I only have warehouse mgmt work experience(which means all IT responsibilities fall on me), but I can’t keep away from various programming projects.

I’ve only dipped into the privacy-sphere of software in the last 2 years, but I’ve found a earnest passion in my pursuits. My obsessiveness has bled into most friends asking why I haven’t pivoted my career, and I don’t have a good answer other than I assumed there’s no money to be made in it since I never finished my college CS degree.

I will code and continue my projects regardless, but was hoping this community could offer some advice or there experiences with similar endeavors. Thanks

  • @just_another_person
    link
    135 months ago

    Do some writeups and post them online, get a public GitHub presence going, and link all those together from some central homepage or LinkedIn or whatever you like. Then try to land some interviews.

      • @just_another_person
        link
        45 months ago

        Well use whatever you want, the point is showing you have code out there, which is inherently NOT a very privacy-centric act.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          35 months ago

          Exactly. Our words matter & the sooner we stop using Google to mean search or MS GitHub to mean code, the sooner we can start shifting the narritive towards entities that better respect our privacy or even gasp self-hosting. Word choice for social change is just as important for spreading the message.

            • caos
              link
              fedilink
              Deutsch
              24 months ago

              github

              I would suggest Codeberg: “Codeberg is a collaboration platform providing Git hosting and services for free and open source software, content and projects”

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              2
              edit-2
              5 months ago

              Cheeky answer would be: CodeForges ∩ {MS GitHub}c (anything but)

              I’ve been primarily using Darcs & a little Pijul, but have been using Codeberg when I need to use Git or just self-hosting via SSH.

            • @just_another_person
              link
              25 months ago

              There are dozens, but none with the same reach of people just poking around to find projects. Some people self-host things.

            • tisktiskOP
              link
              fedilink
              15 months ago

              What are your thoughts on Gitlab, codeberg, gitea or forgejo? I have only sampled the first 3

      • @Evotech
        link
        25 months ago

        You can’t fucking promote yourself in private now can you

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          25 months ago

          You can easily self-host your static landing pages. There are decentralized (& self-hostable) social media options—such as Lemmy that you are on now. There is no need to involve Microsoft, & these big places like Reddit, or whatever, someone will eventually repost your content if it is good.

          Also you code forge itself doesn’t need to be social media web 2.0. You can keep these separate.

          • @Evotech
            link
            2
            edit-2
            5 months ago

            Google and Ms will index it regardless, might aswell use a platform that reqruiters actually use when looking for candidates

            • @[email protected]
              link
              fedilink
              25 months ago

              What does indexing have to do with actually getting to own your data & not participating in corporate-owned social media? If you want to straight hide it all, you would never post it to the internet. Most of us sought the refuge of Lemmy to avoid these platforms & know our post aren’t harvested to profit for a Lemmy IPO.

              Recruiters can find you regardless, but also are not very useful for getting a job versus having a network & the cut they take means you get the shaft if hired thru them too. A platform like LinkedIn is drivel that will absolutely rot your mind so it should be an easy skip.

    • tisktiskOP
      link
      fedilink
      25 months ago

      Solid–I like this course of action. If I have an old Github with long bouts of inactivity, would it be better to build a presence with that account or start anew?

      • @just_another_person
        link
        4
        edit-2
        5 months ago

        You don’t need to even make your activity public, just someplace people can see relevant stuff you’ve been working on.

        Fork some repos, contribute some PRs to some projects you like, and generate some activity if you’d like though. People love to see that.