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Leaving Sun

As has been widely repor­ted, Sun Microsys­tems laid off a num­ber of people on Thursday. That num­ber included most of my pro­ject team and me, since the pro­ject I was man­aging was cancelled.

Over the nearly four years I was at Sun I learned a lot, con­trib­uted what I could, and had fun work­ing with some excel­lent people. Some of them are still there; oth­ers, like me, are now fig­ur­ing out their next steps. These days it’s easier to keep in touch, for which I am grateful.

What’s next? I’m not really sure. First I’ll take some time off, help out with North­ern Voice, fin­ish off recon­fig­ur­ing my base­ment firewall/website sys­tem, do some house and cot­tage renov­a­tions, catch up on my crafts, and think about what I want to do next. Even­tu­ally some good oppor­tun­ity will come my way that I can’t res­ist; ideas and leads are welcome.

{ 17 } Comments

  1. Boris Mann | Jan 24, 2009 at 9:57 am | Permalink

    Sorry to hear about this, will keep my ears open.

  2. yarnpiggy | Jan 24, 2009 at 10:22 am | Permalink

    Sorry to hear this news, Lauren.

  3. tts | Jan 24, 2009 at 10:48 am | Permalink

    Take care.

  4. Airdrie | Jan 24, 2009 at 10:58 am | Permalink

    I’m sure you must be upset — nobody likes being laid-off. Hope­fully you got some fin­an­cial com­pens­a­tion, and will enjoy hav­ing some time off. I’m really enjoy­ing being off work, myself. Although my leave was by choice, not lay-off, I still think that it would not have been my first choice if life’s situ­ations were not as they are; I love work­ing. Try to keep the nanny if you can afford it. Take some time to your­self. Some say job hunt­ing is a full-time job itself.

  5. Dave Pawson | Jan 24, 2009 at 11:01 am | Permalink

    Enjoy the time off Lauren. I’m sure you’ll find some­thing to interest you when you come back to the race!

  6. Derek K. Miller | Jan 24, 2009 at 11:16 am | Permalink

    Ah, the joys of the tech eco­nomy. I last exper­i­enced the same kind of lay­off in 2001, and while I had liked my job at the time, things worked out bet­ter for me over the next few years after that.

    In ret­ro­spect, though, I was freaked out enough that I star­ted doing freel­ance work right away, and it might have been bet­ter for me to take a bit of a break as you are. We’ll see you at North­ern Voice!

  7. Pete | Jan 24, 2009 at 12:58 pm | Permalink

    Derek: tech lay­offs get all the press but let me assure you that the blue col­lar and hourly work­force are going through these as well, as we always have, and 99% of us are not pro­tec­ted by con­tracts and we don’t get the nice pack­ages that Microsoft and Sun hand out. The “joys”, as you call them, are every­where; we just don’t get the headlines.

  8. Dave Orchard | Jan 24, 2009 at 10:28 pm | Permalink

    Sorry to hear the news. I’m sure you got a decent pack­age. I didn’t take much time off from the job hunt and I wish I had. Make sure to set some very spe­cific goals that you’d like to accom­plish, then dive back into the mar­ket when you are ready. It will prob­ably get bet­ter after a bit anyways!

  9. Tony Fisk | Jan 26, 2009 at 10:34 pm | Permalink

    My sym­path­ies, Lauren (hav­ing been laid off a couple of years ago myself, and hav­ing ended my last con­tract a month ago)

    Basic­ally, I agree with what Air­drie said (and keep con­trol of the home chores list!)

  10. len | Jan 27, 2009 at 6:35 am | Permalink

    72,000 jobs evap­or­ated yes­ter­day in the US. Hard sledding.

    I went almost a year without work except for music gigs and as the money side of the sup­port team (aka, mar­riage), it was a scary ride. On the other hand, I used the time to build River of Life and I’m right proud of that. When the next oppor­tun­ity came along, it was bet­ter in every way includ­ing the power to lib­er­ate some col­leagues and friends from their bad gigs. That job came from the light pro bono stand­ards work on CAP. Atten­tion to dharma means good karma, and you’ve got a trawler load, so no worries.

    It’s a gift wrapped in news­pa­pers that oth­er­wise wrap fish. The upside is you are well-prepared and in demand, which is more than one can say for the fish.

  11. Liam Quin | Jan 27, 2009 at 12:40 pm | Permalink

    Good luck, Lauren, I’m sure whatever you do will be done well.

    Looks like North­ern Voice will be cool, too.

    Liam

  12. Dethe Elza | Jan 27, 2009 at 1:09 pm | Permalink

    Sorry to hear that, Lauren. I’m sure some­thing will turn up for you soon. See you at North­ern Voice!

  13. Travis Smith | Jan 27, 2009 at 1:52 pm | Permalink

    Being laid off, even at the best of times, is a blow — but ulti­mately, I’m sure you’ll end up some­where bet­ter. You cer­tainly have the sup­port of a wide circle of people who want to help you through to your next phase.

  14. Betty Harvey | Jan 27, 2009 at 5:04 pm | Permalink

    Lauren:

    I am sorry to hear that Sun is doing another down­turn. If there is any­thing at all that I can help with, please don’t hes­it­ate to let me know! If John hadn’t got laid off by DEC I would never have had the cour­age to strike out on my own. There is always a sil­ver liner.

    Keep us informed of your next moves and the best of luck!!

  15. David Comay | Jan 27, 2009 at 10:49 pm | Permalink

    Lauren, sorry to hear this news. It’s our loss but here’s hop­ing you enjoy the time and that another oppor­tun­ity comes up soon.

  16. timbl | Jan 28, 2009 at 6:18 am | Permalink

    Lauren, I hope very much that you even­tu­ally can look back at this as another pos­it­ive mile­stone in your life. You have great tal­ents and spirit — whatever you do will bene­fit greatly from your involve­ment. And eco­nomic down­turns are never down­turns in the flow of ideas or of things that need doing and things which are excit­ing to do.

    timbl

  17. William Loughborough | Mar 02, 2009 at 5:18 pm | Permalink

    Although I echo what Tim says, I would add that you should be cel­eb­rat­ing a release — not bemoan­ing a “bad turn”.

    The residue of the imper­at­ive to accept even the most benign forms of wage slavery besets us all from time to time. After all didn’t god say we’re sup­posed to tug our fore­locks to the king?

    There’s a Lenny Bruce piece about a guy who loses wife, etc. and the Chinese waiter’s response is “You betta off!”

    Even if you have to live “under the bridge”, it won’t really mat­ter because you have, among a great many other things, you. I hate to play my age card but hard as it is to accept, your life is just begin­ning. The best that’s yet to come will be super­lat­ive. And I know this from experience.

    Love.

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