(no wonder i became a flame starter)
>>And especially if what you're working on is something you don't want to be working on. :)
im now a corporate whore... willing to perform any algo-strategy(whether brilliant or goofy)
my jap employers could think of... (the resistance is there, but they're
the ones who give the final word)
>>Especially if you're being paid peanuts.
number one reason here in NEC for the "migration" to other companies/countries, dont let
the "jp" in my email add fool u, im still employed here inthe phils(alhtough it's a japanese firm),
migrating to a another country is not in my plans(yet)... i can still bare it...im working for
a foreign country in my own country... im so lame..
tsk tsk tsk.. is the scene alot better in the government??
Dean Michael C. Berris wrote:
Butt in lang ako... :)
Orlando Andico wrote:
But coding for work, isn't much fun. :P
Especially if you're being paid peanuts. ;) And especially if what you're working on is something you don't want to be working on. :)
Although I get to work on both platforms (Linux and Windows) at the same time (Using Windows on my workstation, while ssh'ed to a test server running RH and coding with vi and g++) I still miss using Linux on the workstation. And I miss configuring services and hardening servers mainly because I'm not authorized and mandated to do that here. :(
But I'm getting a great kick out of fixing broken code, and being successful while doing so. ;)
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