Start your search with the big jobs portals. Monster.com, CareerBuilder, HotJobs, Dice.com, and your local newspaper's help wanted page all have plenty of jobs that require Linux experience.
There are a few job boards specifically for Linux, including Mojolin, BestLinuxJobs.com, HotLinuxJobs.com, and LinuxWebJobs. OpenSourceJobs.org is another place to try. If you know embedded Linux, turn to the listings on LinuxDevices.com.
Some online job sites focus on Linux for specific countries. For instance, Germans can turn to DELinuxJobs.com, Italians to Linux Lavoro, and Australians to Linux Australia's job board.
Don't overlook your local LUG. Not all have job postings online, but they're an excellent place to start networking.
If your job search fails to bear fruit, don't despair. Keep your day job, but get involved with one of the thousands of projects on SourceForge. No, you won't get paid, but you'll gain valuable experience, make good contacts, and contribute something back to the open source community.
Have we missed your favorite Linux employment resource? Post it in a comment below.
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If your local tech company his hiring their own website is a much more direct place to go than these other sites.
This book was directly responsible for getting me a half-dozen interviews, one of which landed me in my current position. It's not Linux development per se, but I develop ON Linux, and the company plans to switch from Solaris to Linux during 2004.
Three big things from the book: NEVER post your resume on line (Monster and co. are specifically mentioned as a problem), there are THREE types of recruiters (legit recruiters have no problem telling you what company is hiring), and you'll need THREE resumes for effective job hunting.
This book has great advice, and explains the realities of job searching in these modern times.
One big change is that everything doesn't revolve around computers here the way it does in Silicon Valley. Instead, everything revolves around financial companies. That turns out to be pretty nice, because they have a lot more money than computer startups do!
If you're in the San Francisco dot-bomb blast zone, <A HREF="http://www.craigslist.org/" TITLE="craigslist.org">Craigslist</a craigslist.org> remains one of the best sources of jobs, housing, personals, and, um, <A HREF="http://www.craigslist.org/about/best/" TITLE="craigslist.org">BoCL</a craigslist.org> resources anywhere. No guarantees, but it appears to be the preferred contact point for both lookers and seekers. A large portion of postings are direct-from-employer, rather than recruiter listings, a big plus over other boards.
Craigslist has expanded beyond SF -- it's pretty big in NYC and LA, less so in other area, but check out the <A HREF="http://www.craigslist.org/about/cities.html" TITLE="craigslist.org">regional Craigslists</a craigslist.org> as well. International too<nobr> <wbr></nobr>;-)
No association on my part. Happy user, and <A HREF="http://www.cnewmark.com/" TITLE="cnewmark.com">Craig Newmark</a cnewmark.com> is an all-around cool dude. The site itself is very much community oriented, an exemplar of the best of the Web.
...and you've heard it a gazillion times: don't overlook good old-fashioned networking. Friends. Family. Past gigs. Getting out and about in your community. Get off your "good intentions" (as NPR calls 'em), paste a smile on your face, and meet people in real life.
not so great
Posted by: smitty45 on December 10, 2003 11:29 PMWhy is this bad ? Because recruiters very often decline to give the name of the company, and variations in the job description make it seem that two jobs are different, but in reality are for the same job, just thru a different recruiter.
What happens then is that if you apply to both, companies usually pass you by if you've been submitted twice by two different hiring agencies, for fear of getting into a pissin match as to who got you in first, whether you are qualified or not.
Hotlinuxjobs never has more than 10 or so very high level development positions, Mojolin never gets more than 5 jobs at any time in any area, and opensourcejobs.org is the same.
My personal experience is that a better way to find a job is to search out company's own website...I see more listings there that aren't on job boards.
p.s. anyone looking to hire a Senior Unix/Linux Sysadmin with 10 years experience in the Bay Area ?<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:)
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