Quote:
If it's not 2 but 3 years, both pay the same but one has a much faster system in those last 3 years.
Clearly advanced Economics and Financial Management concepts were not on your mind. Think: NPV vs. NFV with respect to inflation. Given that the economic trend towards further recession and/or depression has not reversed, future money will likely technically "cost more" than present money with respect to overall budget. That second $500 may be "more expensive" at a future date, as the CPI (Consumer Price Index), aka "inflation", has gone up for everything, including essentials of food, gas, water, electricity.
Quote:
Why does it matter what employers use?
Ah, to be non-jaded by the employment market.
Experience. It's all about experience. It doesn't matter diddly squat to most people that you are intelligent and can learn something fairly quickly. They don't want that. They don't want to have to train. They want you to walk in with vast amounts of knowledge and bust your butt for only 2/3rds to 3/4ths of the pay that you should get if the economy was better and they had less of a choice of people.
Technically, what I'd like to have is a system with a SSD and 16GB memory so that I could set up a VM, get Visual Studio Express and work on designing some sort of database for myself to catalog an album (LP) / tape (including reel) / CD / DVD collection, so that enabled me to have VM experience and SQL Server experience.
Hopefully, if I can get this job, even though it is part time, they have Exchange and use Active Directory. Again, this is an experience thing. I administered a Lotus Domino server, which included checking on any mail backlogs and spam filtering, as well as creating new user accounts and removing the accounts when the person left. However, since it is not Exchange and AD / Group Policy, employers ignore you because you "don't have the experience", despite having equivalent experience in a different product.
Like I said, how great it is to not be jaded / woken up to the real world of job hunting...
Quote:
Today I took my mothers old pc (E5200) that she bought for 300 euro (and that's including VAT) 4 or 5 years ago to my office to try it out - I was able to run full processing including composite clipping at quality 50!
I have different expectations. What I have to decide is how much, if any, of those expectations I can keep, given my situation. I may end up in bargain-basement territory, but that's not where I'd like to be. I've already dropped 50% of the price of what I'd truly like. Going further is becoming harder to justify, which could turn out to be a decision to not buy anything until this thing completely dies.