The Heavens open!...
The opportunity-of-a-lifetime finally comes within your grasp:
an entry-level Web developer position, with a dominant focus on the
Linux operating system and writing code in Perl - both of which have
been self-learned over the past three years. Finally, the opportunity to
tune out the ever-present chaos of the world and the uncertainty of
illogical human interactions... an
opportunity to finally delve into the recesses of the mind to analyze,
theorize, and fabricate in a surreal realm of structures, functions,
logic, and processes.
Success is in sight!...
You
successfully make a positive impression as a team player who can
communicate well with others and you provide an extensive portfolio to
evidence your computer knowledge and programing prowess...
Irony...
Two hours of the three-hour interview are spent by head management
explaining that the role they really want you to take involves
interfacing directly with the customers and the store employees, to help
improve their business model and develop new methodologies for
customer/employee/computer interactions, because "there are some
programmers who should never be put in front of other people."
So, you're qualified to be a developer, according to the coding
evaluations they gave you, but you're not anti-social "enough" to hide
you from the public eye.
Sigh...