* Re: jobs in ada?
[not found] <01bcfadf$4c3abc60$0f02000a@luisespi>
@ 1997-11-28 0:00 ` bklungle
1997-11-28 0:00 ` Robert B. Love
1 sibling, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: bklungle @ 1997-11-28 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
As a software manager for an Aero-Space company doing Ada, Robert Love is
right on. If you are in the LA area, send me a note, and then a resume. If
not, contact a GOOD body shop.
bob
Luis Espinal wrote in message <01bcfadf$4c3abc60$0f02000a@luisespi>...
>Hi,
>
>I became fond of ADA back at school, and programming in ADA would be
>something I would enjoy. But, when I search for jobs in ADA, the vast
>majority of them requires knowledge that seem more of a electrical engineer
>than of a computer scientist. Not only that, I've been told at school that
>electrical engineers have a better chance to get a job in ADA than a
>computer scientist because of the nature of most of the applications
>written in ADA. Is that true? If I want to work as a ADA programmer, would
>a B.S. degree in C.S. will be sufficient?
>
>Thanks.
>
>Luis Espinal.
>
>--
>What does not kill us, makes us stronger.
>Nietzsche.
>
>L^3 = Long Live Linux
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread
* Re: jobs in ada?
[not found] <01bcfadf$4c3abc60$0f02000a@luisespi>
1997-11-28 0:00 ` jobs in ada? bklungle
@ 1997-11-28 0:00 ` Robert B. Love
1 sibling, 0 replies; 2+ messages in thread
From: Robert B. Love @ 1997-11-28 0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
In <01bcfadf$4c3abc60$0f02000a@luisespi> "Luis Espinal" wrote:
> something I would enjoy. But, when I search for jobs in ADA, the vast
> majority of them requires knowledge that seem more of a electrical
engineer
> than of a computer scientist. Not only that, I've been told at school
that
> electrical engineers have a better chance to get a job in ADA than a
> computer scientist because of the nature of most of the applications
Well, its true, you must be able to _do_ something with the language.
Its not just enough to speak it. However, if you're willing to learn
I think most corporations would accept you at an entry level.
The problem I see is that CS guys don't want to do the avionics type
work and they only want to work in the "in" language (C++). EE
guys want to do avionics and are willing to tackle any language.
Again, I think it boils down to willingness. At job interviews be
interested in the job, show a willingness and be patient. Getting
the first job is the most difficult. You school will have a placement
office that will schedule interviews with companies willing to accept
new hires.
Also, there are non-avionic tasks done in Ada too. Try seeking those
out.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 2+ messages in thread