Do you enjoy your job?
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want.
there is the problem. :)
M..X...E
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day?
Yes.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management.
Most days - some days I reaaaally don't like me.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have good communication with your management
That would be talking to myself then. I've tried to cut that down a lot, the voices in my head told me to.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions?
No. I have the habit of padding estimates I give to myself, and I know it.
I have CDO, it's OCD with the letters in the right order; just as they ruddy well should be
Forgive your enemies - it messes with their heads
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yes, yes, yes, yes It takes a few trying and job hoping, and maturity, but you can get there! :)
A train station is where the train stops. A bus station is where the bus stops. On my desk, I have a work station.... _________________________________________________________ My programs never have bugs, they just develop random features.
Not always, yes, yes,yes If our greedy bosses ever find out that we enjoy our work, they will make us pay admission instead of paying us. So: Psssst!
A while ago he asked me what he should have printed on my business cards. I said 'Wizard'. I read books which nobody else understand. Then I do something which nobody understands. After that the computer does something which nobody understands. When asked, I say things about the results which nobody understand. But everybody expects miracles from me on a regular basis. Looks to me like the classical definition of a wizard.
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
The answers to your specific questions are both yes and now depending on mood and other things. But the bottom line is, I really enjoy my job as I am involved in the kind of work I like, and equally importantly, am paid well enough. The day I find either to be lacking, I'll move on.
...byte till it megahertz... my donation to web rubbish
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
- No - No - No (managers) and mostly yes (team mates) - No
SciGama wrote:
Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
Absolutely not, you should pursue a job that you feel comfortable in, after all, you'll be sitting there for 40 - 60 hours a week on average...
V.
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
No. Yes. Yes. Yes. That might seem odd, but I get along great with everyone. I like (most of) the people I work with. I even love what it is I'm supposed to be working on. What I dread are the endless interruptions from people who have nowhere else to turn because nobody else in this company has two brain cells to rub together. But I'm not bitter.
He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
Yes to all of those. You won't really know for sure that you want the job until you accept the position and become part of the dev environment The only thing you can really do before taking a job is determining if you want to work on the types of applications they're developing with the tools they're using. For instance, I won't work at a company that is still using VS2005 for current development. There's absolutely no reason to stay with that version of the IDE five years down the road. I also only work on C# applications as a general rule. You have to establish your minimum acceptable standards and find a job that fits (and hopefully, exceeds) them. After you get hired, you get familiar with the team and then decide wther or not you can work in that environment. I've personally never been so put off by an existing team member that I can't still work within that team. I have, however, been on a team where one of the programmers didn't like me, but his attitude was nullified by my ability to code. He really had no room to bitch about my work performance, and he was a pretty good developer in his own right, so we established a respect for eachother's abilities, but never spoke regarding anything but work.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
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"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." - J. Jystad, 2001modified on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 8:22 AM
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Yes to all of those. You won't really know for sure that you want the job until you accept the position and become part of the dev environment The only thing you can really do before taking a job is determining if you want to work on the types of applications they're developing with the tools they're using. For instance, I won't work at a company that is still using VS2005 for current development. There's absolutely no reason to stay with that version of the IDE five years down the road. I also only work on C# applications as a general rule. You have to establish your minimum acceptable standards and find a job that fits (and hopefully, exceeds) them. After you get hired, you get familiar with the team and then decide wther or not you can work in that environment. I've personally never been so put off by an existing team member that I can't still work within that team. I have, however, been on a team where one of the programmers didn't like me, but his attitude was nullified by my ability to code. He really had no room to bitch about my work performance, and he was a pretty good developer in his own right, so we established a respect for eachother's abilities, but never spoke regarding anything but work.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
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"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." - J. Jystad, 2001modified on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 8:22 AM
John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
I also only work on C# applications as a general rule.
I seem to remember some VB.NET programming in your past. Did you manage to change back to C# now?
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
Currently, yes to all. The caveat is, in my experiences as an employee, I would have to answer no to all, but as a consultant, it is almost always yes to all. Marc
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John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
I also only work on C# applications as a general rule.
I seem to remember some VB.NET programming in your past. Did you manage to change back to C# now?
I had a job where they were doing vb.net, and said I could do all new development in c#. When I got here at GD, my boss wanted us to do Silverlight with VB, but I convinced him that VB ony led to the dark side, and the other guys on the team sided with me (that was a close call). Like I said in my original post, I don't do VB *as a general rule*.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
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"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." - J. Jystad, 2001 -
Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
No Yes No Yes
SciGama wrote:
Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
For most of us, probably.
Proud to have finally moved to the A-Ark. Which one are you in?
Author of the Guardians Saga (Sci-Fi/Fantasy novels) -
I had a job where they were doing vb.net, and said I could do all new development in c#. When I got here at GD, my boss wanted us to do Silverlight with VB, but I convinced him that VB ony led to the dark side, and the other guys on the team sided with me (that was a close call). Like I said in my original post, I don't do VB *as a general rule*.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
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"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." - J. Jystad, 2001John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
VB ony led to the dark side
Cool so this is how the dark side looks like ;P Your more lucky than me then, couldn't (and still can't) convince my boss to do ditch vb and go for c# (hell a lot of the programming here is still done in Access so I'm glad I dogged that bullet and at least get to work with .NET)
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
Absolutely not! But anyone who expects every day at even the best of jobs to be wonderful is in for some serious disapointment. No matter how much you love what you're doing, there will be days, weeks, months when it's a struggle to get through each day. But these should be temporary things, and rare, else you're in the wrong place. I have a great job, doing what I was born to do, and I go for long periods when I can't wait for the sun to come up so I can get to work. I design things, and it being a small company, I also get to build a lot of what I design. It doesn't get much better than that for an engineer! :-D But there are still times when it's a drag - when the job's done, and the boss won't give me a week to clean up the final drawings; when the accountant quits, and the boss assigns me to do the accounting reports for all the electric meters; when there's power purchase contracts to be negotiated and I have to sit in a room full of lawyers and deal with their bullshite, day after day. And since taking over the sewer and water operations for the area, I now have to track and file all the trouble reports and well monitoring data that gets collected every day. It's bean counter work, and I hate it. On the other hand, I now have water and sewer systems to design and build, along with all the control systems that make them work correctly. That's a whole new line of work for me, and there's a huge learning curve, so I'm buying books, studying nights and weekends, and doing prototypes in my shop to try things I want to do at work. When I need a break from that, I program apps to make my job a little easier, which in turn will make the job a bit less tedious for whoever may follow me in this position. The point of all this is that, yes, enjoying your job is possible. If you love IT, and find the right working environment to match your personality and working style, you'll love your work. If you don't love it, you're in the wrong place, or you picked IT for the wrong reasons. That's not an uncommon thing, you know. A lot of people get lured into the profession because of the salaries paid, the fun workplaces depicted by the media, and of course, the dating opportunities. All of them are wrong reasons, and I can think of few fates more hellish than spending the rest of one's life doing a job that isn't fun, challenging, and personally rewarding. Even if what you really love is be
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day?
Mostly Yes.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management.
Yes.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have good communication with your management and team mates?
Yes.
SciGama wrote:
Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions?
Yes.
SciGama wrote:
Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
No. I think it is a possible dream. Sometimes it is difficult, but eventually it is possible to find a job that you truly enjoy.
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day?
Depends on the weather. When it comes to my work I really enjoy it (well, most of the time :) ) but if it is dark and raining when I get up in the morning I am looking forward only to going back to bed - at least until I have my coffee. As for the other questions, the answer is yes. My managers are programmers and that helps a lot.
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?
SciGama wrote:
Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions?
*sigh* I can't be bothered to read the last line of this blatant advertisement for personnel services.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Yes to all of those. You won't really know for sure that you want the job until you accept the position and become part of the dev environment The only thing you can really do before taking a job is determining if you want to work on the types of applications they're developing with the tools they're using. For instance, I won't work at a company that is still using VS2005 for current development. There's absolutely no reason to stay with that version of the IDE five years down the road. I also only work on C# applications as a general rule. You have to establish your minimum acceptable standards and find a job that fits (and hopefully, exceeds) them. After you get hired, you get familiar with the team and then decide wther or not you can work in that environment. I've personally never been so put off by an existing team member that I can't still work within that team. I have, however, been on a team where one of the programmers didn't like me, but his attitude was nullified by my ability to code. He really had no room to bitch about my work performance, and he was a pretty good developer in his own right, so we established a respect for eachother's abilities, but never spoke regarding anything but work.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
-----
"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
-----
"The staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - J. Jystad, 2001modified on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 8:22 AM
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John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
I also only work on C# applications as a general rule.
Have you truly embraced C#, or just given up on finding a C++ job?
3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18
I went cold turkey on C++ in August 2007, and haven't looked back. I still don't like .Net, but that's where the money is nowadays.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
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"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
-----
"The staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - J. Jystad, 2001 -
Yes to all of those. You won't really know for sure that you want the job until you accept the position and become part of the dev environment The only thing you can really do before taking a job is determining if you want to work on the types of applications they're developing with the tools they're using. For instance, I won't work at a company that is still using VS2005 for current development. There's absolutely no reason to stay with that version of the IDE five years down the road. I also only work on C# applications as a general rule. You have to establish your minimum acceptable standards and find a job that fits (and hopefully, exceeds) them. After you get hired, you get familiar with the team and then decide wther or not you can work in that environment. I've personally never been so put off by an existing team member that I can't still work within that team. I have, however, been on a team where one of the programmers didn't like me, but his attitude was nullified by my ability to code. He really had no room to bitch about my work performance, and he was a pretty good developer in his own right, so we established a respect for eachother's abilities, but never spoke regarding anything but work.
.45 ACP - because shooting twice is just silly
-----
"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
-----
"The staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - J. Jystad, 2001modified on Wednesday, October 6, 2010 8:22 AM
John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
I have, however, been on a team where one of the programmers didn't like me, but his attitude was nullified by my ability to code. He really had no room to bitch about my work performance, and he was a pretty good developer in his own right, so we established a respect for each other's abilities, but never spoke regarding anything but work.
I just 'finished' that sort of experience. I've been here 20 years. Another engineer, who'd been here longer, decided back when I started that I was incompetent because of the project I was working on, rather than anything based on my individual performance. The project itself was in a wee bit of trouble, which was the reason I was hired in as a consultant and then offered a full time position. Even long after that initial project was finished (successfully, mind you), and I had done other things, this guy still thought I was an idiot. Every time I dealt with him, he lied, obfuscated, or misdirected his answers. Eventually I gave up on dealing with him at all, and went to one of the other guys on his project. Fortunately, this guy retired a couple months ago. Upon further reflection, maybe this guy's just an asshole.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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Do you wake up in the morning looking foward to what you have to do that day? Do you have a good cordial relationship with your management. Do you have good communication with your management and team mates? Do you have support of your management and do they trust your opinions? I just wanted to get quick points of view from other developers out there. I am working really hard to find an IT job that i really want. Do you think enjoying your job is a pipe dream?