>>>There are a lot of .NET developers out of work here, too. As you say, things have been tough all over. I have invested quite a bit of time in learning .NET, both formal classes and self-study, and have not been able to get a foot in the door without work experience. In a more robust economy sometimes people are given that first chance based on general skills, how they present themselves in the interview, etc. These days it seems like employers are saying the want X years of experience and insist on it. I don't blame them. If you have a pool of experienced applicants, what motivation is there to take a chance on someone with none? (in the particular skill(s) you are looking for)
>>>
>>>IMHO, this is a red herring. The toughest part of software development is understanding the nature of the business problem and devising an appropriate solution. Writing the coede is the easy bit.
>>
>>I take your point - up to a point. But if, for example, you come from a DeskTop background (even a NET one) then getting up to speed developing, say, a Web application is not exactly easy ?
>
>Developing an ASP.NET application is MUCH different than developing a desktop app. A different mindset and incredible patience is needed.
>
>Developing a winforms .NET application is a pretty straightforward jump from a VFP application assuming an SQL backend.
Aren't we saying the same thing?
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