Those that leave one Googly-eyed
Thursday, March 11th, 2010 22:48One of the things I’ve been procrastinatingah, not had the time to do, being busy with school and other projects, is announcing and working on a job search for this summer. I have posted my resume, but I didn’t even get around to mentioning that. The process really doesn’t excite me that much — it’s essentially research, comparison shopping, which I have never been very fond of.
But, last October, I was contacted out of the blue by a recruiter asking if I was interested in opportunities at — Google. After checking that it wasn’t a spoof I naturally said yes, and after a number of rounds of information exchange and interviews,
This summer, I will be (well, subject to my completing the process of accepting the offer) working as a Software Engineering Intern at Google, with the Caja team, in Mountain View, CA.
So — whoa and yay and other such cheerful words. And thanks to my friends at Google who referred me and nudged the process along.*
The most uncertain remaining step is finding housing in or near Mountain View (could be as far as San Francisco or San Jose; Google runs a shuttle bus and is convenient to public transportation). Google has provided some general advice-for-interns, but I’d like to hear input from my readers and friends who already live in in the area.
Some parameters:
- I would consider living with other people, but I wouldn’t want to take a chance on a complete unknown. (So if you are someone or know someone with a room...)
- Speaking of taking chances, make the chance of being mugged on the way home in the evening very small, please.
- I am traveling from the east coast, probably by train, so I don’t want to have to transport a lot of stuff, or buy items that I’ll use for only three months — so a furnished space is better.
- I do not own a car, but I know how to drive one.
- I do not own a bicycle, but I used to know how to ride one.
- This will be the first time I have lived outside of my home city for longer than a week’s visit/vacation.
*Y’know how job search advice is big on saying you should be “networking”? If you’ve thought you’re too much of the non-face-to-face-social non-polite-small-talk would-rather-talk-to-people-through-the-computer sort for that — take me as an example. This opportunity came to me because of other people who knew me entirely through my work on open source projects (E, and thus Caja-CapTP) — I didn’t do anything that I wouldn’t have done for other reasons anyway. I’m not saying you shouldn't do any of the other stuff you might be thinking of — I’m saying this stuff counts.
Do you have any Stanford contacts?
Date: 2010-03-17 22:27 (UTC)Housing in the Bay Area is famously both scarce and expensive. So don't be mortified by what you find (or don't find). Shared housing is a really good idea. Craigslist is worth a shot.
If you're into museums or great food or nightlife, SF is a fantastic place to live. Go for it. But if you expect to spent much of your summer evenings quietly coding, save yourself the commute (~1hr each way) and find a place in or near Mountain View.
Bikes are good. Biking in the area is fantastic. Hills, flats, and good weather all in one place.
Google is in the middle of miles and miles of suburbia. I think the odds of muggings are quite low.