Jan 242009
 

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 Responses to “Leaving Sun”

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

  2. Sorry to hear this news, Lauren.

  3. Take care.

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

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

    Looks like North­ern Voice will be cool, too.

    Liam

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

  13. 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. 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. 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. 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. 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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