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Until that pale, calm, a bit awkward girl went nut about a piece of someone elses C code.
At that point I've known her for four years already.
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When asked this question I advise everyone to get real world business experience first. Knowledge of business principles, culture, accounting and customer relations are equally or more important than technical knowledge. Unless you work for a company that sees IT as a profit center rather than a cost center, you will be valued by how well you can create business solutions.
We have all worked with people that have passed multiple certifications but were not capable of creating a usable solution to a problem. The wiz-bang coding we all admire because of the complexity or uniqueness is absolutly worthless if it doesn't solve problems in the real world. This is how utility writers and font designers are born.
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If they are from (small) city other than Banglore, Hydrabad,Pune, Delhi , Mumbai etc ..
Where there is lots of IT Companies and Jobs.
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Gaurang Shah 033 wrote: If they are from (small) city
But they can migrate to the bigger cities and furthermore a good developer can earn by working on some online projects.
Best Regards,
Mushq
Mushtaque Ahmed Nizamani
Software Engineer
Ultimus Pakistan
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...I don't want developer-wannabe relatives nagging me with their endless coding questions too.
The worse is those who ask you something on messenger and expect you to have instant answers...so you start asking a couple of questions to figure out exactly what it is they're trying to accomplish, and they take a solid 7-8 minutes between replies 'cuz they're being distracted by their TV on their end as they're typing...and of course they don't wanna do this over the phone, 'cuz they "feel they're bothering you" if they call you...
Think I'm bitter?
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I SOOOOO understand you on that one....
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Yepp... That's a problem...
May be you need to set "I'm too busy" status in IM?
------------------------------------------------------------
Want to be happy - do what you like!
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This one has been around the traps for a while - the 'help with my pc' thing. Just get yourself a standard schedule of charges, and get it well known amongst friends and relatives.
For instance:
- operating system reinstall or similar : carton of beer
- Virus removal or restore of accidentally deleted files : sixpack of beer
- accompany to shop for assistance with buying new computer : lunch afterwards
The other condition is that you don't make house calls - all computers must be dropped off/collected from your house.
You mightn't drink beer, but there's surely something else you can use. You can always swap it for chores you don't like doing, like mowing the lawn or washing your car.
My point is : if you don't feel you can charge money, at least make them swap something of value to you, or spend an equivalent amount of time helping you out.
Most people will be happy to come good, if they expect something for nothing, then, well they need a lesson in how the world works, and tell them to take it to a shop. In fact, I find people are happier getting you to do something if they know you are being rewarded for your time. Now, if you'll excuse me, I've got a carton of Stella Artois I need to put in the beer fridge...
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Being a developer is like being a slave. You do way more work than the average employee.
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That really (really, really) depends on who you work for and what kind of company it is. I have had programming jobs where I was a baby sitter (the guy in charge was just riding out until his retirement so didn't want to hear about real work) and jobs where the focus was on closing out issues (didn't matter if they were fixed right, just get them closed).
In my 17 years of coding I have found that the person you work for most directly impacts your like or dislike of a job, followed by the company and it's policies. In my current job I do not think I do any more work than anybody else in the development staff (engineers, software, documentation, etc).
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I would if they were 1) young and remaining single or 2) older and empty nester. It is just too hard to keep up and keep the family a priority.
WarePhreak
Programmers are tools to convert caffiene to code.
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I would only recommend a development career to someone who exhibits a potential talent.
Our industry suffers from a plethora of two-bit hacks. I wouldn't want to be responsible for bringing even more of them in.
Grim (aka Toby) MCDBA, MCSD, MCP+SB
SELECT * FROM users WHERE clue IS NOT NULL
(0 row(s) affected)
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[i'll here it now, based on that title]
I see more assembly-line programming these days. There is no innovation. It's all about lowest price.
If I knew someone who was creative and talented and coming out of college, I'd say "write up the spec's for your program...then pay someone to develop it. Then spend your time marketing the software."
If they like programming just for the sake of programming then they can do it, I don't care.
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Even nuclear physicists start off as someone else's flunky.
If they're talented and driven, they'll eventually get an opportunity to do the really innovative and interesting work. Same thing goes for our industry.
Except in our industry, there's way too high a percentage of "professional programmers" who have neither the talent nor the skill to ever be anything more than a code-monkey.
Grim (aka Toby) MCDBA, MCSD, MCP+SB
SELECT * FROM users WHERE clue IS NOT NULL
(0 row(s) affected)
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A "would you" needs qualification, otherwise it's just too wide open. As the question stands it can't be answered.
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it can be answered. many have answered it.
take the plunge.
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Heck no. If I say "Yes", I may get a call saying Granny wants to learn VB!
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and...? What would you say to her?
cheers,
Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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I would not encourage such behaviour.
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I'd have to ask if she stopped taking her meds.
Darroll
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That's what I saw the maybe answer as doing, allowing for an if...
WarePhreak
Programmers are tools to convert caffiene to code.
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Nop. They think "hey free tech help!"
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Simply put 'You are taken for a free ride. '.
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I get always free cake, cookies and coffee for helping. :->
Greetings from Germany
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Thats true for a lot of techies. People always feed me when I am at their house working on their computer.
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