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Denis Melnikov2018-11-26 14:01:07
Distant work
Denis Melnikov, 2018-11-26 14:01:07

Actual language for remote control?

In connection with not good life difficulties, I thought about how to leave the Russian Federation (previously Bali).
I have little experience except in 1C. I wrote an assistant site for myself in Pyhton/Django (working with SSH/Mikrotik/REST API).
Therefore, the question is for those who live remotely. What is relevant now, what work is more. I understand that the question is banal, but for me it is now extremely relevant. I set a deadline for myself, 1 year, if nothing changes, then we’ll dump ...
I’m looking towards ASP.net core, or a PHP must have =)
I really need advice =)

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7 answer(s)
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Sergey Nizhny Novgorod, 2018-11-27
@Mi11er

Definitely PHP / JS
Java / .Net - most often in the office. Of course, there is remote work, but it’s directly very dumb given the scope.
Python (django) - there is a remote, but it is not enough. Plus, projects are most often bourgeois, which are outsourced by a company from conditional Rostov, Krasnodar, Yaroslavl, etc. (that is, they will not pay normally).
If you go west, then python is not bad for clients from the USA, Canada, Australia. But it's up to you whether you get it or not. As for asp.net, that's a bad option. For .net in the USA is used to automate some enterprises, where you need to be in the office and understand what and how to do, and not conditionally sit on your ass. Plus, in the USA, local firms are often (where Indians by origin are in charge, they take orders and pass them on to their brothers)

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Puma Thailand, 2018-11-26
@opium

Yes, in any field of work, it’s fucked up in the context of one person, you write as if the arrival of one person will dry up a niche in which thousands of hours a day are needed by a person
. And so you can go to any exchange and see what works are hanging, you yourself can all publicly

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Philipp, 2018-11-26
@zoonman

English .

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Itlyashev, 2018-11-26
@Itlyashev

Try to just take a break for a month or two, without bothering with remote work and relocation. There are more cons than pros.
By specialization, highlight the most interesting things that you had to do and develop it. Be it back, front, mobile, devops or gamedev. Almost everything will be in demand both in office work and remotely.
It is more important to do your job with pleasure and interest.

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stratosmi, 2018-11-26
@stratosmi

Exactly also you can work fine and 1C remotely.
It is not important what kind of work is more (there, by the way, the competition among performers is higher).
What matters is what you personally know best.

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incel, 2018-11-26
@incel

I wrote a helper site for myself in Pyhton/Django (working with SSH/Mikrotik/REST API)

Well, the experience is there, you can develop it. There is definitely outsourcing on Python.
And you're funny, nothing has changed here for hundreds of years.
I will also double the stratosmi , you can find a remote on 1C if you are a professional.
In general, of course, I would first get good knowledge, skills and experience in any instrument, and only then I would fall, and would not fly to the ends of the world with a bare ass.
Good luck!

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Sizar, 2018-11-27
@Sizar

You have more emotion than a sober mind, judging by what you want. Those. your wife and daughter left you for another, for some reason you can’t stay in a Moscow apartment (not yours, for sale), and therefore you want to leave naked and stupid where it’s warm? And are you sure that you will be better there alone, without experience, without normal knowledge, with people with behavior and worldview alien to you? I doubt.
As I see it, frontend works well remotely, but this is pampering, not a profession for a man, since it is not stable, not interesting, for young students and graduates. A bunch of smut with the search for orders, the customer.
I myself thought about dumping from Moscow to Europe (not Germashka, but to normal countries), but this is too difficult, and in developed countries, programmers are not really needed, unlike the United States.

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