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Comment Re:grumpy old coder (Score 2, Insightful) 726

Meh, it goes both ways. How many younger coders feel they are god's gift to the industry?

Personally, I welcome anyone who wants to be a programmer. Show me you want to learn, and I will mentor you. I will also listen to your ideas and will likely learn something from your fresh insight.

But show me you are an asshat, and I'll treat you accordingly.

Comment Re:Typical: blame the process (Score 1) 726

I'd note that everything you mention above has been an issue for the 24 years I've been a programmer.

The customers always want more features or a different interface, interfacing with other systems has always been a problem (witness SNA, EDI, and a host of other painful solutions), some programmers have always felt that the "new" generation is less talented, and in 1984 the CFO at the company I worked for spent most of his time writing Lotus macros and "designing" how our freight dispatching system would work.

That said, anyone who has been in the business for more than a day has seen paradigms come and paradigms go.

All that usually means is that someone, somewhere, is making a shitload of money from convincing someone else that they need to change the way they are doing development.

Comment Re:Extracurricular activites (Score 3, Interesting) 639

Not only is your experience not "scientific" (as if experiences could be), it is not typical.

I worked in higher education for many years. The consensus among my colleagues was that homeschooled kids were usually in the top tier of academic work and had no more problems with social interactions than any other college freshman.

In short, they were normal students who were better prepared academically that the majority of their peers.

Comment Re:Extracurricular activites (Score 1) 639

When we homeschooled our son he was on the homeschool group's fencing team, did auto-restoration, participated in student council, took ASL classes, and orchestra.

The meme that homeschoolers are socially isolated is a canard used by public schooling activists to scare people into using their underperforming and failing institutions. IMHO of course.

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