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About work in closed state. institutions?
Does anyone work in closed state. institutions? What are the disadvantages besides the ban on traveling abroad? Is it possible to get a job in a foreign company?
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Minuses? Yes, complete:
1. Terry bureaucracy
- Be prepared to get a job in up to a couple of months, passing all sorts of medical examinations and running around signing papers.
- In case you need something for work - this also needs to be agreed and signed a bunch of times - A lot
of useless work in the form of drawing up "according to GOST" documents (even if you are a programmer, yes)
- Any work is a TOR, and a TOR is agreement. Boring and long.
2. Outdated material base
- Usually state-owned enterprises do not favor innovations
3. Lack of normal Internet access
- It either does not exist at all, or through a separate computer with a CRT monitor in the corner. By record. Sometimes you can sit through a USB modem until they give you a hat - at your own expense, of course.
4. A bunch of idlers
- Usually a bunch of losers gather at state-owned enterprises, who were not taken to other places. How can this be a downside? And so - your work can be tied to other people who are in no hurry to do their part or, in especially neglected cases, will do it carelessly and then try to blame everything on you.
5. Oppressive atmosphere
All this crap with the Internet, idlers and bureaucracy discourages the desire to do something and somehow develop. What for? You will have everything - in 20-30 years. It is unlikely that a foreign company will hire such an employee.
The above is my personal (thank God, small) experience. Perhaps somewhere the situation is better.
Agree with LeEnot . Everything is described exactly as it was for me. Unfortunately, I spent a lot of time in this institution. Fortunately - I still changed my mind) Now I have to intensively catch up. A lot of time was spent on classes that were completely extraneous for a programmer - subbotniks (just like at school), dragging archives from one room to another, production lectures (the topics of which had absolutely nothing to do with IT), fussing with documents (orders, reports and other nonsense ). As a result, during the working week it was possible to do programming for a maximum of 2-3 days. By the way, about programming there: everything is bad) I’ll sign it in more detail:
- there really was no Internet, only on a separate computer. It was a silent nightmare when it was necessary to look up something on stackoverflow or download some library. Running back and forth from a work computer to a computer with the Internet got tired very quickly.
- The material base is really outdated. I bought half of the components of a working computer with my own money, because it was extremely uncomfortable to work on the brake gland.
- Low level of programming in general. Nobody knew what CVS was, no OOP, let alone Design Patterns and so on. absolutely not used. In principle, each programmer kept some of his own applications, in which only he understood. As a result - no teamwork experience.
The only spoon of honey in a barrel of tar - it was allowed to use any technology that would fulfill the task. Thanks to this, I was able to write first in Delphi, then in C# and then in PHP. But any programming language of interest can be studied at home, in my free time, so this spoonful of honey is not essential)
I was lucky at some point to change my mind and break out of the comfort zone into which my work in the state dragged me. institution. True, I lost a few precious years and now I have to make a lot of efforts to catch up with my peers, who at one time went to work in normal offices. Therefore, my advice is no government agencies, run away from them to normal IT organizations!
This is the sa-a-my debt and workaround. Really. You do not know and cannot guarantee that you will use the right technology stack and have the right social circle. It may well be that you will have something written in your labor record like OAO Research Institute "Kontur", the position "Computer Operator, Category 2". In any case, find out everything clearly and in advance. Might be something really interesting.
Is it possible to get a job in a foreign company?
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