Computer programming; network monitoring and mapping software specifically. I love wowhead, by the way. It's a fantastic resource. I especially like the fast load times and very tolerable ads; very google-ish.
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Computer programming; network monitoring and mapping software specifically. I love wowhead, by the way. It's a fantastic resource. I especially like the fast load times and very tolerable ads; very google-ish.
I'm a data warehouse consultant and semi-pro photographer. Hope to be a pro photographer one day and leave data warehousing behind (photography is much more interesting) :)
Network Engineer
Serial Entrepreneur.
I'm one of those programmers you are looking for. I'm a Java Developer / Web Developer. Currently, we are writing a new Order Entry system for the Company I work for, and I deal a lot with how our web applications connect to our back end, so I work between the both of them. We use a JSF architecture, using EJB3 and hibernate/persistence on the back-end for any fellow Java programmers who know what any of that stuff means.
Good stuff, and we are under some crazy deadlines which is why I haven't had as much time as I'd like to dedicate to my multi-boxing. But our deadline will be up one way or another April 1st, so I'll have more time to roll with it then. I was lucky and got a job at a pretty good company, so I have a fair amount of funding for my whimsical multi-boxing ventures.
QA Manager for a Bluetooth company. Mostly software but we do some firmware and hardware in-house.
GIS (Geographic Information Solutions) developer. I write applications that help people manage and analyze the spatial data with that being from desktop to web application. some of the computer languages I know. VB.net, C#, Asp.net, PhP, Coldfusion, Java, HTML, JavaScripts, ArcObjects, ArcXML, XML, SqL ect.. with my job it is every learning new things as we try to create new was to store and display spatial data.
Degree in Cartographic Scinece
Edit: Added degree and fixed some general errors
Wow alot of CRAZY jobs that iv never heard of before. Amazing. Would be curious to see roughly what these different jobs made, however that would be a little rude :)
Guessing some of the higher end ones (attorney, consultant, etc) make low to mid 6 figures.
High 5, low 6 is certainly possible for some higher end "IT" jobs.
Edit: "Programmer" likely (sadly?) does not fall into the above categories. Hard to compete with overseas talent that works for 1/10th of the salary.
Although I'm quickly becoming the general developer for our website, I primarily do database design and backend software (PHP specifically) for the company I contract for. My degree is in CompSci with a Mathematics Minor. My emphasis was in software engineering with a heavy reliance on Database systems and web applications. I went down that route because I saw more and more large, real time systems being developed to run in browsers. It worked out pretty well.
As far as other things go, I'm attempting to earn entry to the U.S. Naval O.C.S as a nuclear officer.