Patti OConnor
poc231st at hotmail.com
Sat Jun 2 17:25:23 CDT 2012
thanks love it and so true On 05/27/2012 02:35 PM, Jim Lawrence wrote: > I saw this article and decided to post it in it entirety. As an mature > programmer I made similar decisions many years ago and understand where this > youngster is coming from: > > " Old Farts Know How to Code > > I turned 45 this month. In many professions that's the prime age to be - and > in others it's considered young - but in my line of work, some people tabhink > middle-aged coders are old farts. That's especially true when it comes to > startups. > > The startup culture is similar to professional sports in that it requires a > fleet of fresh-out-of-college kids to trade their lives and their health for > the potential of short-term glory. > > "Old farts" are often excluded from that culture, not because we're lousy > coders but because we won't put up with that shit. We have lives, we have > families, we have other things that are important to us. We're not about to > sleep at our desks and trade watching our kids grow up for the promise of > striking it rich. Especially when the people who really strike it rich > aren't the ones writing code. > > So many developers my age have had plenty of chances to ditch coding and > move into management, but we've stuck with coding because it's what we love > to do. We'd earn more in management, but writing software is in our blood. > We wouldn't stop doing it for anything. > > And because of the years we've spent creating software, we've learned what > works and what doesn't, regardless of the language or the platform. > Operating systems rise and fall, development tools come and go, but through > it all, old farts know how to write solid code. " > > Jim > > _______________________________________________ > dba-Tech mailing list > dba-Tech at databaseadvisors.com > http://databaseadvisors.com/mailman/listinfo/dba-tech > Website: http://www.databaseadvisors.com > >