What were you before?
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
Police Officer - Quite a jump!!
code-frog wrote:
B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
I'd still be a Police Officer! ed ~"Watch your thoughts; they become your words. Watch your words they become your actions. Watch your actions; they become your habits. Watch your habits; they become your character. Watch your character; it becomes your destiny." -Frank Outlaw.
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
Physicist
code-frog wrote:
B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
I would be a quant analyst[^] and currently that is what I am doing. I am no longer a software engineer.
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
I was a tutor for people with learning disabilities in college. I tutored most of the gen eds and also in programming classes. Sounds strange that people with LD's could learn programming and do it well but time and time again I was suprised.
code-frog wrote:
What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
If I could go back, I'd minor in education. I love teaching/tutoring people about new stuff. If I would have a choice I would teach programming/hardware classes in college. I'd also make more time to get my senior citizen computer classes going. In college, I tutored the elderly in uses of the Internet/Email/Word Processing for free. It was a very rewarding experience. It's a shame I had to graduate and get a real job. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
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Degree Student (Applied Statistics - just how useful hasn't that been! :) ) Then worked in a mill that produced wire of all shapes and sizes while trying to find a job. 9 months later I stumbled into programming That was 20 years ago and here I remain. If I had my time again I would have trained to be a plumber and never be short of work again. I still remember having to write your own code in FORTRAN rather than be a cut and paste merchant being pampered by colour coded Intellisense - ahh proper programming - those were the days :)
Baconbutty wrote:
If I had my time again I would have trained to be a plumber and never be short of work again.
No shit. I had a good friend that worked with me 20 years ago or so when I was managing a commercial laundry for a big hotel chain. When they closed the laundry in Dallas we had the choice of moving to another city and assuming the same job or moving on. I started my little software company and he went and got his electricians license ( he already help a plumbing license and a commercial welding license ) and started a small home repair/maintaince/fixit business. Business was real good and in 1998 he sold out for a bit over 5,000,000.00. Me - I'm still working. Jimmy died in 2003 but he died fairly rich. I'm gonna die broke - still coding - such is life. Richard Suppose you were an idiot... And suppose you were a member of Congress... But I repeat myself. --Mark Twain
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
code-frog wrote: A: So what were you before you became a programmer? A student in High School. I became a programmer in High School. code-frog wrote: B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? If I had a different life, I really wish I would've continued my football career and/or joined the military. Of course, being a pro-bodybuilder would be nice, but first I'd have to get into shape again and second my girlfriend would never allow it. :laugh: I love to program, but I've since learned a couple things about the industry that irks me. For instance, I'm tired of people trying to mentally masturbate by telling you stuff you already know just so they can tell you, anal people (they come in droves in this industry, and I'm not talking about anal about their work either b/c I'm anal about that too), micromanagement, people acting like they know stuff when they don't just so they don't look bad, computers still being the buzz so every Jane, Dick, and Harry *thinks* they know everything about them, etc., etc. etc. Of course, maybe I just haven't worked with the right people yet. :~ Jeremy Falcon
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A: A restaurant manager B: I would follow my dreams of being a professional musician. BW
Meanwhile, behind the facade of this innocent looking bookstore...
It's never too late ya know. And, when you make it big, I expect free tickets! :) Jeremy Falcon
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
A: A fry cook and a dishwasher. I've been employed as a programmer since I was a sophomore in college. B: A teacher. I've occasionally had to play the role of teacher, either by volunteering at my daughter's school or through work. I found I really enjoyed it. Unfortunately, I'm too attached (as are my creditors :(() to the salary I make as an engineer to make the switch.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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It's never too late ya know. And, when you make it big, I expect free tickets! :) Jeremy Falcon
True enough. Free tix for anyone with a :bob: T-shirt on. ;) BW
Meanwhile, behind the facade of this innocent looking bookstore...
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A: A programmer. B: A fireman, or maybe an astronaut. ------- sig starts "I've heard some drivers saying, 'We're going too fast here...'. If you're not here to race, go the hell home - don't come here and grumble about going too fast. Why don't you tie a kerosene rag around your ankles so the ants won't climb up and eat your candy ass..." - Dale Earnhardt "...the staggering layers of obscenity in your statement make it a work of art on so many levels." - Jason Jystad, 10/26/2001
John Simmons / outlaw programmer wrote:
maybe an astronaut
I hear you. For me, growing up with the Apollo launches, being an astronaut would have been it. Unfortunately, that idea pretty much died in 3rd grade with my first pair of glasses :( (you ever see one of those guys in glasses? no way).
Software Zen:
delete this;
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code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
Physicist
code-frog wrote:
B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
I would be a quant analyst[^] and currently that is what I am doing. I am no longer a software engineer.
You sound like my boss. He graduated with a B.S. in physics about 30 years ago. Two weeks after graduation, he was asked to write some software for a data acquisition project, and he's never looked back.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
I was a tutor for people with learning disabilities in college. I tutored most of the gen eds and also in programming classes. Sounds strange that people with LD's could learn programming and do it well but time and time again I was suprised.
code-frog wrote:
What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
If I could go back, I'd minor in education. I love teaching/tutoring people about new stuff. If I would have a choice I would teach programming/hardware classes in college. I'd also make more time to get my senior citizen computer classes going. In college, I tutored the elderly in uses of the Internet/Email/Word Processing for free. It was a very rewarding experience. It's a shame I had to graduate and get a real job. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
bwhittington wrote:
Sounds strange that people with LD's could learn programming and do it well
I'm surprised there hasn't been more done along that line, especially with folks with autism. It would seem that some of the 'savant' conditions would lend themselves to programming.
Software Zen:
delete this;
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A: So what were you before you became a programmer? B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again? --- I was basically a student. Life had totally bottomed out and brought me back to school. If I could go back and do it again I'd go into Pediatric Surgery and specialize in the stuff that would help my middle child the most. Not only that it's pretty fascinating and nobody is really doing it. I love programming and there'd be now way to get me away from that. But understanding my kids health better would be nice. I'd still code though. Just kinda have to do that. - Rex Yes, I've been up all night. :sigh:
Some assembly required. Code-frog System Architects, Inc.
-- modified at 10:01 Monday 24th October, 2005
code-frog wrote:
A: So what were you before you became a programmer?
I'm not really paid to be a developer. It’s just one more skill in the toolset my employer uses / expects.
code-frog wrote:
B: What would you be if you could go back and do it again?
If I wasn’t coding I wouldn’t mind being a plumber. Either way it’s just Sh*t flowing through pipes. :-D
DEBUGGING : Removing the needles from the haystack.