We're all in a good position right now.  The economy is beginning a strong
rebound, the pretenders have been weeded out, and a lot of companies are now
beginning to see both the technical AND financial benefits of open-source
technology.  No buying licenses for server systems that provide less
stability and a lot more fluff (draw your own conclusions from that :) ).
Open source systems may require a little more configuration and actual
effort to get off the ground, but if done right they will stay where you put
them instead of crashing back down and validating Newton's law of gravity.

Finding a LAMP job (or something including any of those components) will
become easier as the positions become more plentiful.  Come March you'll see
a noticeable change.  Please mark my words :)

Mike Frazer



"Michael Kimsal" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> Vincent Stoessel wrote:
>
> > On another list that I am on someone made this very bold
> > statement:
> >
> > "I've seen a lot of jobs for ColdFusion & Oracle or MS SQL server
> > experience combinations.  Don't let anyone fool you, PHP/MySQL is not
> > going to land you a job  [;)] "
> >
> > now, as someone that was making avery good living doing Linux based
> > web application development last year and now among the jobless I am
> > beginning
> > to question the validity of having all of my eggs in the LAMP  (linux
> > apache mysql php)
> > basket.  I just recently built a NT4 to do some win based development
> > on. I still have
> > not installed any development enviroment cause it just feels so alien.
> > Has anyone else
> > out there feeling the pressure of going to the win32 side  to pay the
> > bills.
> > Thoughts?
> >
> >
>
>
> This really depends on how you want to work and/or approach 'jobs'.
>
> Do you consider a job a place to go for 40 hours a week and get a
> paycheck?  Or is it more than that?
>
> Being able to positively improve an employer's bottom line is always a
> plus you can bring to any 'job' - you're there to do work and make them
> money too.  If you can help by furthering the use of Linux/PHP/etc due
> to the licensing cost issues, so much the better.
>
> I will never again (bold words I know) *merely* have a job where I'm
> told what to do by someone who doesn't really give a rat's ass about me.
>   :)  (been there done that too many times).  When approaching a job
> now, I would be more proactive about what impact I can make in a
> company, and  the Linux/PHP skills/experience would be a facet of that,
> no doubt.
>
> Sure, there are many people advertising for "ASP" developers, etc.
> Perhaps they're not finding qualified people, and need to advertise?
> I'd say PHP/MYSQL won't land you a job, but neither will CF, or Java, or
> anything else.  You need to sell YOURSELF, and if you sell your ability
> to further a company's objectives (make money) many won't care what you
> use, or at least won't care to the point of restricting you.  There will
> always be shops that are CF only, or MS only, or whatever.  But there's
> a (growing, I think) number of businesses out there that simply need to
> have things work - be the person who helps them achieve their goals, and
> you'll succeed just fine.
>
> Michael Kimsal
> http://www.tapinternet.com/php/
> PHP Training Courses
> 734-480-9961
>



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