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by ice109 3285 days ago
people say this a lot but it's pretty hollow. if you're smart enough you can do it even if you don't like it. anecdotally I'm a fairly good dev (full stack, know several languages, several projects under my belt) and I hate it. the day I move from technical to management will be the greatest day of my life.
4 comments

Careful what you wish for. Management is often the same shit, different sandwich. I agree, however that you can be good at something you don’t necessarily have a burning passion for. That’s why they call it “compensation”–it’s there to compensate you for the time you’d rather be doing something else.
I honestly have never worked with anyone in software like that. I think you are a lot more rare than you know at least when it comes to software dev. But I do know other industries are filled with smart people that hate it and somehow stuck with it only for the money. For example attorneys...
I don't think you'd know if you'd worked with someone who is just in it for the money. If they're coding just for the money then it stands to reason that they'd also be willing to pretend to like coding just for the money as well.
coincidentally enough i considered law school before i considered my ms in cs :)
A manager tries to create reliable processes using flaky components with zero test coverage and lying metrics, I don't envy their job.

Btw, it irks me that you don't capitalize the first letter of your sentences but still properly capitalize "I".

>Btw, it irks me that you don't capitalize the first letter of your sentences but still properly capitalize "I".

blame my phone.

My experience: been in both roles. Mgmt is not bad, but after a few years in it, I consider my current career as freelance contractor dev to be way less stressful.