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by travisgriggs
1458 days ago
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> Programming well is difficult and takes time and effort to get good at, but it's worth it. I agree very much with parts 1 and 2 of your assertion. At 51, with a decent brag list of successes, I think I’ve even achieved some measure of it. The part I’m not sure about is the “worth it.” I used to think that, I’ve become less sure of late. What makes it worth to you? I’m honestly curious. I used to have various things that made it worth it to me, and of late they’ve become less valued. |
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Mostly because of the potential employers, who they hire and why, and how success is 'measured' these days. I've been contract only for 17 years and I'll never go back to employment. I guess I'm lucky to have the option, but if I didn't I'd find another non-employment way to earn a living.
As you say the problem is that individual contributor quality isn't valued as it should be -- it's not prioritized above say compliance with 'all the current things.'
Engineering culture is mostly absent everywhere nowadays and in it's place a culture of entitlement and groupthink -- the hallmarks of failing institutions.