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Poll: What are you doing full-time?
65 points by sah on June 21, 2008 | hide | past | favorite | 52 comments
Working at an established company
251 points
Founding a startup
182 points
Going to school
126 points
Working at a startup
114 points
Consulting or contracting
85 points
Other
61 points


Working as ER nurse: 36 hrs per week

Working 20-30 hrs per week on www.nomadnurse.com : Online tools for traveling/contract nurses

Right now, it's just a landing page, but my goal is to have a place for travel/contract nurses to review where they've worked, a place to review recruiters/companies, a forum, job postings and tools to help decrease the reams of paperwork that travel nurses have to fill out for every 3 month contract and for every state license they apply for.


Well I just spent a weekend waiting around ER rooms as my daughter had half a tooth nocked out (and sedation needed, some minor surgery).

I do not envy your job. Whilst I can assume that there is a large element of satisfaction (and it doesn't seem to be as hellish as they make out in movies) it can't be easy. Its just more bad news and frustrated smelly people all the time. Never ending.

I tip my hat to you.


Sorry about your daughter. I hope she's okay.

Thanks, though. It's a lot better here in Silicon Valley than it was in the ghetto in Chicago. It was pretty much a nightly occurrence to be wrestling a drug addict or drunk every night. Nights were measured by how many gun shots or stabbings we took care of. There's not nearly the culture of violence here, which makes work a lot easier.

It's still pretty high pressure and high stress. I could be a little weird, but working on my business is a lot less stressful for me. I hope it takes off.


Yeah she was fine. Lost a (baby) tooth, but no pain.

So if your business does take off - you would cease to be an ER nurse? Just interested...

I have a job, and if any business of mine took off, I am still happy to do what I do now (I guess that makes be one of the lucky ones).


No, my plan is to leave nursing behind. My knees,legs and back can't handle another 15 years of this. I'm 35 and I'm going to have to have surgery for my varicose veins in a few months. I need to get out.

The dream is to start making a little money with the site, and then be able to cut back a shift or two a week as I have more money coming in. We'll see how it goes. It's a lot of work to develop part time and work full time, even though I'm only working 3 days a week.


I quit my job six weeks ago. I've had an idea for a web site sitting in the back of my brain for several years now. Amazingly, no one else has done it. I put up an ad on craigslist asking for someone to pair-program with me. We've been pairing 4-5 days a week.

We expect to go live next week.

I'm scheduled to start a Ph.D. in another six weeks. I could delay. It's a tough choice. Getting my first toe in the entrepreneurial water has been exciting and fulfilling. I'm getting to do things "the way I always wanted to".


If you want to be an entrepreneur, and you don't need a PhD to do it (e.g. you aren't starting a biotech company), then for the love of all that is holy, don't start a PhD program. Quitting is like gnawing off your own leg.

The PhD program will be there later. Trust me.


Thanks for the advice. The reason I want the Ph.D. is to become a professor, and the reason I want to be a professor is to be paid to indulge my curiosity and to teach (I love both).

Delaying a year to do this site is definitely an option I'm considering. Cooking Indian food in my kitchen has got to be way cheaper than gnawing off my own leg. ;)


Yeah, that's a tough decision.

Keep in mind that very few people make it through a PhD program with a good enough outcome to become a professor, and it usually has less to do with intelligence, than with luck, social skills, and the ability to "play the game". And if you do manage to get a faculty position (somewhere...), you've got another six years of hard work ahead of you before you've got any true claim on autonomy. Then you get paid dirt for the rest of your life.

You can always go to grad school later, but you've only got so many years of youthful enthusiasm and the ability to live cheaply. And once you have a wife and kid(s), it gets a lot harder to start a company. My advice is to take the massive-upside risks when you're young, and leave the low-upside risks for later.


Yup, I'm still studenting, and have a long way to go. I wonder if all these start-up opportunities and communities will still be around when I finish college...


Based on the direction markets and firms are heading (lower startup costs, computers becoming commoditized, smaller firms being able to compete easier with large firms), there will be even more opportunities.


That's encouraging. :)

Of course, I wouldn't want to speculate about then, because who knows what could happen in 7 years... It's humbling to think that the Internet has only been around about double that.


Basecamp was made in 37signals' part time. If you have an idea or the willpower, you don't have to wait to graduate from college.


Living in cheap asian countries on savings from my grad school year. Trying to develop AI that isn't Good Old Fashionned AI. Learning music. Learning Turkish. Biology. Reading.


That's very cool -- I've often considered doing that (moving to a cheap Asian country). I'd be curious if you have any more advice about it -- which countries were good, what sort of places to stay in, etc.


I went for the sound bite, but the truth is: I left grad school last December, and I've been in Turkey ever since. I'll likely move to India in a few months.

Turkey outside of Istanbul is rather cheap, but not incredibly so. My nice 4-bedroom flat is 400 euros/month in a good student neighborhood (split with my 3 roomies of course). A very good student meal is around 4 euros, so we eat out a lot. The fruits/vegetables are ridiculously cheap in bazaars. People are really friendly and helpful, though it's hard to find people who are... different, for lack of better term. The uni libraries suck in Izmir, which is bad for me.

Staying with Erasmus students turned out to be best for me. Living with Turkish men has proven... difficult, and the culture doesn't really allow mixed-sex appartment sharing before marriage.

I never did it, but you can get 15 Euro/hour teaching English here, which is really good money for Izmir.

Everything else I've heard second-hand, so you might have more luck with Google. India is supposed to be dirt cheap (7 euros/night reasonable hotels). I'll go there alone and network my way into an appartment. My roomie went to Iran for two weeks, and it seems so interesting, culturally. If there wasn't the threat of a looming war, I'd stay some time there before moving more to the east.

Finally: moving/finding an appartment is very costly, both in time and money. Changing country is even moreso. If you're staying less than 4 months in a city, you're not really living there, you're just travelling. (nothing wrong with that of course, but my goal is to get work done and learn as much as I can)

Feel free to email. I wish I knew more people doing what I'm doing.


I'm doing lighting design for a band. We're leaving for Europe in a couple days. I'm also trying to develop the next generation of stage lighting controllers.


Would also be interesting to see how many people are working in tech vs. other fields. I definitely get the feeling that I'm one of the few people here in a non-computer-related area.


Yeah it is always surprising when people describe their day job (when it isn't tech).


I work at a bank as a teller, but it's only part time and I'm also in school.


Might want to add consulting / contracting as an option...


Good call. Done.


Working as a corporate tool. Got a verbal offer (would need to negotiate my comp) to work with some really bright guys again at a startup. Debating what to do, asking myself why am I debating what to do...


Just quit my office job. I'm going to France in July to spend two months cycling. When I come back I am intending to start a startup (though I still have a few ideas I am trying to decide between). I will probably be working part time as well.


Good luck with that. I daydream of a similar path (though Spain/Portugal rather than France).


Daydreaming about it won't get you there! I have never traveled before doing this trip but have wanted to for years - I kept on putting off because it wasn't the "right time" etc.

A few months ago after deciding to leave my present job, I finally made up my mind to go for it before having to find a new way of making money.

Having made the decision everything has just fallen into place since. I have discovered that making the decision in the first place was the hardest part and I think this probably holds true in many aspects of life.

Another thing you will find when you decide to do something like this is how much your peers support you. Apart from a few negative types everyone I know has been really encouraging and offered to help me where I needed it.

I wish you well with your plans, but start doing it instead of dreaming it! :)


GMT 3:48

Even if every person voted 6 times, it's still an average of 4:1 people who voted in the poll to those who upmodded the post.


People upvote if they liked the story, and they vote just to share.


Not sure if it's typical but I almost never upvote a story (however I'd happily downvote some of them if I could). Last time I checked it automatically saves it in your favorites. Since I never go back to check a story, no matter how interesting (in which case I'd just hit Google), I find it would be an utter waste. Accumulating stuff I know I will never use like that seems... frightening to me, for some reason.


My usage pattern is almost the exact opposite. If I like a story and find it relevant, I upvote it in part so I can easily reference it later.


Working at a regular consulting company.

In my weekends, I'm trying to marshall what resources I can to learn other things.

Right now, I'm playing with SproutCore, but have been deflected in setting up Django to serve as a back-end, and I'm finally learning some Python, and I'm really impressed with it.


I'm interning at Sun, volunteering with Miro, and taking summer classes.

I'll be getting my BS after a little over two years in school and as one of those “big picture” people, have become increasingly more focused on what I'm going to do once December rolls around.


Working on scalability of an RDF server at an established semantic web company. Enjoying going to moffet field every day. Not enjoying lack of free time as I finish prototypes of my own project.


Had to click three things.


Founding a nonprofit.


High school, part time hacker for a couple OSS projects

That leaves me a striking question: How many other readers here are high schoolers like me?


Being a musician?


this is a very interesting poll. I have always wanted to know what the hacker news community constitutes.


FULL TIME = 70% School + 30% Startup


Fulltime sales engineering job, hacking and consulting gigs on the side for my own startup...


i'm working a a big behemoth web security company 40-50 hrs. per week - and working on my startup 20 hours per week - and raising my family (2yr old + 1 on the way) with my wife. our startup is set to launch in August - so its a big push right now.


If you founded a startup and are working on that startup, what option should you choose? :)


I would assume the distinction is founding a startup versus being employed by people who founded a startup. That's how I read it.


What if you work at a startup, founded a startup and go to school? :)


Fortunately News.YC's clever poll software allows you to choose multiple options.


Burnout?


Hardware engineer at a day job. Software hack wannabe by night.


Lets see, PhD in AIDS research, founding 2 startups


Taking over the world (Pinky and the Brain).


working on a day job at an established company to pay for me and my two buddies working full time on a startup.


working @ a startup, consulting, and lending a hand at establishing a better startup environment in Austin.


Working at a Startup




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