You know, not everyone can afford to take the CF Classes. Some of us
"people who work from [their] our 'bedrooms' do so not because we really
want to, but because circumstances have made it so we have to. I live in an
area that is not 'overflowing' with CF opportunities....and because of
personal involvements, I have no wish to move.
I have been working with CF only since version 3.1, I have a college degree
in fine arts and come from a non-programming background. Does this make me
less of a professional? I have worked as a UNIX account
assistant/consultant (a step or so below full UNIX administration - taking
care of those problems that sys admins shouldn't need to worry about) and
as a CF developer. All my computer skills I learned on my own...starting
with Macintosh, working through UNIX, learning Windows 3.1, 95, 98 and NT4,
and Linux (RedHat 6.2).
Some day, I would love to be able to afford to get some 'formalized
training' if only to have that piece of paper that "proves my worth" to
people who, when they don't see a CIS or MIS degree listed in my resume,
dismiss my abilities - to do or to learn.
I proudly call myself a professional.
Judith Taylor
A Freelance 'bedroom' CF Developer
At 12:27 PM 2000-12-27, John Wilker wrote:
>[snip]
>That's a very common theme, in any industry, the professional people who
>have honed their skills taken classes and such have to contend with people
>who work from their bedrooms and call themselves professionals, who flood
>the market and cast a bad light on the industry as a whole.
>
>That being said (just a gripe I've had for a long time :-))
Judith Taylor
ICQ: 67460562
Freelance ColdFusion Developer
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