Perhaps it's because most companies require a degree. I got half-way through my Bsc (Computer Science), ran out of money, had no place to stay, and started working for a builder, double-shifts.
Extended my Pascal to teaching myself Delphi, which I've been doing since Delphi 4 came out.
I have never ever even gained an interview through applications, but a relative got me in with a FI company, and I gave my all for the time I was there.
After wasting my time applying all over the place, and having to support myself by other means in other odd-jobs, I decided to do my own thing. So far, I've got a crawler out there (among various rough apps I use to make my life easier) and I'll be indexing shortly once I've finished writing the proggy for it.
At least I'll be able to say I've done a whack of different things in my lifetime, and have been forced into becoming self-sufficient as an entrepreneur.
Jobs are nice - at least you don't worry every month as to where the basic living is coming from!
See? I don't lie about what I've done, and it gets me nowhere employment-wise. Companies generally aren't interested in self-taught people following their passion, irrespective of what they can do.
Perhaps this is a possible example of why some people lie about their degrees? Funny thing is, the newly-qualified guy in Delphi could learn quite a bit from me...
