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I've done some work for a startup that uses Java as well as some other Java related technologies you might consider outdated. Their founder is an older guy and wrote the MVP himself. But hey - it all works and does the job quite well.

You can create an API and query databases with just about anything.


X links are near useless if you don't have an account or are logged out since you can't view threads.

I really wish there was an easy way to backup Google Photos. I like it but I don't relying on them for backup.

Find something where the .com is for sale, use .ai or .io for now, then spend the money to buy the .com once your business is generating revenue.

I don't see a need for a tool like that.


Did you find UpWork worth pursuing? I looked at it briefly and it seemed like a race to the bottom on compensation.

What type of blogging are you doing? I'm curious how companies would find that and decide to hire you.


"Did you find UpWork worth pursuing?"

Personally? No.

But I met a few people who were pretty serious about it, and made good money there.

"What type of blogging are you doing?"

I chose a platform (dev.to) and started writing about my weekly learnings in my dev job.

React, React-Native, WebPack, Node.js, etc.

Later, I moved to DevOps stuff with AWS, Pulumi, Serverless, etc.

I got between 1000 and 10000 views per article and was Dev.to Distinguished Author for two years.

If you put quality stuff out that people want, sooner or later you get some interest.

Not every company has AWS or Vercel reach/money and can hire the top 1% of content creators.

On my website, you can see some of my clients. Not FAANG-Tier, but not no-name agency either.

https://kay.is


That's something I'd be fine to do. I'm generally looking for some time flexibility that can't be had in a traditional full time job.


Check out Google Cloud. They have a much better developer experience than AWS.

Cloud Run is pretty easy to setup.


That sounds exactly like what I'm trying to do. I have no experience with the agency world and most of my contacts are in giant corporations. Do you think it would help to do some work in the agency world?


I guess it depends on what country you live in; I'm in the US, not sure what it's like elsewhere with regards to advertising, but if USA-based then yeah I would pursue that. Initially it'll probably be easier via a recruiter who already has a relationship with the agency where they bring you in and put you on the bench until a gig opens up.

From what I've seen, brands (clients) rarely do much in-house -- they hire agencies (for periods of time, then will go to others depending upon results), sometimes hire as Agency of Record for a period of time as well (all creative, from web/app/digital through social management, media, print, etc, flows through their AOR) -- everything runs on quarterly client budgets (so frequent initiatives that "ladder up" to XYZ intangible "KPI" -- you'll get used to the arbitrary and capricious lingo) -- and it's really not that far off from a modern version of Mad Men. "Agency life" is another phrase that encapsulates "we probably have time management issues and/or over-commit to stuff, so if you want to succeed in this business, be willing to be patient, present and available for the duration and parameters of the project" -- as a freelancer though, you get paid by the hour, rather than being a salaryman.

I did 15 years of full-time employment, salaried. Overtime === a slice of pizza, a pat on the back, a vague promise of promotion; as a freelancer, it's dollars-per-hour, nothing more nothing less, you get paid for your efforts.

I've only been fortunate enough to benefit from that having done full-time salaryman in these places long enough to meet enough people and make enough contributions to become a known quantity. That said, I do have friends though that were ONLY contractors the entire time, usually via a recruiter as mentioned above, they worked in the same places on the same projects, and they've been able to flip that into similar situations or even full-time with the companies they gelled with the most.

There are a bunch of ways to approach it, but the fluid, always-changing clientele of ad agencies provides quite a lot of opportunities for work that isn't just "employee".


Windows would also have let you target business people with specific niche business problems. You could be the best search for legal documents, invoices, etc.


Funny you say that. Legal and invoice were actually the two avenues I actually explored! There definitely is an opportunity there but I found that there is an intense status quo to fight.


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