Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Best rules as a contractor
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? Best rules as a contractor Post 302754159 by Neo on Thursday 10th of January 2013 07:11:41 AM
Old 01-10-2013
Most of my career, over 95%, was as a self-employed person.

The formula is quite simple:
  • Honest, integrity, professionalism and honor above all.
  • Strong, current, relevant technical skills - always learning
  • Flexible, adaptive, and considerate to others and ideas
  • Hourly wages should be high enough for you to pay your own benefits, etc.

I also have a lot of experience on the other side of the equation, hiring contractors. I can tell you, for a fact, it is nearly impossible to find honest technical contractors who don't lie and fake their resume and references. In some countries, it is almost like resume cheating is the subculture norm.

I've even tried hiring "by the job" to do simple tasks like program some small code in PHP or HTML; and it is nearly impossible to get someone who can do a 1 hour job in less than three days or even weeks, LOL.

I've read so many "super duper" resumes, experts in this and that; but when I ask to just demonstrate some simple coding skills, the candidate falls apart with excuse after excuse.

So, to be a great contractor and make money is easy; if you are honest, skillful and all the things mentioned above.

Too many people are looking for shortcuts, they will lie and cheat and fake their skills on their resume and they struggle all their career. The people who just do the work, learn the skills, become experts, real experts, not fake ones; find that contracting is very easy (and rewarding!) and the money will flow and you will have a good life.

It's easy... their are no shortcuts, only hard work, honesty and integrity.

Without honor, all is lost.
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

rules?

What rules? I have been searching for hours on the internet and just cannot seem to find the command you would type to add a serial port or the file that specifies whether a filesystem shoudl be mounted at boot time or not............. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Xskwizitboi
1 Replies

2. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Rules

https://www.unix.com/showthread.php?t=2971 Spelling Error. You 'Adhere' to rules, not adhear. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tux
2 Replies

3. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

rules

rules are there but asking 2 questions out of 30 is surely understanable esp when the instructor gives an open book test and urged us to seek answers anywhere we can except from him directly. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: vrn
2 Replies

4. Post Here to Contact Site Administrators and Moderators

Homework rules !

Why do you ask about prof info at homeworks forum..... do you contact to prof and tell him that this student asked for our help? I asked that because some of them are very strickt and conseder that as cheating (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fwrlfo
4 Replies
normality(5)							File Formats Manual						      normality(5)

NAME
normality - definition of what types of normalities different users may have. SYNOPSIS
/etc/normality DESCRIPTION
The normality configuration file has a rather simple syntax, as shown in the diagram in the next section. Some things to remember is that the normality file's influence is inversely proportional to the user's cluefulness and that, in certain cirumstances, modification of the normality file can and will be considered immoral. NORMALITY GRAMMAR
<normality file> := <normality file> <line> | ; <line> := <normality type> ': ' <userlist> | <normality type> '! ' <userlist> | <normality type> '= ' <normality tags> | <comment> <normality type> := [A-Z][a-zA-Z0-9]+ <userlist> := <username> ', ' <userlist> ';0 | <username> ';0 <normality tags> := <normality tag> ', ' <normality tags> ';0 | <normality tag> ';0 <normality tag> := 'marriage' | 'love-relation' | 'nice-job' | 'money' | 'spare-time' | 'friends' | 'no-pager' | 'vacation' <comment> := '#' .* '0 SEMANTICS
It is expected that you specify all normality types before you start assigning (or disassigning) users to (or from) them. That is so the system can do an easier consistency check of the specification. Let's say that we have a system with three normality types, foo, bar and gazonk and two users, cucumber and onion. Now, a line like "foo! onion;" would exclude onion from having any of the real-life things specified by the foo type, even if that (or those) things appear in another normality type. So, the disallow syntax overrides the allow syntax (specified by "<type>: <username>..."). There is always an implicit type named ``all'', that contains all normality tags. For all system administrators, you have an implicit rule, "all! asr". EXAMPLES
# Normality file for a sad system # Our users are onion, cucumber, jdoe, jrl and washu animetype= love-relation, nice-job, friends, spare-time; notworst= love-relation, nice-job, friends; sysadm= friends; # All normality types we will use are declared # Now let's do the magic stuff... all: jdoe, jrl; animetype: washu; sysadm: cucumber; all! onion; # Now, this is fairly easy, OK? WARNINGS AND BUGS
This file messes with the real world, so a bit of caution is recommended. Newer versions of the chastise(3) library function modifies this file on-the-fly. Has a tendecy to create small discontinuities in the velvet of reality whenever there are syntax errors in the normality file. AUTHOR
This sick idea was put down in *roff format by Ingvar Mattsson, as a contribution to the alt.sysadmin.recovery man page collection. 4th Berkeley Distribution Release 0.001 alpha normality(5)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:23 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy