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by VexXtreme
4688 days ago
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As I've mentioned before, in a lot of professions it is paid and considered part of the job. If not, then at least it's regulated. We enjoy none of those benefits. Software is a career requiring a much higher level of personal commitment than many other careers, while often not necessarily being better compensated. |
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Isn't the level of personal commitment subjective though? What would your solution be?
I think it's hard for programming because there's such a diverse array of programmers (university educated based on data structures / algorithms vs self-taught that might not know those things). My recent interviews with Amazon tested my core CS knowledge but nothing like frameworks or anything. I suspect those things would matter more at startups / web shops (where I used to work).