BladeVenom
Lifer
- Jun 2, 2005
- 13,365
- 16
- 0
Ageism is far more prevalent in Silicon Valley....
It's time for him leave Silicon Valley.
Ageism is far more prevalent in Silicon Valley....
I was never replaced. I choose my own path.
And most projects are mindless, so if you're merely a programmer working for a company, you have no choice but to do mindless work.
Again, your experience doing something brain-dead-simple is in no way a representation of the real work that many programmers do.
bravo! You are the best programmer on this thread!Not sure what type of programming some people do but writing a portfolio engine to calculate and balance clients financial simulations for 100 years or so in order to give advice and take in to effect proration and inflation, all different types of scenarios, is not mindless it takes a lot of brain work to guarantee 100% success rate for clients that invest their money in the in the company.
bravo! You are the best programmer on this thread!
This guys has been working for 20+ years and is unmarried. He should have saved enough money to retire, and yet he blew all his cash and is now getting evicted.
Only got himself to blame, and not "being old."
Reality is, they're middle tier employees and not something you should be doing for over a decade.
Where you worked, maybe, but not at many companies.
Yeah, I pretty much thought you were a troll with the "mindless" comment, or at least someone who has never done any actual "mindless" work. You're both, obviously.
Brutal world becoming more brutal? Say it isn't so (but it is).
That was my first thought, too. Not to knock his situation, because I can sympathize, but you have to plan for the future. There are dozens of other fields that have this exact problem - look at sports, for example. Not many old guys out there in the NFL, you know?
That was my first thought, too. Not to knock his situation, because I can sympathize, but you have to plan for the future. There are dozens of other fields that have this exact problem - look at sports, for example. Not many old guys out there in the NFL, you know?
are you even serious?What's the average programming job? Building a website? Tuning a database? Those are all bullshit.
People who get to design cybernetic implants and write video game engines are very few. Or maybe you have a different idea of what "mindless" is.
Yeah, I pretty much thought you were a troll with the "mindless" comment, or at least someone who has never done any actual "mindless" work. You're both, obviously.
The whole hiring thing in Silicon Valley is screwed up. Apparently they all have a secret understanding not to try and poach other companies programmers.
It's all moot. US programming jobs are flying to India. And they are flying coach.
They fly right back as soon as companies learn how terrible cheap Indian programmers are.
No, it's the case at most companies.
What's the average programming job? Building a website? Tuning a database? Those are all bullshit.
People who get to design cybernetic implants and write video game engines are very few. Or maybe you have a different idea of what "mindless" is.
This. If there's one thing I don't worry about being in the tech field, it's India/Indians. In fact, when I hear someone go on about how it's all going to India, I know anything else they say can be summarily dismissed because that's pure inexperience talking.
Do companies still try to outsource to India? Yes. Is that a decision that usually gets unwound ASAP? You bet. It hasn't concerned me since 2001 or so. In fact, that whole mess has such a bad rap that I see Indians having a hard time getting work here. Hate to paint with such a broad brush, but a lot of times you get the same half-assed cut-rate work from them here as you do overseas. Again, sorry to generalize, but that comes from years of experience as both a manager and developer.
Very true, yet there is still some good-enough-always work left to outsource such as testing. I still see many companies trying hard to find something to outsource.
Yep - the last staff position I held (the one I mentioned earlier) had a huge QA department that was 100% Indian.
I really don't want to sound like I have something against Indians - they're nice people - but there just seems to be something about their culture, education system, or whatever that fails to instill an attention to detail or an appreciation for scalability/maintainability/performance. Basically, there's a very pervasive mindset that "it works right now at this very precise moment in time, so it's good to go."
are you even serious?
There is a lot in-between stuff that you're leaving out on purpose to further your argument.
