Originally posted by milanbenes
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Reply to: 1 Month to become c# contractor?
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Previously on "1 Month to become c# contractor?"
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postthe third meaning for MSDN is I've been trying for ages to subtly encourage people to wack it on their cv's in their list of certifications and see what response it brings at interviews
Probably howls of laughter. MSDN doesn't appear to be a level of certification me old bene.
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I've stuck "DimPrawn, certified SAP" on my CV and noone has disagreed with me.
HTH
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the third meaning for MSDN is I've been trying for ages to subtly encourage people to wack it on their cv's in their list of certifications and see what response it brings at interviews
we'll get there in the end someone will do it
Milan 'certified MSDN' Benes.
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postnah Shim,
I mean MSDN
get yourself that baby and they'll be knocking your door down to get you on contracts
Milan 'certified MSDN' Benes.
So MSDN has at least 3 meaning now, of which only two I can remember at the moment!? Maybe the third one is MSDN with a silent D.
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nah Shim,
I mean MSDN
get yourself that baby and they'll be knocking your door down to get you on contracts
Milan 'certified MSDN' Benes.
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Originally posted by VectraMan View Post
Don't know about embedded stuff, but a DOS C program would have started with main, like C programs are meant to, and the command line arguments are passed into that. I've never heard of the 'args' function.
I think if I'd have been interviewing you I wouldn't have thought any less if you'd asked about where to get the args, but if you couldn't work out how to parse it with or without the string functions, I wouldn't have been very impressed.
It was, "sit in a room and write the code to do this".
You don't need to use string routines to parse the buffer. The arg functions do it all for you - it's a three line answer.
tim
tim
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MCSD you mean, Milan - done that but no one seems to be beating a path to my door yet...?
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Originally posted by milanbenes View Postlads,
top tip...
the best way to get into a successfuly .Net C# contracting career is to have the certificates, get the certification, go for the full monty and aim to be a fully certified MSDN and you'll be larfing
Milan.
I can download the certificates just as easily as I can download a degree if I believed that.
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lads,
top tip...
the best way to get into a successfuly .Net C# contracting career is to have the certificates, get the certification, go for the full monty and aim to be a fully certified MSDN and you'll be larfing
Milan.
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Originally posted by VectraMan View PostOddly every non-contractor I've talked to about this has assumed you have one agent that finds you work, I guess like a theatrical agent.
Yeah, many other freelancers must have to sign a contract with the agent binding them for a fixed period or until notice is served. Footballers, writers, actors etc. Though I think those types of agents would be working a bit harder for their 10% when the freelancer needs work.
Maybe that's why Denny kept banging on about agents really being EBs, whatever EB stands for. Employment Broker?
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