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Ask HN: Newly realized “hacker”. Cry for help
3 points by karqat 3389 days ago
I'm a software developer... or so I think... then I realized recently that in truth, I am actually a hacker who has been trying to find an outlet for creative problem solving, and not finding it in my chosen career.

Tl;dr. What do I do with this realization? I'm losing my sanity, and having aneurysms on a daily basis: over the overlording by management; over the smell of big client money controlling everyone's words and actions, instead of having the hard conversations of how to build something correctly... the first time; over the paradigm mongering; over the complexity and inefficiency from head to toe, from dev team, product lifecycle, or business... Are there jobs that people with a hackers mentality are more well suited for? Is there some role or position I should be looking for? Or should I be looking for the right kind of company or team? Am I simply barking up the wrong industry? Where do I go, what do I do? Help.

Please see my original post below. It didn't fit within the 2k character limit, but it gives more context to my question.

3 comments

You might find embedded systems development more up your alley. The hardware is always broken in some way and you often have to get very creative to work around those deficiencies. Especially when there's an ASIC involved.

You'll get to experience a whole different class of aneurysms ;-)

but how do i get into it? Where do I find those jobs? What do they want to see on a resume? What koalafications?
Dude, come to Silicon Valley. Whatever kind of development style, methodology, personality type, will make you happy, you'll find it here.
3 years ago I participated in a software boot camp. As a satcom operator in the Army, I thought it was a natural prgoression. After the boot cam, I plopped myself in a chair at a start up and that "That's it. I've done it."

It wasn't long after that when I thought to myself, "That's it?" Work became boredom, a slog, fighting with IDE's, and IDE managed references, fighting with merge conflicts, 3-4 hour sprint planning, philosophical debates about paradigms and methodologies... corporate personality surveys?? Software developers were supposed to be people who learn and solve problems, and do both of those things as efficiently as possible... or so I thought?

Today, it's been 3 years since that feeling began to sink in. I'm now in my 5th contracted position, and having been on 7 or 8 different projects and 9 or 10 different teams, I am getting this sinking feeling that this is simply the nature of software development: Complexity for the sake of the ego of the architect, unintelligible code bases, inefficiency of process, inefficiencies of SOFTWARE process, horribly written code, business needs superseding the purview of a scrum team (without which, why even bother with scrum? Isn't the point to keep the business out of telling a software team to do its job?)

Luckily, while I was at the boot camp, I recalled my time in the military, communications systems, command line. All this time that I've been payed to sit in a chair, and not accomplish much else, I've been at home, delving into any and every subject I can possibly imagine. I've become a bit of a bash fanatic, I always have some form of linux on hand, whether one of my phones, my raspi, my personal laptop, or a vm on my work pc. I'm constantly building tools to automate stupid processes I'm required to do at work, and expanding my vimrc.

This last week, I started digging into assembly and optimization patterns in C, and I came accross an article, I'm sure many of you have read.

http://catb.org/jargon/html/story-of-mel.html

If not, I highly recommend it. It's an entertaining read. This naturally took me to the home page of this particular site. Curious, I started clicking through page after page, and I began to identify with some of what this website was saying. I remember picking up a book at a store called Hacking: The Art of Exploitation (2nd edition) I remember it clearly with its yellow on black text, and its stark appearance. I remember it because the chapter headings were written with hexidecimal, which I thought was very hackerish of the author. And I read the preface where he asks you to combine 1,3,4, and 6 using only the basic mathematical operators to equal 24, and I pondered this question the entire trip home, which was a 2 hour drive from the city I was visiting. This website made me realize, maybe I'm a hacker... trying to be a corporate software developer.

Tl;dr. What do I do with this realization? I'm losing my sanity, and having aneurysms on a daily basis: over the overlording by management; over the smell of big client money controlling everyone's words and actions, instead of having the hard conversations of how to build something correctly... the first time; over the paradigm mongering; over the complexity and inefficiency from head to toe, from dev team, product lifecycle, or business...

Are there jobs that people with a hackers mentality are more well suited for? Is there some role or position I should be looking for? Or should I be looking for the right kind of company or team? Am I simply barking up the wrong industry? Where do I go, what do I do? Help.