Haunted bucket of bog water

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Joined 6 days ago
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Cake day: March 8th, 2025

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  • Not sure how long you’ve been looking, but just be prepared for ghost job postings and very fierce competition. My job search took nearly a year and I know folks who’ve been looking longer. A large percentage of job postings are outright fake or they don’t actually intend to hire anyone for the position, and even real positions, especially remote ones, will have thousands of applicants. It might not be you, your location, or your resume - even if those are 100% optimized, it’s a rough market right now for finding a remote tech gig.

    My advice is to make sure your resume is optimised for the AI screeners most companies are using (unfortunately what I, a human, looks for in a tech resume is very different from what HR and the AI tools look for, so make sure to have multiple versions and at least one formatted to be parsed by an AI tool) and leverage your network at much as you can. Apply as soon as you can after a job is posted. Check the websites and apply mostly to smaller companies. You can apply through Linkedin or indeed but most of the “easy apply” ones are ghost jobs. Still worth hitting the button on a few hundred of those or so just to try, but they’re far less likely to be of any value.

    Good luck in your search.







  • Calcifer@eviltoast.orgtoPolitical Memes@lemmy.worldYo! What's Goin' Down?
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    4 days ago

    The stock market is generally more of a “rich people’s feelings” graph - very few Americans relatively are invested in any meaningful way, most if they are do so through a 401k or similar. That said, what “the market” hates most is uncertainty - and there’s quite a lot of reasons to be uncertain at the moment between tariff threats and mass layoffs (not to mention geopolitical tensions).

    Importantly though (and this is just a personal opinion) I think many stocks on the market are way overvalued. Executives and investors have used every trick in the book to “make a line go up”, which means they aren’t really operating on any business foundation designed for longevity or to withstand swings in the market. There’s bubbles lurking in a lot of sectors. I’d guess at least some of this downwards momentum will be a market correction for some of these issues.

    As always though, it’s the folks invested through pensions and 401ks that have the most to lose relatively. The big players have probably already taken out their cash and are just waiting to see what they can buy up in a crash.