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I graduated in Physics in 1966 and went to work for Boeing in Seattle acquiring and reducing data from wind tunnel tests, calculating lift and drag, measuring noise from directional mics.
Next stop was working on the OS at Prime Computer.
Long story short, I've been writing code since I was in college and still am. Today, storage is king and I'm deep in iSCSI, Fibre Channel and Windows integration. I still write code every day, every week.
StCroixSkipper, aka Scott Moreland
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Got started learning programming just before high school in 1969, after high school was a computer operator that rewrote programs to make them faster and easier to use (the "systems programmers" had no concept of time/motion), first professional job was in 1976. First published programs in 1980 (game cartridge) and then Apple II utilities in 1982. (I'll let you do the math)
Worked 100+ hours/week doing conveyors because we couldn't program the conveyors (each was unique) until they were built and client expected to use it shortly after. I wrote a table driven universal carton tracking system in FORTH that new manager didn't understand and he declared future programs were to be written in "C" to be "commercial." I would have written a simulator so we could do simultaneous development during construction, but idiot manager insisted on being an idiot. He thought job was 8 to 5. Out in the field he got to experience his first 12 hour day (clients expect you to cover all three shifts) and boy was his butt dragging at the end. Cheer up, I said, just wait for your first 36 hour day and yes, there will be 48's as well. Because of him (and a big raise) I left and he didn't last much longer. I still miss that job. Required everything I knew and a little bit more besides to keep it fun and challenging.
I love my current job as a manager that gets to program. A previous job where I was accidentally left in charge had no time to program in.
Still work on outside projects on weekends to learn stuff regular job does not currently use, but twice now, the knowledge acquired from the outside projects have been applied at work and saved the company vast sums of money.
I do not plan on retiring.
Psychosis at 10
Film at 11
Those who do not remember the past, are doomed to repeat it.
Those who do not remember the past, cannot build upon it.
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For a profit, around 5 years, but I love to code, so probably I would be doing it till the end of times (or my life, whichever comes first... )
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I've been coding for a living for 41 years this July. I loved it for about the first 30 but then the world changed somehow. Maybe I just got old. Anyway, I also arrived at the point where it just seemed pointless to keep learning new programming stuff. I have hobbies but I just don't have the time for them as long as I'm working. The gig I'm on now is the last one. When it's over, I'm retiring so I can do all the stuff I want to do without programming. Oh, it only took me ten years to discover that working more than 40 hours a week is a loser's game. There's no way you will get that time back and you miss out on a lot of more important stuff when you are working that much. In all those forty years, they kept trying to turn me into a manager but I refused. There's no way I would do that when I could stay coding.
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Since 1964: so 50 years.
COBOL, Focal, Fortran, ALGOL, PL/1, APL, Basic, Burroughs Assembler, Datapoint Databus, IBM Assembler, Intel 8088/8086/..., Perl, Dialog, Ksh/Csh/Bash, Javascript, PHP, C#, ...
Now mostly: Perl, Bash, Javascript, PHP, C#.
Lots of others to learn for fun on the weekends. I am interested in them all ...
"Courtesy is the product of a mature, disciplined mind ... ridicule is lack of the same - DPM"
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Coded first program in 1966. Solved Shrodinger Wave Equation given boundary conditions using Fortran which we had to learn on our own to do the homework for Physics class at Miami University.
Since have programmed in assembly (mainframe and PC), PL/I (mainframe and PC), Cobol, Basic (original and later versions), Turbo Pascal, Delphi, Delphi Prism, RemObject's Oxygene. And dabbled in others including C#, Modula II, Ada, etc.
I prefer the Algol derived langugages. Don't much care for C and its derivatives.
Made a spreadsheet program for the mainframe in PL/I which IBM marketed and made $10 million from.
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At least once a day since I arrived here.
Anyway, greetings from Fieni.
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Are you in Romania?
- I would love to change the world, but they won’t give me the source code.
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Da.
Moved my wife and kid here this week.
I'll follow in a few years...after I get tired of the peace and quiet at home.
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GenJerDan wrote: At least once a day since I arrived here
And - oh wait you are not in the tropics!
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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I'd be surprised if this isn't a Leslie, but Super Planet Crash[^]
If you don't think any of the places below are really that great to live in, design your own solar system.
Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them.
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Totally unrealistic - them orbits ain't elliptical (Yes - I know some pedant will say that a circle is s special type of elipse)
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I'm an optoholic - my glass is always half full of vodka.
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Psh. A circle is a special type of ellipse.
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Why are they even orbiting? There is no gravity to keep them in position. If there was, it would have been an elliptical orbit.
Overlapping orbits and overlapping celestial bodies does no damage to system. Funny.
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What do you think the big yellow thing in the middle is?
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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Well, if there was any gravity in that yellow thing, orbits would be elliptical.
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They are, just as soon as they are perturbed, even slightly.
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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It's harder than it looks!
My "best" score: (only two planets)
3,534,634
points over
2.8
years! But with twelve planets I got the full distance.
24,039
points over
500.1
years!
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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Thank you, I needed a new and good time-killer today, you made my day
There are two kinds of people in the world: those who separate humankind in two distinct categories, and those who don't.
"I have two hobbies: breasts." DSK
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15,839,988 over 500.1 years. Thanks a lot
modified 17-Jun-14 15:54pm.
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9,838,64 points over 500.1 years.
I presently hold the top score.
7 planets ~ 2 Dwarfs (5000x) and 5 Earth (1x) planets.
Yeah, total time waster!
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24,528,699 points after only 87.9 years
The language is JavaScript. that of Mordor, which I will not utter here
I hold an A-7 computer expert classification, Commodore. I'm well acquainted with Dr. Daystrom's theories and discoveries. The basic design of all our ship's computers are JavaScript.
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Well, yes - it is actually.
Those who fail to learn history are doomed to repeat it. --- George Santayana (December 16, 1863 – September 26, 1952)
Those who fail to clear history are doomed to explain it. --- OriginalGriff (February 24, 1959 – ∞)
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No. No, I don't think so.
BTW, Eldest gave me Raising Steam for Fathers Day - I'm something over halfway through already.
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