't work fulltime on Linux seems to contradict your assertion that some projects require full time workers.


>The fact that Linus didn't work fulltime on Linux seems to contradict your assertion that some projects require full time workers.

I didn't make any such assertion. My assertion was that coders need full-time jobs.


>some projects cannot be done as day jobs


> He started the kernel when he as a Master's student in Finland, too.

No. He released Linux in 1991, he received his master degree in 1997.




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