I could write a book on that topic. I have around 9-12 clients in MV (and 3
in MS Access) and the 'eat when you work' aspect is very true. I'm making
more $ than when I worked full-time at a 100 user MCD end user 13 years ago.
But I'm also working much harder and more concentratedly being under the
magnifying glass of these many clients. Factoring in paying for my own
health care, zero vacation/sick days and the other financial aspects of it,
it is like two jobs.

I get the jitters when I have one or 2 days in a quarter that i don't have
booked. I can't imagine being a full-time contract programmer (8hrs x 5 days
x 12 weeks) and then bam, cold turkey having to get the next assignment. I
guess my diversity allows me to ebb & flo with the separate biorhythms of my
client's business cycles. Some are up while others are down. It's very busy
when they all are up and I want to hang myself when they all are down. One
would need a strong stomach to endure this environment.

It's like a lot of businesses. You should lot live too large when the times
are high because there will be lean times. Farmers, Ice Cream people, Santa
Claus and others endure this uneven business cycle.

My 1 cent.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Allen E. Elwood" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2004 3:43 PM
Subject: RE: [U2] [UD] running a subroutine


> Mark Wrote:
> Am I the only programmer with multiple environments (clients) that
continues
> to follow in the footsteps of prior sloppy programmers. It appears that
most
> on this forum are full-time programmers for a specific software company or
> large end user. Just curious.
>
> Thanks
>
> My Reply:
>
> I'm a "eat when you work" programmer that takes clients of all sizes and
> types and languages, whenever possible.  Used to work for ROI Systems
before
> Epicor bought them and replaced the talent with trained monkeys (kidding,
> well, somewhat kidding, somewhat serious).  Now I'm working less, enjoying
> it more and making about the same to boot.  Who says you can't have it
> all!!!!
>
> **For those thinking of going independent, please do not be encouraged to
do
> so by this message.  When you're busy, it's great, but much MUCH harder
than
> working for one client/one package.  In addition, the first time you're
> setting there for a month (or two, or three) waiting for the phone that
> never rings can/will reek havoc on your subconscious.  I have been
> incredibly lucky so far, but there is always the nagging doubt in the back
> of my mind, so I never spend a penny unless I absolutely have to.
Sometimes
> the "ploddingly certain but safe future" job has much to offer.  Like you
> can plan vacations, and new purchases, and don't mind spending a lot on a
> nice meal at a restaurant.  All that changes.............
>
> *=aee=*
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