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Stand-up comedy? Or maybe you don't drink enough?
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Oooooh! WAY TOO MUCH WORK! LOL.
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Engineering?
SwITCh?!
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I don't know if I'm smart enough for that. I almost remember Calculus ;D
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And maybe even after that.
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I'm with Nemanja
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Same here, Think i will code even after if my code bot ever gets off the ground (preferably before so people can pay me for work I'm not doing )
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I certainly hope to continue coding - although retiring sounds like a fine end alternative to dieing.
Last job got outsourced to cheaper country. I don't plan to move, so I may have problems coding if this trend (moving jobs to cheap labor) continues...
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Yeah, it's too much fun. To me, it's like asking a wizard to give up magic. Why would they?
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Well put
Sad but true: 4/3 of Americans have difficulty with simple fractions.
There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary and those who don't.
{o,o}.oO( Check out my blog! )
|)””’) http://pihole.org/
-”-”-
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Yep, me too, even after retirement i'll still be coding, i like coding
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It's the companies I've worked for I would change. I'd also probably do more independant work rather than working for someone else.
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Hear hear.
Sad but true: 4/3 of Americans have difficulty with simple fractions.
There are 10 types of people in this world: those who understand binary and those who don't.
{o,o}.oO( Check out my blog! )
|)””’) http://pihole.org/
-”-”-
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Knowing that C# wouldn't be available for twenty more years would be very frustrating.
Though I suppose I could kick-start it...
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I also love working with C# so much better than C, so I must agree with you there.
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In the beginning there were punchcards.
When Assembler was born, people happily learned it.
Later on they were happy to change to C and C++.
After C++ there was C#. Again, people were happy to change.
After C# there'll be ... well, I don't know, but as history tell us, it will probably be better than C#.
This statement is false.
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Well, yes, we can expect better things in the future; but to actually know the details decades in advance would be frustrating.
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If I could go back I wouldn't do the computing straight away. I seem to have the right basic talents and abilities (and all that childhood programming practice). I'd have been a singer (my other main talent) and then done the degree/got into computing later in life. I have met several people who have done a similar thing (after being in the Army, for example) and they seem do do just fine...
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kirsty pollock wrote: I'd have been a singer (my other main talent) and then done the degree/got into computing later in life.
There was a fellow that worked with me a few years ago that was a good guitarist and a very good EE/SW guy. He made friends with a singer in a famous 70's rock band (before the resurgence of 70's music). One day the singer called him and asked him to tour as a guitarist and the tech manager. He did that for about 6 months and then came back to work with us. Before he came back, I was able to see he play with the band when they had a local concert (it's kind of fun to say "I'm with the band").
When he came back he said it was because he got sick of the road and the way band members treated their support crew (probably more of the latter). But not long after that he got a job at a company that focuses on HW/SW for music, movies and home theater.
So it's possible to have it both ways. Apparently touring with a famous band as a guitarist is a good resume builder for some entertainment oriented HW/SW companies.
Keith Rule
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...I could have done it too but my parents coerced me into engineering when I was making my college choices. Once you've graduated and got a job/mortgage/wife/family etc. it's very difficult, if not impossible, to stop working and re-train for some other profession.
It's not that I dislike the job - I actually love what I do - but I can't help feeling that (in the UK at least) engineers are looked upon as geeky second class citizens, a necessary evil if you like and the subject of many nerdy jokes. In fact, I often avoid getting into discussions with people about my chosen profession because as soon as I say 'Software Engineer' their eyes glaze over and they change the subject as soon as possible. If I'm lucky they'll refrain from some joke about 'shift registers' or 'The IT Crowd' on Channel 4. I wouldn't mind but just about everybody in the developed world (and quite a few people in developing countries too) use electronics developed by us poorly paid second class geeks, so where's the pay/respect?
The only way to really get paid in this profession is to go it alone as a freelancer, but it takes a lot of different qualities to take that plunge, many of which most people don't have.
OK, rant over. Back to work...
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Man, I can't stand the IT crowd. hahaha.
And, I swear it's not as bad as you think it is. Everytime I tell people I'm an electrical engineer, I kind of wince (presumably expecting a blow to the head or something, dunno) but really, it's not too bad - they usually ask me how I got into it etc.
SwITCh?!
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"The only way to really get paid in this profession is to go it alone as a freelancer, but it takes a lot of different qualities to take that plunge, many of which most people don't have."
Yes, like being a completely useless, shameless gouger Ok, not all freelancers, but some
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I think about this being that I work with Doctors that make 10 times my salary or more...
John
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So much for morality.
Making your living off of sick people?
Exploiting the dire misfortunes of others?*
Taking part in impoverishing people - entire families?
That's the crowd you want to hang with ???
* As is oft said by MD's: "We bury our mistakes" - but still send the bill.
"The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits." - Albert Einstein
"How do you find out if you're unwanted if everyone you try to ask tells you to stop bothering them and just go away?" - Balboos HaGadol
"It's a sad state of affairs, indeed, when you start reading my tag lines for some sort of enlightenment?" - Balboos HaGadol
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Well, that's one way to put it.
Actually, I sort of think of it as making a living helping sick people.
Maybe I look at it slightly differently here in the UK. We have a publicly funded National Health Service, and the vast majority of people would agree that it's a good system (although everyone would agree that it has its problems) and as far as know it's never been responsible for impoverishing entire families - in fact it's supposed to provide largely free health care to everybody, no matter what their financial situation.
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