Awesome programming jobs
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Any games we may know that you can name drop? Gear of War 2, Fable II, Fallout 3, StarCraft 2...
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Most of us have average, maintenance-type programming jobs. While they mostly pay well, they don't make for legendary status. If you are one of the few lucky ones to have an "awesome" jobs envied by the masses of programmers, tell us a bit about it here.......
I can't compete with Chris. But once in a while my job has a boom. It's usually at least 'smokin!' however 9 days out of 10 I'm just winging it. :-D pay no attention to the man behind the curtain. :)
_________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb) John Andrew Holmes "It is well to remember that the entire universe, with one trifling exception, is composed of others."
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i SOOOO want to work at this place!!! i want to work in marketing because of this game description: "Enter Pimp City, where bling is king, and style is everything. On these streets, if your car isn't fully pimped out, you'd be better off walking. You and Xzibit will take on the challenge of hooking up your homies, and transforming their hoopties, buckets and beaters into the hottest whips on the street, while redlining through the highways and alleyways of Pimp City. You choose the mods, you choose the route, but pimpin' ain't easy. It will take speed and style to hook them up. Do you have what it takes to Pimp Their Ride?"
----------------------------------------------------------- "When I first saw it, I just thought that you really, really enjoyed programming in java." - Leslie Sanford
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Considering that question as superficial... after all it is nothing more than that.. I have a "job" where no one envies me, perhaps apart from not knowing what I'm working on next. No one knows me, no one cares, and only results in real terms (aka cash first and potential sales second) are of any importance. Love of the job (read: lifestyle) is the only pre-requisite to that goal.. I love going to conferences and watching the speakers sell their next book or next job or next tech. You know, as if it wasn't invented or even better-than-now hammered topic 10, 20 or 30 years back.. Evangelists and exhibitionist are most intriguing, they are certainly more entertaining than estate agents, but still estate agents alike. So screw the so-called 'legends', if you need a reality check dive into expert open-source libraries of less egotistic or inhibited engineers. So no one envies me, and I feel best that way.. I'd suggest instead of worrying of 'average', you do your piece to your best and get hubmle when someone does it better. And don't forget that some of the most clueless programmers, architects and fashion chasing Goks are exactly on the boards here, at CP.. There are exceptions, but you'll take ages to figure out who they are.. And if you think you are one of the top, just look at something like boost.org, and make sure to touch down quickly and safely.. That applies to the entire C# 3.0 and 4.0 (although they nicked one of the boost guys) and JDK 6.0 brigade.. Envy and big-headedness is the root of all evil, and most of the unknowns can still take on any CLR guy there is out there in their own field and 'engineering'.. so you tell me if it can possibly be more fun than that. Go on, name your legends and think about their names real hard in value/engineering/scientific contribution rather than technology sales or blogging skills .. I believe you can always be surprised with alternatives out there by 1000s of those unknown people who only bother responding with substance and none of the such mediocre and usual MS or better put Java-induced utter blx.. Have fun :) Regards, Angelina Brad Jolie
Are you one of those government "programmers"?
MrPlankton
(bad guy)"Fear is a hammer, and when the people are beaten finally to the conviction that their existence hangs by a frayed thread, they will be led where they need to go."
(good guy)"Which is where?"
(bad guy)"To a responsible future in a properly managed world."
Dean Koontz, The Good Guy -
Need any testers? :)
MrPlankton
(bad guy)"Fear is a hammer, and when the people are beaten finally to the conviction that their existence hangs by a frayed thread, they will be led where they need to go."
(good guy)"Which is where?"
(bad guy)"To a responsible future in a properly managed world."
Dean Koontz, The Good Guy -
Need any testers? :)
MrPlankton
(bad guy)"Fear is a hammer, and when the people are beaten finally to the conviction that their existence hangs by a frayed thread, they will be led where they need to go."
(good guy)"Which is where?"
(bad guy)"To a responsible future in a properly managed world."
Dean Koontz, The Good Guyhaha, if you get hired...remember: "pimpin aint easy"
----------------------------------------------------------- "When I first saw it, I just thought that you really, really enjoyed programming in java." - Leslie Sanford
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You mean other than feeding the hamsters, corralling trolls, and removing staples from various ferrets?
Scott Dorman
Microsoft® MVP - Visual C# | MCPD President - Tampa Bay IASA [Blog][Articles][Forum Guidelines]
Hey, hey, hey. Don't be mean. We don't have to be mean because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are. - Buckaroo Banzai
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Scott Dorman wrote:
removing staples from various ferrets?
staples? easy. it is catching the cheetah that is the hard part
----------------------------------------------------------- "When I first saw it, I just thought that you really, really enjoyed programming in java." - Leslie Sanford
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Most of us have average, maintenance-type programming jobs. While they mostly pay well, they don't make for legendary status. If you are one of the few lucky ones to have an "awesome" jobs envied by the masses of programmers, tell us a bit about it here.......
Most of the time I am writing new code, and start applications from the beginning (usually web based apps written in c#, but have written several smart phone apps as well). I usually work alone, but from time to time team up with one perhaps two people on projects, usually SAS programmers where a SAS backend is required. Many times the applications are “demonstration” applications that eventually morph into applications that get deployed My employer has given me an MSDN subscription, and allows me to work from home which is great! I run two development domains consisting of several vm’s that I some times use to collaborate with other remote programmers from around the country. Unfortunately, my current main project is modifying a shareware application that uses many xml files to configure its UI and how it talks to SAS, but overall I have a great job.
MrPlankton
(bad guy)"Fear is a hammer, and when the people are beaten finally to the conviction that their existence hangs by a frayed thread, they will be led where they need to go."
(good guy)"Which is where?"
(bad guy)"To a responsible future in a properly managed world."
Dean Koontz, The Good Guy -
Scott Dorman wrote:
corralling tro
*Cough*
Visit http://www.notreadytogiveup.com/[^] and do something special today.
Corralling, not slaying. That's your job and nobody would dream of stepping on your claws.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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Most of us have average, maintenance-type programming jobs. While they mostly pay well, they don't make for legendary status. If you are one of the few lucky ones to have an "awesome" jobs envied by the masses of programmers, tell us a bit about it here.......
I work in the IT/programming dept of a small company that is a large part of the music industry, tracking concert dates, tour histories, managers, record labels, recording studios etc. It's still just databases, web sites and in-house apps, but the data is interesting, the people are all awesome and the job has a ton of perks. - Come in when you like and leave when you like. My supervisor gets in at 6:00am and my co-worker usually arrives sometime between 11:00am and midday. - *Very* relaxed dress code. - Streaming internet music all day long. - Occasional opportunities to meet famous/interesting people or get tickets/passes to shows.
The StartPage Randomizer | The Windows Cheerleader | Twitter
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Scott Dorman wrote:
corralling tro
*Cough*
Visit http://www.notreadytogiveup.com/[^] and do something special today.
Trollslayer wrote:
*Cough*
Sorry...only the bad trolls...and (as your CP name implies) you deal with them after they've been caught. :)
Scott Dorman
Microsoft® MVP - Visual C# | MCPD President - Tampa Bay IASA [Blog][Articles][Forum Guidelines]
Hey, hey, hey. Don't be mean. We don't have to be mean because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are. - Buckaroo Banzai
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Hi, my name is Chris and I run The Code Project. My job rocks.
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Surely that's maintenance now? :-D
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Surely that's maintenance now? :-D
Yeah right ;) Even I've finally stopped making statements to my dev team that start with "when we've finished the infrastructure..."
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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The Man wrote:
elaborate a little on what 'running code project' entails?
Herding us cats. (Just checking that you know you are on The Code Project and that the guy who answered you is the head honcho main dude numero uno.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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Are you one of those government "programmers"?
MrPlankton
(bad guy)"Fear is a hammer, and when the people are beaten finally to the conviction that their existence hangs by a frayed thread, they will be led where they need to go."
(good guy)"Which is where?"
(bad guy)"To a responsible future in a properly managed world."
Dean Koontz, The Good Guy -
Yeah right ;) Even I've finally stopped making statements to my dev team that start with "when we've finished the infrastructure..."
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
I've heard a rumour that you now unleash the Ninja Attack Hamsters to keep your minions, sorry employees, in line. Genetically modified assassins with cute furry faces - and I'm talking about the hamsters here now.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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Don't worry about it. He's talking about users of users group. Not you.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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Well, right now I have a very interesting, good paying job. It scares me to death. I am working with a company that (among other things) converts code from one language to another (actually a couple others). We have a compiler and code emitter (C# output). This is a little busted, and not so easy to fix, so we are building a suite of tools that work around it. The company are letting me take the long term approach (it's a couple year project, and we will be re-using the technology to translate other programs). I am able to affect the way the company runs. I have pretty free reign over how my team does things. There are lots of interesting problems to sole. They are free with the technologies they let me pursue. They let me work from home a lot. I get to run a pretty good group of people. Why am I scared? Because I could always loose it, than I would have to find another job, and it will not have all these perks.
Silver member by constant and unflinching longevity.
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I've heard a rumour that you now unleash the Ninja Attack Hamsters to keep your minions, sorry employees, in line. Genetically modified assassins with cute furry faces - and I'm talking about the hamsters here now.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
Not saying anything. And neither, mysteriously enough, will the devs. :suss:
cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP