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Salon.com August 22, 2000 Kasia Anderson |
So how much do you make? Once taboo, salaries are now a hot topic among today's young working stiffs.  |
Fast Company September 2000 George Anders |
Life After the Crash The market for Internet stocks has crashed, but that doesn't mean that your career has to crash with it. Here's a set of lessons on how good people in dotcom companies gone bad can reboot their careers.  |
Salon.com July 26, 2000 Cynthia Kuhn & Wilkie Wilson |
No fooling My girlfriend smoked a lot of pot recently and now has to take a drug test for her new job. Is there anything she can do to avoid being caught?  |
Fast Company August 2000 Ron Lieber |
The Permatemps Contretemps It is the dark side of Free Agent Nation. Here's how the mix of Microsoft's human-resources policies, unwilling temps, high-tech union organizers, and "permatemp" agents produced unintended consequences -- and a cautionary tale.  |
Fast Company August 2000 Ellen McCarty |
It's Not a Job Interview, It's a Subculture! Interviewing for a programming job is like walking into a game of Dungeons & Dragons: sphinxlike interrogators, enigmatic riddles. Two survivors have cracked the code and written the ultimate tour guide.  |
Salon.com February 10, 2000 Steve Kurutz |
Hardly workin' Nothing says unemployable like being unemployed in a boom economy.  |
Salon.com June 28, 2000 Sean Elder |
Can't anyone around here edit? As long-form narrative pieces go the way of Diogenes, magazines search for that rarity: An editor who knows how to edit.  |
Linux Journal July 2000 Ralph Krause |
Book Review: Getting Started in Computer Consulting by Peter Meyer The siren call of a career in computer consulting: leaving the anonymity of a big company, being your own boss, and surviving by your wits. With today's good economy and the growth of Linux, you may think the time is right to take the plunge....  |
Fast Company July 2000 Amy Wilson |
Don't Mess With Success My Smartest Mistake: Recognize personal success in your present job.  |
Salon.com May 24, 2000 Craig Offman |
Peons rejoice! The book business gives its infamously low-paid assistants a raise.  |
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