• sfxrlz@lemmy.world
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      2 months ago

      Jokes on programming. Hated life before being forced into it…

      Edit: it meaning programming. This isn’t supposed to be that edgy.

      • Asafum@feddit.nl
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        2 months ago

        Just try being uneducated and working in a dead end factory job while having hated life all your life anyway!

        Much fun! -46/10 would never recommend!

        I wish I was forced into programming… I tried on my own and just don’t have the mind for it, I find it incredibly boring. All my friends are in the field and all work from home wherever the hell they want to live. I’m stuck in a VHCOL area with shit income and 0 potential to increase it :(

        • sfxrlz@lemmy.world
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          2 months ago

          Yeah well I was „forced“ into it by an injury and one my parents working at the university. I never finished my degree so in that sense I’m also uneducated.

          I didn’t have the mind for Uni stuff either esp. the maths stuff. There are so many areas. I just liked doing webdev stuff in my freetime and that landed me a few jobs.

          • Asafum@feddit.nl
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            2 months ago

            I’m sorry you’ve had to suffer an injury! From what I understand, your experience now and your interest outside of work counts for more than the paper degree so if you do choose to continue that path I wouldn’t worry too much about being uneducated. Good luck, I hope you find happiness in whatever you do!

            • sfxrlz@lemmy.world
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              2 months ago

              Thank you very much! Yess school has never been for me but I’ve only been diagnosed with adhd when I was 21. so I’ve always struggled. I don’t know if it’s the perfect place for me, I’m still struggling from time to time, but let’s be honest who doesn’t. I never thought I could work 8 hours when I was younger. But here we are. So hopefully you can also find something you enjoy doing. And I wish the best for you too. Thanks again!

    • stebo@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      2 months ago

      We need more of those people, people who find contentment in their wealth instead of endlessly pursuing more wealth.

    • The Quuuuuill@slrpnk.net
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      2 months ago

      You spent all those years down in the trenches implementing bullshit designs an architect came up with, positive you could do better if you just got the chance. Then you go to graduate school to get the qualifications companies say you need to be an architect. You receive a masters degree. You’re your companies leading expert on software design. You get promoted to architect.

      That’s when you find out the truth. All those previous architects left for the same reason you someday will. It wasn’t the previous architects making the terrible decisions that frustrated you. It was the marketing team and the CEO telling the CTO that the software product must have certain buzzwords present in the design. Those buzzwords offer no value to what your software product is meant to accomplish. But if you don’t put them in the designs, they’ll fire you and hire someone who will play their games.

      Eventually, you can’t take it anymore. Having interfaced with the upper levels of your company, and having the understanding of systems engineering you do, you realize that every software firm will be this. There is nowhere you can go that will be better. You start saving.

      Your goal is to save enough money to purchase a small plot of land and put an organic farm on it. Your convictions for this farm are simple: it must be able to feed your family. This may not be exclusively what you envision for it, and you may not even intend for it to be the only source of food for your family, but it will help you be less reliant on the kinds of corporation you’ve come to know and come to see as irrevocably evil.

      And then sometimes, you get people like this in the post. Who find enough success farming to focus their energy on it exclusively.

  • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Yeah, after 22 years at Microsoft in a senior position, you should be able to retire and do whatever the fuck you want as a hobby. I very highly doubt this guy will ever make significant money from goose farming.

  • jaybone@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I’m a senior/principal engineer with 20+ years of experience and I can’t even think about retiring any time soon. All the posts in this thread are making me super sad. And the posted salary numbers are way higher than mine. :(

  • vinnymac@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Might be one of the few times a Lemmy post related to me.

    I have owned a farm for four years, and do engineering for fun. AMA

      • vinnymac@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        My grandfather is/was an electrician for over 60 years. Worked on very important projects in New York City. This rubbed off on me growing up. I spent much of my childhood taking things apart, figuring out how they worked, and putting them back together how I liked. I’ve been working on both hardware and software since I was 11. Had the privilege to study CS formally in high school, and Computer Engineering in university.

        Good timing mostly got me into farming, especially since interest rates fell to the floor during the pandemic. Had enough to buy the acreage I wanted, and the wife was interested in helping out. We grow a variety of things now, and not just plants. For example we sell Honey, Soaps, Walnuts, and Mushrooms. It can be hard on the body to be so active all the time, but it is more satisfying than a monitor staring back at you at 3am because of some small incident.

        I continue to tinker, and assist startups in my spare time, I can’t imagine I will ever stop programming.

  • DragonAce@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    I quit my 20+ year career as a sysadmin about 2 years ago and started turning my backyard into a massive garden. I’m currently trying to figure out places to sell large quantities of hot peppers and I’m about to start selling matted and framed photos of flowers and wildlife from my garden.

    Fuck IT.

  • Zink@programming.dev
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    2 months ago

    I have taken a half step in this direction and it’s improved my life greatly.

    I still have a normal job, but my Covid project back in 2020 was to finally put a koi pond in my back yard. I spend way more time learning and thinking about it than keeping up on tech shit. And the job I have now is great - I’m not trying to escape from it or anything.

    The best part is that even the guy I bought my recent koi from has a microbiology degree. He’s properly living the “x farmer” dream, but that “job” is much more than a 9-5.

  • tacosplease@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    You should say “This is how something looks” or “This is what something looks like”, but don’t put the “how” and the “like” in the same statement.

    That is not how it should look like.