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by ElectronicE 3054 days ago
I got a super comfortable job for the past 15years as a work from home C++ server programmer. It has allowed me to be around and watch my kid grow rather than be away 8-6PM and just come home to dinner and put them to bed.

It was very good pay at the beginning but it hasn't keep up and now it's not that good (to bad either).

A few years ago I started playing with electronics (Arduinos, Raspberry PIs and stuff like that). After a while I started looking and picked up a few easy jobs related to that in Upwork as a way to do something different as doing the same thing for 15years can take it's toll.

Shortly after I was picking more and more advanced jobs. I picked a few big clients and moved them off Upwork. I'm now doing advanced embedded system programming and electronic design as a side gig on weekends and afternoons and making more money than my main programming job (which I can't seem to be able to leave).

And that's the story of how I found an alternative to my comfortable job. If I ever leave it I will never go to an office again, I will just expand my embedded freelancing.

4 comments

What kinds of projects are you taking on in the land of electronics? I find this area very interesting, but can't seem to figure out how you can make a living on it....
Well there had been a lot of "I want to make a device to do X". Then I will cook a proposal to do it using a rapberry pi or a MCU depending of what it is.

People wanting to make gadgets using Bluetooth is a big one and I have been using Nordic Semi line of BLE SoCs very succefully.

Most of the business lately has been coming from a couple of companies that I made some work for and keep requesting changes or more features. I had to disable my Upwork profile as I didnt had the rrsources to keep up with the projects coming from there, even after upping my rates a few times.

That sounds like a pretty rewarding expansion of your skills.

I've spent the last year coming up with fun projects of my own, based around ESP8266 devices, and while I don't think I'd ever want to make a career out of it there is something very refreshing about developing in such constrained environments.

It always reminds me of writing code in Z80 assembly on my home computer back in the 80s.

It's cool that you used Upwork as a way to change careers. Very intriguing use of that platform.
' and now it's not that good (to bad either)'

looks like a few other skills have depreciated too

Criticizing the parent for grammar and even not using capitalization or punctuation. You aren’t even following the norms for quoting on HN.
I'm not a native English speaker and didn't bother to proof read my writing. Anyway I can't edit it now.