Another report has come in that an @awscloud employee got an offer at a non-FAANG for 40% more than their current target AWS comp.
Lateral move again as best I can tell.
And because I don’t hide data that doesn’t confirm my position: a third employee reports that a non-FAANG offer has come in $100k *below* their current @awscloud comp.
This is why we interview! Find out for yourself what you can get elsewhere.
Another report has come in. “I have multiple offers in hand. My current TC at @awscloud is 335k. My highest FAANG offer is 652K and non FAANG offer is 710K. Same level (engineering manager)”
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So once upon a time I worked in a shop where the ops folks were divided into two teams.
AppOps, which handled the care and feeding of the application the company ran, and SysOps, which handled maintaining the Linux servers.
I was on the SysOps team. We handled filesystems, monitoring via Nagios, datacenter buildouts (this was pre-cloud), filesystem work, etc.
We were sysadmins. Today those jobs are called DevOps or SRE. Same job, better pay.
The AppOps teams started with the care and feeding of Jboss or Tomcat or whatever the hell middleware we used in that era, and went into the app from there.
They communicated constantly with the app developers and knew heaps about Java heaps.
In an effort to broaden my mass-market appeal, I will attempt to livetweet today's #AppleEvent in this thread in something approaching my usual keynote livetweet style.
My tweet threads are to "shitposting" as Macbooks are to "laptops;" both involve garbage and the keyboard.
The best #AppleEvent streaming experience is on Apple devices using Safari. Other browsers "may be able to access the stream" but I've seen enough of these to recognize a "go fuck yourself" when I see one.
The "Audio descriptions" are hilarious. It's trying to explain what's happening. "A blue line swoops in from the top right and then the lower left, then swoops up back to the left. A thick yellow line moves up from the left and become slight green."
Nice: Oracle Cloud is technically excellent and doesn't get enough attention for what it does well.
Nasty: It's a heavy, heavy lift to recommend it for greenfield projects just because "you should use Oracle" sounds like terrible advice without heavy contextual bounding.
We work together at a company with 135K other people. For some reason, they've asked me to write this instead of people who are directly familiar with the quality of their work.
Fear not! I've conducted diligence and searched news.google.com to validate that they're not publicly accused of atrocities. I've also punched their name into Twitter's search and found nothing notable there either.