Do You Work In A Specific Industry?
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
I don't. Financial now, transportation a couple of times, education, manufacturing, "adult" once. It's all just data.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
My common thread has been the third-party application suite (OSISoft PI), not the industry. Started in cereal manufacturing working with automated product routing and had an opportunity to work with the PI sysetm. From there it was pulp and paper industry; again had an opportunity to use the PI system along with other developer tools. Now, major utility working specifically with the PI system; I was recruited to work on the system directly and have enjoyed every minute (next month will be 3 years here).
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Currently for a small water company in the UK. Previously for a Europe wide pallet delivery network.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
Chris, what's small water? ;P
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
I started my software career at a software consulting company (Science Systems) in the UK in '95, although my first programming course was in the early 70s. I've contracted in many fields, but I've been in an environmental regulatory agency for 12 years and it will be my last regular employment. Working here I feel like I've contributed to society and the work is very varied (hence the 12 years!)
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
Me: measurement equipment (Selling quite literally Vorsprung durch Technik), for about 15 years now, and still quite often, yes. For me this means user interface (not much anymore), robust communication with "really good" harware over crappy protocols and cables, and - since interfacing a scripting language and having an automation interface - more and more copying data from format A to format B and back again. The most challenging and interesting thing, though, is working with "programming engineers", for whom writing templates is "fancy stuff" and it takes a lot of consideration to accept that Numerical Recipes isn't exactly production quality code. Some scientific background is pretty helpful here.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
OEM machine tools for mid-heavy steel fabrication. I'm on the controls, logic and HMI side but we have developers that create CAD/CAM applications too. I've worked here for nearly 29 years. Started in mechanical engineering, morphed into our IT department for a stretch before joining control engineering 16 years ago. Enjoy is such a vague word. ;P At times its very challenging and enjoyable, other times... not so much.
Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. ~ George Washington
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My common thread has been the third-party application suite (OSISoft PI), not the industry. Started in cereal manufacturing working with automated product routing and had an opportunity to work with the PI sysetm. From there it was pulp and paper industry; again had an opportunity to use the PI system along with other developer tools. Now, major utility working specifically with the PI system; I was recruited to work on the system directly and have enjoyed every minute (next month will be 3 years here).
Tim Carmichael wrote:
OSISoft PI
I had to interface with that on the job I had in manufacturing (a three month contract in 1996). My first "real" development job after college. The only interaction my software had with it was to connect, read two (16-bit) values (instructions), write two others (status), and set a few more (measurements from the plant) as they became available.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
Medical imaging research. For the last 17.5 years I have developed software to aid in studying methods to improve early detection of breast and lung cancer with some focus on dose reduction of screening patients when possible. Also I write applications to train radiologists and to compare the effectiveness of different imaging modalities, workstations and software used in the industry.
Matt U. wrote:
do you still enjoy it?
At times I do enjoy what I do however at other times it's hard work long hours (80+ hour weeks) and a lot of stress.
John
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
Worked for a mainframe manufacture for about 40 years 35 full time, then contracting for them after I retired). Dave.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
Several. Many companies believe that only people who have been trained in their field can work on software for them, but they're wrong.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Chris, what's small water? ;P
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
Big water: H2O Small water: h2o ;)
A positive attitude may not solve every problem, but it will annoy enough people to be worth the effort.
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Several. Many companies believe that only people who have been trained in their field can work on software for them, but they're wrong.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Big water: H2O Small water: h2o ;)
A positive attitude may not solve every problem, but it will annoy enough people to be worth the effort.
gotit!
Life is like a s**t sandwich; the more bread you have, the less s**t you eat.
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
In chronological order; Concrete-industry (five years) Academics (Nope, didn't fit in there, 2 years tops) Pharmacy (Introduce a bug and kill someone) Oil-industry (Just for a year) Document Control / CAD (Two years and counting) I'm a developer. To the software it matters not which "industry" you are in. It is all simply data, all stored in a database, all fetched in a similar manner.
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
Matt U. wrote:
letter shop/printing service.
Been in this world for 15+ years. Started at the lower level - interfacing with Docutechs, sending mailmerged data down, etc... Slowly made my way into the front office. Now I'm doing almost exclusively intranet-based order management/crm stuff.
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In chronological order; Concrete-industry (five years) Academics (Nope, didn't fit in there, 2 years tops) Pharmacy (Introduce a bug and kill someone) Oil-industry (Just for a year) Document Control / CAD (Two years and counting) I'm a developer. To the software it matters not which "industry" you are in. It is all simply data, all stored in a database, all fetched in a similar manner.
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
Eddy Vluggen wrote:
To the software it matters not which "industry" you are in. It is all simply data, all stored in a database, all fetched in a similar manner.
Except it's really not. Software can be tailored for an industry - processes, regulations and even laws may need to be understood and followed. Often times there are specific terms for specific industries. In my case, we're controlling really expensive and really powerful industrial machines that operate in a VERY flexible manner. Instructions and machine reactions need to be very well thought out with specific knowledge of the industry and the machine(s) involved.
Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. ~ George Washington
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There are so many industries that software development and related services can apply to. I'm just curious what industries you all work in. I personally work in the healthcare industry, for a company that supports and manages various hospitals, physician practices, etc., around the United States. I've also done development in a manufacturing environment and in a letter shop/printing service. How long have you been in your industry, and do you still enjoy it? Before I landed my current role, I had been thinking for a while about how I would like to get into development in the healthcare industry. I don't know exactly what it is about healthcare that grabbed my interest, but I've loved it so far, though I've only been here for almost two months. It's a wonderful company, the work is plentiful, I have plenty of exposure to the latest technologies along with maintaining software built on older technologies. I feel confident that I will be able to grow here for a long time. The reason I say "specific industry" in the title is that I know there are so many industries, but some places don't necessarily specialize in one single industry. If you do contract/consulting work on your own, for example, you may work with all sorts of different industries.
djj55: Nice but may have a permission problem Pete O'Hanlon: He has my permission to run it.
I've worked in 4 different industries. Computational Chemistry , Linguistics (automatic text correction), Entertainment (2D animation) and Engineering (metrology). But I've mostly been doing generic C++ framework and GUI work in all of those domains.
I'd rather be phishing!
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Eddy Vluggen wrote:
To the software it matters not which "industry" you are in. It is all simply data, all stored in a database, all fetched in a similar manner.
Except it's really not. Software can be tailored for an industry - processes, regulations and even laws may need to be understood and followed. Often times there are specific terms for specific industries. In my case, we're controlling really expensive and really powerful industrial machines that operate in a VERY flexible manner. Instructions and machine reactions need to be very well thought out with specific knowledge of the industry and the machine(s) involved.
Government is not reason; it is not eloquent; it is force. Like fire, it is a dangerous servant and a fearful master. ~ George Washington
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Except it's really not.
Every damn niche thinks it is special.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Software can be tailored for an industry
Software is built based on specs, so yes, it would be tailored. Regardless of the niche, it would be.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
processes, regulations and even laws may need to be understood and followed
Yes, but those simply translate to conditions that the developer checks. As long as there is a domain-expert (and no, my domain and industry is software development) I can model and build it.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Often times there are specific terms for specific industries.
There's also specific terms if you are writing a debugger, or a password-manager. Those are translated to logic, and then to code.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
In my case, we're controlling really expensive and really powerful industrial machines that operate in a VERY flexible manner.
More flexible than say, a generic, programmable all-purpose machine?
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Instructions and machine reactions need to be very well thought out with specific knowledge of the industry and the machine(s) involved.
Yawn. Same goes for most industries; the price of errors can be high. Still your industry is a flow of information, and it is that flow that gets automated. As an analyst I do not need to be a domain-expert. Should not be in fact; one starts leaning on assumptions that the analyst recognizes.
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]
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Mike Mullikin wrote:
Except it's really not.
Every damn niche thinks it is special.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Software can be tailored for an industry
Software is built based on specs, so yes, it would be tailored. Regardless of the niche, it would be.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
processes, regulations and even laws may need to be understood and followed
Yes, but those simply translate to conditions that the developer checks. As long as there is a domain-expert (and no, my domain and industry is software development) I can model and build it.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Often times there are specific terms for specific industries.
There's also specific terms if you are writing a debugger, or a password-manager. Those are translated to logic, and then to code.
Mike Mullikin wrote:
In my case, we're controlling really expensive and really powerful industrial machines that operate in a VERY flexible manner.
More flexible than say, a generic, programmable all-purpose machine?
Mike Mullikin wrote:
Instructions and machine reactions need to be very well thought out with specific knowledge of the industry and the machine(s) involved.
Yawn. Same goes for most industries; the price of errors can be high. Still your industry is a flow of information, and it is that flow that gets automated. As an analyst I do not need to be a domain-expert. Should not be in fact; one starts leaning on assumptions that the analyst recognizes.
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^]