Tech workers are a weird choice for “princes of labor,” but for decades they’ve enjoyed unparalleled labor power, expressed in high wages, lavish stock grants, and whimsical campuses with free laundry and dry-cleaning, gourmet cafeterias, and kombucha on tap:
Whoa. That’s not the experience I had.
Since graduating software engineering in 2008 I’ve had a lot of trouble finding a job from a company that didn’t want to screw me over on salary and work hours. It’s only recently that I was able to negotiate my salary to something decent.
Same. Graduated back in 2013, but since I live in a “third world country”, not a single company here did anything even remotely similar, not before and not since.
I live in Canada. But even in the US it hasn’t been like this for everybody. Ever seen the movie Office Space? The truth is closer to that movie for the vast majority of IT employees than whatever big tech Silicon Valley companies offer.
Whoa. That’s not the experience I had.
Since graduating software engineering in 2008 I’ve had a lot of trouble finding a job from a company that didn’t want to screw me over on salary and work hours. It’s only recently that I was able to negotiate my salary to something decent.
Not everyone works at Google.
Same. Graduated back in 2013, but since I live in a “third world country”, not a single company here did anything even remotely similar, not before and not since.
In the US?
I live in Canada. But even in the US it hasn’t been like this for everybody. Ever seen the movie Office Space? The truth is closer to that movie for the vast majority of IT employees than whatever big tech Silicon Valley companies offer.