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13 votes
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See how Hollywood’s job market is collapsing
25 votes -
Requesting your thoughts that may help me decide between moving to Chicago or Portland (Oregon)?
hey there tildes. i’m moving out of texas in august no matter what and am trying to decide between chicago and portland. i was wondering if anyone here has lived in either (or both) locations and...
hey there tildes. i’m moving out of texas in august no matter what and am trying to decide between chicago and portland. i was wondering if anyone here has lived in either (or both) locations and could help me decide by sharing their experiences.
i’m currently in texas and by the time i move, i will have only been here 1 year but this was always supposed to be a temporary stop for a job (that is very much not working out due to the owner of the company — i’ve posted about it a few months ago and struggle with it in my mind to this day).
i’ve moved around a bit, both in the same cities and across several states, over the past 5 years. im tired of moving and starting over, so im really going to focus on making the next place work for at least 5 years. the world is too chaotic for me to pretend to see farther out than that.
i had been reading and watching a lot of videos about chicago over the past month or two and now wondering if i should give it a try? i just assumed i would move back to portland by default because i liked it well enough and now im not sure if i should fall back to something familiar or try again somewhere else.
just want to say that i know moving wont magically make my life great and i know i will have to put in a lot of work to make everything work regardless. greener grass and all that.
portland
i’ve lived in portland before (2 years) and visited many, many times in the 7 years before moving there. i liked it for the most part.
things i didn’t like (mostly my opinion/experience)
- PNW gray, dreary weather for many months. im prone to bouts of severe depression and it’s a lot of work to keep healthy during the dark months. was in for seattle for 7 years prior to living in portland so i was maxed out with the gray perhaps.
- cost of living is kind of high for the size of city and offerings
- it’s a very slow, sleepy city that feels more like a very big town than a small city. sometimes i liked this about the city (less traffic, crowds) and sometimes i didnt (less “things going on”, especially later at night)
- the sheer amount of unsheltered people and seemingly no solution or even progress. when i lived there, it was really, really bad (2021-2023) and i’ve read that it’s actually gotten worse since ive left. it’s heartbreaking.
things i did like
- green year round, even if it’s gray and winter. beautiful outdoors/hiking, swimming in the river
- proximity to seattle (i have friends there)
- much more agreeable politics for me (Leftists everywhere)
- great food options, fun bars, interesting shops
- very bike friendly (newly into biking, was not when i lived there)
- decent public transit
- relatively friendly people though i did struggle with making deeper connections
- very positive towards folks who are queer or generally nontraditional. that’s important to me
- seems like a lot of creative folk live here
why i moved away from portland originally
i moved away because i was deeply unhappy with my work life (had two awful jobs in a row because my freelancing work (audio/video editing) dried up completely), had to get a roommate for the first time in like 10 years because of pay decreasing with new jobs, and tried to change up my medication for depression (for reasons i can no longer recall) that backfired and i fell into a massive bout of depression.
i backed away from all of my friendships and spent all of my time dreaming about greener grass. instead of focusing on getting a better job and fixing my medication, i chose the “easy” route of moving away again and starting over.
i went to denver chasing better weather and had two new clients lined up but two months after moving, they stopped paying me. had to take one to court and everything. only other job i could find was awful with a really toxic manager and a huge pay cut (again) but had no other job options. i did fix my meds and other lifestyle changes so all was not completely lost.
the owner of the company i was working for (and before i knew what kind of person he was) offered me a new job in texas so i jumped on it. my family was there so figured it’d be nice to be nearby for a year or two. unsurprisingly, san antonio sucks (for me) and job sucks, so as soon as my lease ends in august, im out.
chicago
i’ve never been to chicago. i’ll visit in june to check it out. i also don’t know anyone there. this isn’t a huge deal since i have done this kind of move (only visiting right before moving and not knowing anyone) i guess 3 times now.
reasons i think i will like it
- liberal city
- great public transit
- big, dense city
- diversity
- seemingly decent cost of living
- people say midwesterners are friendly (?)
- job opportunities just by the fact that it’s such a huge city
things that are/may be negative
- brutal winters. i am not used to real winters. seattle/portland had very mild winters and even denver’s were honestly not bad at all. i hear lots of talk about chicago winters.
- crime. no, i don’t think i will be regularly mugged or killed like the US media makes it sometimes seem, but compared to everywhere i’ve lived before, it’s has a higher violent crime rate.
- friends/community. i’m in my mid 30s and it’s harder to make friends the old i get and that’s sort of my number one goal each time i move to a new city. also never really had “community” and would really like to have that in my life.
- politics. i know that portland is generally much more left and chicago is more generic democrat. this isn’t the end of the world and i don’t expect everyone to be as far left as i am but i want to be able to live in the same reality as my community.
huge wall of text, i know, so thanks for those that read it. i’m not great at organizing my thoughts in these posts, but i’m just tryin’ to figure stuff out!
if anyone has anything they want to share based on my likes/dislikes and your experience, please do! i really enjoy reading what the folks here have to say about things.
27 votes -
I worked in a warehouse
5 votes -
UK government blocks Chinese firm’s plans to build wind turbines in Scotland
13 votes -
WNBA agreement to give every rookie under contract a raise
11 votes -
What non-software jobs exist for a newly graduated CS major?
Hey all, I'm a computer science major, and I'm about to graduate at the end of April. My general life situation is a bit messy, so unless I can find a job this month, I am going to have to look...
Hey all,
I'm a computer science major, and I'm about to graduate at the end of April. My general life situation is a bit messy, so unless I can find a job this month, I am going to have to look into some less-than-savory options for housing and feeding myself.
I've applied for ~280 entry-level software engineering positions thus far and have had a few calls back, but once the company realizes that my graduation date is a month out, I never hear from them again (I follow up anyway, just in case.) I also have been working an internship through school for about two years, and expected to get a return offer, but that recently fell through. I can continue to work there past graduation, but I'd still be an intern for the foreseeable future, and that will not be enough to cover rent.
I haven't given up, exactly -- I'm still networking rather aggressively, and, even though it makes me feel bad, I'm milking every connection I have to try to find something. I just don't feel like the chances are good that I land a software job in the timeframe that I've got left, so I want to start looking at what else I can do with just "a degree" as opposed to "a computer science degree." Obviously the job market is horrible for everyone right now, but wider nets catch more fish and all...
So, any suggestions?
32 votes -
George Orwell’s opposition to totalitarianism was rooted in his support for freeing workers from poverty and exploitation
24 votes -
Job hunting absolutely sucks right now
Feeling pretty discouraged after taking yet another spin around the tech interview circuit for naught I was feeling pretty good this time around as I've interviewed with this company before and...
Feeling pretty discouraged after taking yet another spin around the tech interview circuit for naught
I was feeling pretty good this time around as I've interviewed with this company before and was runner up for previous role. The hiring manager contacted me for this new one, and again I aced it until the final stage where I got punted for the all nebulous "culture fit" reasoning. My mood isn't helped by the constant AI doom clouds hovering overhead that makes me wonder if I need to make bigger career changes.How's everyone else fairing out there?
93 votes -
At twenty airports in the United States, security screening is handled not by the Transportation Security Administration, but by private companies — and their checkpoints aren’t seeing long lines
22 votes -
I need to talk to someone with social mobility experience, and I'm out of ideas
Sorry this is pretty rant-y, I tried I promise lol: I've posted on here re: topics similar to & leading towards this one, but not in this group specifically, so apologies if this is not the right...
Sorry this is pretty rant-y, I tried I promise lol:
I've posted on here re: topics similar to & leading towards this one, but not in this group specifically, so apologies if this is not the right place but idk where else to put it lol: I need to talk to someone who started life less-well off, whatever that means where you come from, and worked themselves into a better situation, and then actually finally broke through whatever the fuck this is that I can't get past right now.
I am solidly working/lower middle class (low low, like I'm not gonna lose my house but I also could never move, no savings but only overdraft -occasionally-, etc.): education background, higher ed, public service, etc—I got too many degrees & got on some good meds & found out mid-30s I have a lot of marketable transferable high-level skills, setting me on a course to replace all the side gigs with one Good Job. Almost got a couple of -really- good offers (like, verbal, then waiting, then layoffs, then a very disappointing email, rinse and repeat) as it unfortunately just happened to be the worst year to look for a job since 2008 lol.
One of the things I'm good at is talking/listening to people, and one of the things I was lacking in was a good network (the other BA/education grads I knew also don't have very good jobs), so I started talking to anyone & everyone, mostly aspirational/mentor types, they have all done very well for themselves & I think it's self-selectinf but they're all pretty sales-y, which is fine. And as another skill I can usually "spot" people, pattern recognition or maybe autism idk, so I'm only talking to people who have had success but also that I don't anticipate will be telling me to pull myself up by my bootstraps, etc.
So here's the thing: every single one of them has said basically (and I think genuinely trying to be helpful): "Why do you need a better job?", "What do you really want here?", "I had what you're after and it didn't make me happy, it was what you already have that did that for me finally," and so if you are having thoughts like that, thank you for reading, please leave lol, because I just cannot—like of course it's easy for you to say "Oh, a corporate job is just travel & restaurants, that's no way to live" when you've already done it! I want in, dude. And honestly it feels like something a woman in the 80s or 90s would have been up against—like "Oh you're better off where you are," ok sure let's fucking swap then. Jesus.
Ok sorry /rant. So what I need is for someone who grew up pretty low income to tell me that there's even a hope, a shred of a possibility that I can do better for myself & my family, because all I can find is people telling me I should be happy with what I have, and the truth is I am not, I'm spinning my wheels and going insane, I am running at maybe 10% capacity and it's driving me nuts—i can literally hear it now "boy I wish I had that much free time”: yeah? What would you do with it? Expensive shit, I bet. See? I feel like I could have both things, but no one wants to let me in—is it just in-group mentality & self-preservstion? Am I somehow threatening their status quo by being a real life person who could maybe do what they did? Because the closest I've gotten so far is hearing how someone along the way cut them a break & that's how they got their start, except none of them seem to be able to see the irony in saying that to me before telling me to just enjoy it as it comes, take it easy, my god I am going to have an aneurysm. And we're talking a significant sample of probably 15-20 people—is it just boomers? Am I doomed?
The most recent take was: "Well you seem like a person who's comfortable and middle-class, so it'll happen, you're fine." And I'm not, like, giving them the hard sell or asking for a job, I'm just mostly listening. I don't get it, and I don't know what I'm supposed to do when I'm trying to find out how someone got to where they are & they end with "You don't need what I have." Is social mobility even a thing anymore in the US?
Edit: gosh I just want to say how much I love this weird lil site, I am feeling about a million times better than I did this time yesterday, to the point that when the person I spoke with (the one who sent me spiraling & considering just going to bed & not getting out of it lol) messaged me to ask if I'd like to talk some more, I didn't say anything but "I'd love to!" because I didn't have to. Because they don't have to get it, they just have to help me find a job—seems like quite a few of you get it & that's all I think I really need sometimes.
(unless you're hiring then pls lmk lol)
27 votes -
In noisy surroundings, your techniques to learn to center attention and ignore distraction?
TL;DR: I just need your help to erect some kind of mental deep sea bunker in my soul :-) Context: My job brings me into private homes with lots of permanently switched-on large televisions and...
TL;DR: I just need your help to erect some kind of mental deep sea bunker in my soul :-)
Context: My job brings me into private homes with lots of permanently switched-on large televisions and with lots of super-talktative and socially starved human beings ambiently living around these screens.
The job is personal assistance: to remain emotionally present and relateable for hours on end. Quite an effort, not only because I get easily distracted by television sounds and screens (war-footage + sports = random mainstream deluge of endless pixel poison). I did not grow up with television and my audio-visual filtering capability is very poor. I get fixated by any stream of noise and trapped within it. This job makes me want to get better at filtering.
Thus I would much appreciate if anybody who knows this type of problem, would share techniques to filter and/or ignore external stimuli. More useful answers would take into account that being rude or flippant is not an option, and it would not be socially acceptable for me to regulate the televisions.
What would be some terms that I could use to find books about the topic? Any experiences you can share with me? Thanks <3
31 votes -
Helgi Hjorleifsson, a firefighter, is a leader in an Icelandic experiment to steer rivers of lava away from important sites. Some called it crazy, but it worked.
17 votes -
ArXiv is separating from Cornell University, and is hiring a CEO, who will be paid roughly $300,000/year
42 votes -
A survey of 1,000 hiring managers found that 59% say they emphasize AI’s role in layoffs because it is viewed more favorably than saying layoffs or hiring freezes
42 votes -
René Redzepi, the head chef and co-founder of Noma, announced he was resigning from his internationally acclaimed Copenhagen restaurant following allegations that he had physically abused his staff
25 votes -
Survey reveals almost 50% of California teachers may quit teaching soon
44 votes -
Charli XCX reveals she wants to ‘quit music’ for new career path
24 votes -
I don’t know if my software engineering job will still exist in ten years
37 votes -
Yakult ladies are an icon in Japan
22 votes -
Workers who love ‘synergizing paradigms’ might be bad at their jobs
24 votes -
The average US college student is illiterate
53 votes -
Meta’s AI smart glasses and data privacy concerns: workers say “we see everything”
37 votes -
What’s your preferred work monitor setup?
Lately I’ve been experimenting with different desktop monitor setups, primarily for productivity-focused work as a systems engineer (coding, writing docs, Slack, email, terminals, etc.). Over the...
Lately I’ve been experimenting with different desktop monitor setups, primarily for productivity-focused work as a systems engineer (coding, writing docs, Slack, email, terminals, etc.). Over the past few years, I’ve rotated through:
• 3× 24” 1080p monitors
• 2× 24” 1080p monitors + laptop display
• 1× 32” 4K monitor + laptop display
• 1× 32” 4K monitor
• Laptop display only (on a stand)Surprisingly, I’ve found that I feel the most focused and productive when I use only my laptop display and rely on Alt-Tab to switch between apps.
With larger monitors or multiple displays I start to feel scattered. It almost turns into sensory overload, and my focus drops off.
Has anyone else experienced this? Do you find that larger or multiple monitors decrease your productivity? What setup works best for you?
34 votes -
Spotify's strong revenue isn't reflected in its stock market performance – investors fear growth will stall, while artists are voicing frustration over what they consider a miserly compensation system
24 votes -
Norway's sovereign wealth fund impressed by artificial intelligence's ability to catch risks overlooked by both the media and external vendors
11 votes -
Is higher education still valuable?
Hi friends, Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to...
Hi friends,
Given the current state of AI and other technologies, do you consider higher education to still be worth pursuing? For those of you with children, will you be advising them to go to college?
I’m asking because I am enrolled in a masters program for statistics and have ~2 years left. I’m concerned that by the time I’m finished, the degree won’t be worth the paper it’s printed on. Like many of you, I work in software. Some days I think I should be learning an entirely different skill set in a non tech related field to diversify my value instead of doubling down on a potentially dying field.
I am not really interested in “you should pursue education for the sake of education”. While this is probably true, at the end of the day I need a way to make money to survive and education is the historical way of increasing one’s value in the job market. Furthermore, I can educate myself for far cheaper if education from a university is no longer considered valuable.
Anyone else in the same boat? Am I being dramatic? Would love to hear your thoughts.
33 votes -
Swedish heavy metal band Avatar cancel London concert mid-performance after the stage at Exhibition White City became electrified, shocking two crew members
17 votes -
Binance employees find $1.7 Billion in crypto was sent to Iranian entities
17 votes -
Why Vegas doesn't care if you visit anymore
35 votes -
The AI disruption has arrived, and it sure is fun
29 votes -
Those who can, teach history
8 votes -
How to make a living as an artist
31 votes -
South Korea seeks multilingual talent to hunt down K-content piracy
15 votes -
AI fails at 96% of jobs (new study)
28 votes -
Finland opens Europe's first lithium mine – will create about 350 jobs and offers Europe's only production chain of its kind, reducing reliance on Chinese imports
15 votes -
The AI vampire
27 votes -
‘So tired I want to cry’: AI promotional giveaways swamp shops in China
13 votes -
Jeff Bezos bought The Washington Post to save it. Instead, with a mass layoff, he’s forced it into severe decline.
19 votes -
The shadowy world of abandoned oil tankers
16 votes -
AI doesn’t reduce work—it intensifies it
41 votes -
AI hallucination cases - When lawyers use hallucinated legal content
25 votes -
Typing for love or money: the hidden women’s labor behind modern literary masterpieces
7 votes -
Jeff Bezos orders layoffs at 'The Washington Post'
49 votes -
Ashes of Creation founder resigns as studio begins mass layoffs
26 votes -
Alphabet plots big expansion in India as US restricts visas
20 votes -
I loved my teaching job. But as a trans man in Texas, quitting was the only way to get my dignity back.
23 votes -
I work in a warehouse
17 votes -
Listing for GOG Galaxy developer cites Linux as “next major frontier”
54 votes -
Feeling weird about my career with respect to AI
I’m a software engineer. I graduated in 2021 so I’ve only been one for around 4.5 years and definitely still feel fairly entry-level (at least, any time I look at jobs, the number of years of...
I’m a software engineer. I graduated in 2021 so I’ve only been one for around 4.5 years and definitely still feel fairly entry-level (at least, any time I look at jobs, the number of years of experience required for “senior” positions seems to have increased by one) and it feels like companies don’t particularly want anyone without a lot of experience anymore (and every time I do look at new jobs, the number of years required for “senior” positions seems to have increased by one). Meanwhile, I think it has its uses but I don’t actually enjoy using it. I want to solve problems and think and write code, not talk to an AI and become a full-time code-reviewer. My company is rebranding to have AI in the name shortly and, since early December, have been forcing us into 2+ hour long AI trainings once or twice a week. A lot of my coworkers seem like they’ve drank the Kool-Aid and are talking about new models and shit all the time and I just don’t get it.
I guess I’m kind of rambling but I just feel weird about all of it. I want to program but I don’t just want to use (or be forced to use) LLMs for everything, yet it seems like companies are just trying to get rid of actually human software engineers as fast as they can. I’ll even admit, Claude is way better than I expected, but I don’t actually enjoy sitting there typing “do this for me” and then having to just spend time reviewing code. I don’t know. I don’t think this is really even me asking for advice, just a rant, but yeah, just felt like I had to get something out there, I guess.
54 votes