this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2024
25 points (100.0% liked)
Linux for Leftists
1151 readers
1 users here now
A Community for all leftists wanting to join and being part of a community that talks about Linux, Unix and the Free Software Community
founded 3 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Thank you for your reply (and everyone else's replies as well)
I have the privilege of being able to get out of the country, I'm currently in the US visiting family and working for a small business, it's been about a month. A family member living here managed to get me in the company. It's been pretty meh so far, only done some webdev work (they didn't even put the site live) and IT assistance (installing PCs and such). They have their own management software that (I think) they're selling, which is not ideal but capitalism™. I don't yet have the know-how to make any contributions to it, unfortunately. I'm entering my second year in university and I'll come back to Brazil when it starts.
Even in Brazil, is entering the academic or research field hard? I can get a (sorry if not right name in English) doctorate, post doc, master's, etc since I can find jobs that pay enough to provide for myself while studying due to my qualifications and my parents helping me if I need to. Honestly I'd kill just to get a job at Pine64, System76 or the FSF.
Sorry if I'm too naïve or enthusiastic about all this, I'm still very new to the job market and stuff. (20yo also)
Getting into academia in Brazil is arguably way easier than in the USA or other Global North countries (for foreigners) because our public universities are free and the competition is not too tight. We have a national test for computer science master's programmes, kinda like ENEM. Here.
But academia is its own particular brand of hell no matter which country you're in, so if you're thinking about it first try and get through most of the course with good grades (for selection programmes) and consider doing a Master's before getting set on a doctorate programme.
If you do an undergraduate, a master's and a doctoral degree back to back, assuming nothing goes wrong, you'll be stuck in academia for at least 10 years of your life, and that's not an easy decision to make.
There are possibly also undergraduate research assistant positions in your college, so you could check those out to see if the research lifestyle is right for you.
Since you're young, if you focus your interests on areas that are commercially interesting for open source projects (like the aforementioned Pine, or low-level systems that corporations depend on but can't be bothered to develop), it's possible you could end up working in the area. But along the way you'll have to work on lots of non-free software jobs in order to survive, but also just to learn how to become a better professional.
This is just the way it is right now. It's not a moral failure to engage with capitalism while living under it.
BTW, I'd advise you not to post too much identifying information on internet forums. You never know what kind of person might find it, and once it's on the web it can be really hard to erase it.