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If you have the means to support yourself (or relatives you can stay with until you get on your feet), then moving to where there are more job opportunities makes a lot of sense.
Don't fret about the 10 month gap on your resume... Apply for junior/entry level positions and explain the 10 month gap. In the meantime, I hope you've been doing *something* with your time? Volunteer work? Anything? Mention that to them when talking about your 10 month gap.
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I've only been learning new things. I put up a couple projects on Github, which is already on my resume. I admittedly haven't tried as hard as I perhaps should have to find volunteer work. I called around to a couple nonprofits and got in contact with professors at my school to see if they knew of anyone who had any volunteer work in the programming field. There's been nothing though.
How do you suggest I look?
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Volunteer at your local old person's home, deliver meals to the homeless, take cancer kids away for a weekend (through your local cancer kids charity of course)... not necessarily programming, just getting out there and contributing to society...
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Right...
And when I'm comparing two resumes, one with the volunteer points, and one without, I'll choose the one without.
If I give a good community citizen a job, they'll stop volunteering.
Won't anyone else think of the old, the homeless or the kids with cancer.
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Interesting... attempted sarcasm I hope.
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I found a lousy job (programming, but not something I would like to do for longer time...) just after my Bachelors degree. Stayed there a bit longer than you - for 3 years. That was my "gain the commercial experience" period.
Then I looked around and in my area there was 6 job adverts. In the area I live now - there was >50.
Moving? Yes. But consider this advice (it was given to me by my fried when I was looking for the change):
0. Never move if you have no prospect for job there.
1. Try to find job in area you have someone (relatives, friends) - they may help you with accommodation, they may know the company, living costs, etc.
2. If this is very distant try to set few interviews in a row. It's hard, but gets you more chances for small cost per interview.
3. Have a backup plan - if you will not find the place to stay, if you (or the company) will change mind in 2-3 months, etc.
4. Never try to move into highest pay (and living cost) area without secured contract and place to stay
But today the world is a bit different. Did you try remote work? Freelancing? Work as subcontractor? For most companies this counts as experience.
You may for example fry hamburgers in the day and customize Joomla modules for someone in the night.
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Now you tell me.
I think I've violated each of those more than once over the past 20+ years.
You'll never get very far if all you do is follow instructions.
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I don't think you'll find anyone that really cares about the difference between a CS and a CIS degree. Academic programming and real-world programming are so far off from each other that your degree usually makes little difference, unless you are going into a really specialized field.
I would focus on building your resume with universal development skills from your current job. Admit that FoxPro is a dead end and you don't want to do any more of that, but focus on difficult problems you solved in spite of it, requirements gathering, integrating your changes into an existing code base, testing, finding problems and clearly communicating them while working to find a solution. Those are the skills that make a good developer and are more important than the language you work with.
When looking at new areas, different cities seem to have a focus on technologies based on the dominant companies in that area. Some have more .net positions, some have more java, etc. Look at that as well. If you land a .net job in a predominantly java area, you'll probably have to move again to find another job.
When interviewing for a job, I tend to memorize syntax and and specific language details because a lot of places, especially for entry level jobs focus on those kinds of questions. I'd also build something (a photo sharing app in the latest MVC framework for example) both to show you are keeping yourself current and to have examples fresh in your mind to talk about.
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hehe... Drive past Yass from time to time when I do the esCarpade...
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And yet it is Burger King that says Have it your way.
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Is that a Coldplay album?
=========================================================
I'm an optoholic - my glass is always half full of vodka.
=========================================================
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It's spam.
What do you get when you cross a joke with a rhetorical question?
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There is a thing you can attach to a standard bicycle to turn it into an exercise (static) bike - any idea what this is called?
(I wish to buy one but am unable to google it without knowing its name)
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A bicycle trainer. My wife has a magnetic one that is supposed to be better than the ones based on air resistance.
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A "hill". You place it under the bike and then pedal until you reach the top.
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Google Fu
"convert bicycle to exercise bike"
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A girl friend, you get her to hold up the back of the bike while you exercise?
As I grow older I've found that pleasing everyone is impossible but pissing everyone off is a piece of cake.
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Yeah, that is similar to when Charlie Brown wants to kick a football...
Soren Madsen
"When you don't know what you're doing it's best to do it quickly" - Jase #DuckDynasty
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Yeah kinda!
As I grow older I've found that pleasing everyone is impossible but pissing everyone off is a piece of cake.
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I think the technical term is a turbo trainer
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You have a choice . You can by a turbo trainer . These have a range of options from simple through to riding against virtual people on your pc with corresponding prices . You can also ride rollers which are simply drums you put your bike on . Both types are more suited to bikes with smooth tyres. But a word of warning - they can get boring and are not to everyones taste
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