Programming professionally
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
bartender, gardener, apartment maintenance. :)
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
Teaching dogowners how to teach their dog some tricks and wellbehaved manners
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
I wish i was programming professionally. I am stuck ending another 12hour night shift secretly coding programs so i don't have to do so much work while my boss keeps promising me my promotion. I would stand on the roof naked and howl at the moon but it is bloody cold outside.
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I'd roam the Texas hill country absolutely naked and make a name for myself...
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001That would explain the vast sheep migration to Oklahoma described in the last edition of Nature magazine. Apparently the herd hasn't learned of your new job. Congratulations, btw. Well done! :-D
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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Walker, Texas Ranger, might have something to say about that...
¡El diablo está en mis pantalones! ¡Mire, mire! Real Mentats use only 100% pure, unfooled around with Sapho Juice(tm)! SELECT * FROM User WHERE Clue > 0 0 rows returned Save an Orange - Use the VCF! VCF Blog
I think that Chuck Norris mught want to walk softly in the presence of the Outlaw Programmer. I'm not sure where I'd place my bet, but it would be fun to watch the match...
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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...no, I would probably apply to vet or medical school
Blog link to be reinstated at a later date.
I suspect that the answer in your Subject line is closer to the truth, but you opted for a more conservative answer to fit your persona. I applied for the job, but they wanted me to shave my legs. I couldn't do that, even though the tips would be great, because I'm allergic to sharp objects that might draw my blood. Having teats bigger than Cher's is a curse, but we all have our crosses to bear... :-D
"A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"
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music and astrophysics, are you Brian May ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. "Iam doing the browsing center project in vb.net using c# coding" - this is why I don't answer questions much anymore. Oh, and Microsoft doesn't want me to.
There's a bit of magic in both. :)
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles] -
I would drink beer and beat up stupid people.
Thanks for the :laugh:! Cheers! :beer:
- S 50 cups of coffee and you know it's on! A post a day, keeps the white coats away!
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
Some woodwork I guess, and simple electronics. I am attracted to the first and I have some experience with the second, but who knows?! Traditional cuisine sounds good too, and I could fight stress with veal in nice sauce :D.
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I'd roam the Texas hill country absolutely naked and make a name for myself...
"Why don't you tie a kerosene-soaked rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt, 1997
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"...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001If you don't use SPF 100, your name will be Red Man.
Best wishes, Hans
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There's a bit of magic in both. :)
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler. -- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong. -- Iain Clarke
[My articles]CPallini wrote:
There's a bit of magic in both.
Well, a kind of magic certainly!
------------------------------------ We hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office. - Aesop
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
That's a tough one and it really depends on the reason. If you're tired and old (for programming i mean) then the next most logical thing is to step up to management if you can. Management requires both expertise on technology as well as experience on programming. Of course it takes a lot more than that but that's what it is required (mostly) from a technical point of view. If you have other reasons that physically restrict you from such an activity, well .... i really don't know what conditions you're facing (if any i mean) so i can't suggest something. In any case though, dealing with a problem may require actions that might not be as convenient.
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
Be a lot happier? (Shane, relax, I'm joking :) )
Punkyduck technical media agency
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music and astrophysics, are you Brian May ?
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. "Iam doing the browsing center project in vb.net using c# coding" - this is why I don't answer questions much anymore. Oh, and Microsoft doesn't want me to.
I don't have the hair anymore, but I wouldn't mind being able to play like him.
Deja View - the feeling that you've seen this post before.
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
Back to my first love: cars.
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
I guess if you answered anything else than programming, you might have picked the wrong profession in the first place :)
Rocky <>< Recent Blog Post: Quick, Get your money while supplies last! Thinking about Silverlight? www.SilverlightCity.com
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A contractor I replaced left professional development because he got burned out of it. I'm wondering what the signs are.
What are the signs of getting burned out? Getting tired of being (approximately) 10 years ahead of the curve (in my personal case, 'Agile' type development, ORM/data layers, frameworks, TDD/Unit testing frameworks/continuous integration - I've written my own tools for them all... since back when I was at uni in the 80's...) Realising it's only the illusion of change that we have in development. Realising that you are writing the same damn apps over and over - whilst the tech changes under you so fast that you actually are no better/faster at actually delivering a working product. Being tired of running to stand still - if you study really hard *in your own time* you can just about stay as good as you were after about 5 years in the biz. In the few areas where there is design continuity, being tired of seeing all the same mistakes made all over again... (dreadful database design, over-engineering, under-engineering, 'hacking' to meet a time schedule, lack of client involvement, premature optimisation, optimising without metrics). Seeing the whole arena move in what seems like rather pointless directions - e.g. making web apps act like WinForms apps (except slower) by dint of much complex autogenerated code, seeing the database side engulfed by new tools with their own syntax and learning curve - none of which is necessary if you knwo the SQL and a programming language, seeing the proliferation of a kind of thinking that wants to do everything by ever-more config files - rather than the tool actually designed for the job (i.e. a standard programming language that everyone can follow). Knowing that going for architect only distances you so fast from the tech that you'll be out of touch even faster - and even less useful. Knowing that *WE* made it this way - we wanted a pure mertiocracy, we (when we were young) wanted a field where age and experience didn't matter so much as quickness and cleverness. Being just tired of it all.
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
This[^]. ;) (I'd probably be an architect, journalist or photographer.)
cheers, Paul M. Watson.
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What would you do if you couldn't program professionally anymore to make a living?
I'd train to become a tree surgeon.
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What are the signs of getting burned out? Getting tired of being (approximately) 10 years ahead of the curve (in my personal case, 'Agile' type development, ORM/data layers, frameworks, TDD/Unit testing frameworks/continuous integration - I've written my own tools for them all... since back when I was at uni in the 80's...) Realising it's only the illusion of change that we have in development. Realising that you are writing the same damn apps over and over - whilst the tech changes under you so fast that you actually are no better/faster at actually delivering a working product. Being tired of running to stand still - if you study really hard *in your own time* you can just about stay as good as you were after about 5 years in the biz. In the few areas where there is design continuity, being tired of seeing all the same mistakes made all over again... (dreadful database design, over-engineering, under-engineering, 'hacking' to meet a time schedule, lack of client involvement, premature optimisation, optimising without metrics). Seeing the whole arena move in what seems like rather pointless directions - e.g. making web apps act like WinForms apps (except slower) by dint of much complex autogenerated code, seeing the database side engulfed by new tools with their own syntax and learning curve - none of which is necessary if you knwo the SQL and a programming language, seeing the proliferation of a kind of thinking that wants to do everything by ever-more config files - rather than the tool actually designed for the job (i.e. a standard programming language that everyone can follow). Knowing that going for architect only distances you so fast from the tech that you'll be out of touch even faster - and even less useful. Knowing that *WE* made it this way - we wanted a pure mertiocracy, we (when we were young) wanted a field where age and experience didn't matter so much as quickness and cleverness. Being just tired of it all.
Right, I need to find something else to start studying.
Pete If minds had anuses, blogging would be what your mind would do when it had to take a dump Maddox