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by citizen_friend
686 days ago
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So no such thing as a good or bad engineer? Just teams then? Have you ever worked by yourself? I think the bias today is actually against individuals and for community. Money ball didn’t get them the best team it got them the better team than others expected for less money. |
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> If you haven't been naturally excited to work on your own projects during this downtime, this field might not be for you. reply
Being successful in this field doesn't require programming in your spare time - especially so not while going through a difficult period in life. To think that is the case is a case of pattern matching on a simplistic pattern.
> Do you think you can become a really good engineer without being personally motivated and curious?
No one said that OP wasn't personally motivated nor curious. Again that (in my opinion) is faulty pattern matching. People can be both motivated and curious without taking your one prescribed path. Separately, nothing in this question was about OP trying right now to become a "really good engineer". If your top goal in life is only to be really good at your job, you may want to broaden your horizons w.r.t. your priorities in life. Studying a field, becoming good at it, and making a living doing that is a very wise choice - none of that requires becoming one of the top 10% at that role.
> So no such thing as a good or bad engineer?
No one made a statement even remotely like this. This is a strawman you chose to "reply to" rather than respond to what the prior commenter said.
I don't think your advice is good advice for OP nor a good outlook for anyone starting their career regardless of how ambitious they may be.