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by nsgi
1399 days ago
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Obviously very good that Chrome was delivered without people doing lots of overtime. However, a lot of his argument seems to be about the age of the management, and surely ageism is illegal and it should be about the person's skills rather than being old enough to have school-aged kids or even how many decades of experience they have Edit: Okay, I guess the kind of ageism he is suggesting isn't illegal in the US, but it is in the UK and is still generally considered unethical |
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I had my first "senior software engineer" title when I was 28, and that was after I'd only been writing code professionally for a few years (in my early 20s I had a campus coding job at my university, and then I was doing a lot of open source work through my mid 20s, but not sure I'd call any of that "professional"). At my most recent job, I saw most developers making it to the senior in their late 20s, and many even making it to "staff" (one level above senior at our shop) by 30, or soon after. That's ridiculous. In my mind, most people should be hard pressed to develop the experience to really be "senior" in something before they're in their mid to late 30s.
Now, I certainly don't mind (from the standpoint of prestige and salary) that I somehow ended up with the title of "principal software engineer" (one level above "staff") when I was 33, but... c'mon. When you've nearly tapped out your career ladder by the time you're 35 (unless you move to management), it feels like there's something not right there.