|
Started at my current company in June 1989 at the tender age of 18. Still a great place to work, 15 years on! (we have a very low staff turnover which is a good sign). 200 people when I started, now employing close to 1,500.
The Rob Blog
|
|
|
|
|
Impressive So are u in a senior position now or in a management position?
<font=arial>Weiye Chen
When pursuing your dreams, don't forget to enjoy your life...
|
|
|
|
|
Senior. Put it this way, my boss sits on the board of the company (he is a founding member) - there is no-one else inbetween which is really, really sweet (he's a techie too which is even better!).
The Rob Blog
|
|
|
|
|
|
We do have an office in Dublin if that's any help!
The Rob Blog
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kerridge Computer Co. Ltd.
The Ireland office details:
Kerridge Computer Systems
Anglesea House
Carysfort Avenue
Blackrock
Co. Dublin
Tel: +353 (0)1 288 3355
http://www.kerridge.ie/
The Rob Blog
|
|
|
|
|
|
Maximilien wrote:
12 years ... 4 companies ...
An average of 3 years per company. Looks good. What is your longest and shortest time you worked in a company?
<font=arial>Weiye Chen
When pursuing your dreams, don't forget to enjoy your life...
|
|
|
|
|
My shortest spell was 1 day. Actually, it was a morning. I stayed the rest of the day explaining why I wasn't going to be staying any longer. My longest was around three years, unless you count working for my own company, which was around 8.
Doesn't sound too bad until you know how long I've been working as a developer (20 yrs). These youngsters today, with their visual debuggers, multiple monitors, and namby-pamby language features like buffer overrun detection don't know they're born.
In my day you could work out what was going wrong by looking at the lights on the front panel. If you were really good, you could enter the bootstrap code on the switches at the front without referring to a crib sheet.
Hey, where did the 1980's go...
Steve S
|
|
|
|