Regd change of technology
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
I have been trying for a decade to get a decent Java job. Java == Awesome. If you know c# you should know Java. Java can even pay more! Once you become a seasoned developer with more than five years under your belt the ability and the history of learning new languages can be a positive influence on your resume. Personally, I don't advertise specific languages on my resume; I only mention them on specific projects. [Although, I do have them in the buzzword list for scan happies] On the more cynical side:
prst123 wrote:
that would be a drastic tech change for me.
If this is true you should change professions.
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
-
I have been trying for a decade to get a decent Java job. Java == Awesome. If you know c# you should know Java. Java can even pay more! Once you become a seasoned developer with more than five years under your belt the ability and the history of learning new languages can be a positive influence on your resume. Personally, I don't advertise specific languages on my resume; I only mention them on specific projects. [Although, I do have them in the buzzword list for scan happies] On the more cynical side:
prst123 wrote:
that would be a drastic tech change for me.
If this is true you should change professions.
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
Thanks a ton , Ennis. java does have enormous prospects. no doubt about that. but i wanted to be an expert in a perticular technology, rather than become a jack of all trades. some of my friends said , it depends on ur future goal ; what u want to become 10 years down the line. i for one is interested in remaining a developer, rather than become a manager. well, i will try working on java. if i find it too difficult, or uninteresting, i will think if changing job. thanks again regds prash
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
prst123 wrote:
i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#.
Why doesn't your site reflect this knowledge? All I see is javascripts and applets. Maybe I'm out of line, and I apologize if I am, but your post smells of a cheap attempt to start a .Net versus Java flame.
"I'm happier than a tornado in a trailer park"--Cars
-
I have been trying for a decade to get a decent Java job. Java == Awesome. If you know c# you should know Java. Java can even pay more! Once you become a seasoned developer with more than five years under your belt the ability and the history of learning new languages can be a positive influence on your resume. Personally, I don't advertise specific languages on my resume; I only mention them on specific projects. [Although, I do have them in the buzzword list for scan happies] On the more cynical side:
prst123 wrote:
that would be a drastic tech change for me.
If this is true you should change professions.
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:
Java == Awesome
Seeing that you're comparing the two and not equating; I'm sure we can all agree that test would result to
false
. ;PJeremy Falcon
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
If you do work with Java for the next 6 months, there's no saying you can't keep on using .NET for home projects to stay fresh. Also, from employer's standpoints. Having .NET (or whatever) experience in the past (even 6 months ago) is better than no experience. If you can prove to them you know your stuff, I don't think it'll be much of a problem for you.
-
prst123 wrote:
i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#.
Why doesn't your site reflect this knowledge? All I see is javascripts and applets. Maybe I'm out of line, and I apologize if I am, but your post smells of a cheap attempt to start a .Net versus Java flame.
"I'm happier than a tornado in a trailer park"--Cars
-
Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:
Java == Awesome
Seeing that you're comparing the two and not equating; I'm sure we can all agree that test would result to
false
. ;PJeremy Falcon
I post without thinking. I actualy wrote it the first time as Java = Awesome but thats not right because I cannot assign Awesome to Java. The comparison is false as you pointed out. Maybe I need another method. Java >= Awesome ???
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
-
I post without thinking. I actualy wrote it the first time as Java = Awesome but thats not right because I cannot assign Awesome to Java. The comparison is false as you pointed out. Maybe I need another method. Java >= Awesome ???
A man said to the universe: "Sir I exist!" "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation." -- Stephen Crane
Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:
Java = Awesome but thats not right because I cannot assign Awesome to Java
You can if they are castable types. Although, for the life of my I can't see how Awesome could ever fit into Java. I better stop now. :laugh:
Jeremy Falcon
-
sorry dude, i was v. clear in my post. i was jus asking for a frank opinion about tech change. u dont hav to take it as java or dn, it can be anything (mainframes, c etc)
btw, i have a small request also : speak plain english, no sms here... it's all matter of respect to people talking to/with you...
TOXCCT >>> GEII power
[VisualCalc 3.0 updated ][Flags Beginner's Guide new! ]
-
If you do work with Java for the next 6 months, there's no saying you can't keep on using .NET for home projects to stay fresh. Also, from employer's standpoints. Having .NET (or whatever) experience in the past (even 6 months ago) is better than no experience. If you can prove to them you know your stuff, I don't think it'll be much of a problem for you.
There are a lot of companies where you will have to show evidence for corporate experience (as opposed to home projects) if you have technology X on your CV.
Cheers, Vikram.
"whoever I am, I'm not other people" - Corinna John.
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
prst123 wrote:
any suggestions are welcome
- Capitalize the first words in a sentence, proper nouns, and the personal pronoun 'I'.
- Punctuate contractions using an apostrophe ("can't" for example).
- Use complete English words; you're posting on a web forum, not instant messaging.
Software Zen:
delete this;
-
prst123 wrote:
any suggestions are welcome
- Capitalize the first words in a sentence, proper nouns, and the personal pronoun 'I'.
- Punctuate contractions using an apostrophe ("can't" for example).
- Use complete English words; you're posting on a web forum, not instant messaging.
Software Zen:
delete this;
Gary R. Wheeler wrote:
* Capitalize the first words in a sentence, proper nouns, and the personal pronoun 'I'. * Punctuate contractions using an apostrophe ("can't" for example). * Use complete English words; you're posting on a web forum, not instant messaging.
I second this. I've already got a poor impression of you (i.e. prst123) just because of these reasons. You should try to act like a professional at all times.
-
There are a lot of companies where you will have to show evidence for corporate experience (as opposed to home projects) if you have technology X on your CV.
Cheers, Vikram.
"whoever I am, I'm not other people" - Corinna John.
Vikram A Punathambekar wrote:
There are a lot of companies where you will have to show evidence for corporate experience
I was under the impression he had corporate .NET experience and his job was looking to use Java for the next 6 months.
Jeremy Falcon
-
hi all, i have a query regd change of technology. hope u ppl will guide me properly. i am a dot net programmer. i have been in the industry fr 2+ years now, and all through i have been working on asp.net with c#. i changed my job 3 months back . my new company now doesnt have any dot net projects (they dont expect to get one in the next 6 months). so they are training me on java now and will put me on a java project soon. I wish to know if it would be good for me to stay on here and work on java. that would be a drastic tech change for me. i am looking at the future aspect. ia m pretty comfortable with c# , but cant say i will be comfy with java. another concern is that it wont be financially rewarding to my career , as i would be considered as fresher in java field and it wont add to my dot net exp as well. ( in case in need to shift after next 6 months time) any suggestions are welcome thanks in advance
-
prst123 wrote:
hope u ppl will guide me properly.
My advice, invest in a full size keyboard.
I'd love to help, but unfortunatley I have prior commitments monitoring the length of my grass. :Andrew Bleakley:
Thanks Gary for the useful tips regarding punctuation. Yes, I do have corporate expereince in .Net, not home projects. I was lucky to be working on asp.net all through these 2 years ,since my first job; unlike most other developers who r not so lucky to be working on the same tech. I can work on java for the next 6 months or even an year, not an issue. but will that help me in gaining dotnet knowledge, or leveraging on my existing knowledge. I have worked only on c# web applications. There are people who can master multiple technologies, but iam not a genius. :) Another point i would like to make is, there is a difference between knowing a language/technology and being good in it. I can claim that i know/have worked on several languages like basic, pascal,vb,c,c++ and java, apart from dot net. but i cant claim to be expert on these language.