On The (Digital) Road Again

By Aaron Price, (price@jeannie.ultranet.com)

Aaron was the Documentation Services Assistant in Academic Computing Services for the past year. He is currently living and working in Massachusetts. - Ed.

It was just a couple of minutes past midnight eastern standard time on Christmas morning. A light dusting of snow had begun to fall and the Interstate was completely empty save a sole Corolla with a U-Haul trailer tagging along behind it. Inside that car sat I, driving through West Virginia and the Appalachians listening to WBAP 820 AM . . . I could not believe my ears. The only station I could listen to between the peaks and valleys that was not preaching the airwaves blue was WBAP. It made me think of home and how I got into this fine mess in the first place. People who say the Internet is addictive are not kidding. Here I was about a thousand miles from my home of 20 years and about a thousand miles away from my future home for (hopefully) the next 20 years. From Texas to Massachusetts the shortest distance is not a straight line, but a fiber-optic one.

The Internet changed my life, it can change yours too . . .

So are you sick of life and looking for a change? Don't take refuge in your computer but rather find new refuge with it. Follow my story and you'll see how you can swing your life 180 degrees in under a month.

Begin with finding a new job. Hop on the World Wide Web and surf some of the many career sites on the web. Try CareerPath (http://www.careerpath.com/) or Monster (http://www.careerpath.com/index.html) for example. They will show resumes and job listings geographically or by subject.

I did it backwards. I decided where I wanted to live (Boston), then looked for businesses in the area. I searched the ISPs in particular and found 5 with job openings I was interested in. You can also hit the news groups. glanced through ne.jobs daily looking for just the right hitch.

After you have found the job that was made just for you, shoot off a nice brand spanking new resume through E-mail. It is best to send a cover letter and then attach two copies of your resume. One should be in ascii text and the other in WordPerfect. I found that both are the industry standards for E-mail resumes.

Now getting the job is up to you. Remember the old standards of follow-up-up calling and professionalism. I was lucky and my father donated frequent flyer miles to fly me to Boston for interviews with two companies.
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After you get the job comes the hard part. You need to find a new home! This is where I was shocked at the fantastic support on the net. First make a beeline for Apartments For Rent (http://www.aptsforrent.com/). They rent many apartments over the WWW! You can get pictures of complexes, floor plans, prices, info on accessories (AC, dishwasher, pool, etc.), deposit info, etc. Some even have scanned map directions to the complexes!

This place is classy even if you do not rent from them. Personally, I used them to determine where I wanted to live. By scoping out the apartment prices for various areas of Massachusetts I could determine where I could afford! So I grabbed a paper of that region (Marlborough, 30 minutes west of Boston if you must know.) when I was interviewing for the job. That's where I found a good place to rent.

While you are doing this hit the newsgroups again. This is where you will get the confidence to actually make the move. Post a message on a newsgroup pertaining to the area you are moving to. I joined ne.general and basically announced where I was moving to and from. Within days I was inundated with E-mail from people offering me tips from driving in snow to the best Chinese food place on Harvard square. This is the stuff that makes moving easier. I also got recommendations on banks, automobile mechanics, prices of heating oil, regional vernacular, and even which weatherman to watch on TV!

Don't forget to switch your attention back to the WWW. Check out Lycos (http://www.lycos.com/) or AltaVista (http://www.altavista.digital.com/) and search for a home page for your town or city. Almost all have one these days. They are great sources for civic info. Going to Boston Online I found commuter rail maps, traffic info, tax information (They don't call it "Tax"achusetts for nothing!), and other tidbits that helped me settle in.

Now for the trip. Back in the newsgroups I found the best driving route to Massachusetts from Denton (2048 miles in two days!). I picked up tips on where to rest and where to avoid. I found out that West Virginia outlaws radar detectors (mine was broken anyhow), the Adirondacks are notorious for freak snowstorms, and that there are left lane exits in the New York suburbs.

So now it's the last day. Your eyes are full of tears as you wave good-bye to the loved ones and your heart is excited that you are finally moving on. Be sure to check out Purdue's Weather Processor (http://thunder.atms.purdue.edu/) to get the latest satellite images for the trip and hit Intellicast (http://www. intellicast.com) for some NexRad radar shots.

Once you've hit the road you have to leave the computer be. WBAP will be your guide for most of the way as that station seems to own the nighttime AM airwaves.

A Happy Ending

That's how the Internet has changed my life. I found a job, a home, and a safe trip through it. And all for the price of about ten "Dole For President" yard signs.

The only thing that disappointed me is that on the way I acounted only six Stuckeys. I could have sworn I'd break twenty.


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