Comment Re:One of two things. (Score 1) 365
I just turned 40, have been paid to figure out problems since 1994 and have been programming since Logo and original Microsoft Basic existed. Some languages are Asembly, COBOL, C, C++, C#, VB 6.0, VB.NET, PHP, Pearl have created IOS apps, Windows Phone apps, windows desktop apps, web apps, have written async http posts using plain old Javascript until my fingers bled in the 90's, now using JQuery, worked with ColdFusion, classic ASP, MVC, XML and JSON. On the database side I have worked with Oracle, Microsoft SQL extensively, mySQL. Numerous Windows OS, Linux, Mac OS X, Unix. Bought some older 2003 Cisco Routers to learn their IOS, have installed databases, operating systems, financial systems (Hyperion). Have created Web services that serve numerous UI's such as Apple IOS, windows mobile os, web apps, other web services, desktop apps (SaaS). This list could go on and on. Have designed and implemented countless systems -- that all went to production in some form -- and all worked for the companies that used them. Worked in the original Cloud - ASP or Application Service Provider.
Not many posts have brought me out of my cave but it's good to know from Geezer that i'm not old. I don't feel old and I guess that the Anonymous Coward said it right: older developers are one of two things: a wizard or burnt out. I have worked with many older burnt out and useless guys my age. They still have all the knowledge within them, the only thing is they have no spark, no desire to continue to learn or continue to innovate or, sadly, to continue to contribute. I call them the working welfare.
My opinion of older wizards is this:
We will be around working until we die. The current systems that are getting abstracted away by the slick UI's aren't helping the new generation of programmers with the underlying hardware and software. I wrote a compiler for part of my undergraduate degree (a two class series using AST (Abstract Syntax Tree's) using lex, yacc, in C++). Found out later that class was made optional for later graduates. As the curriculum standards are lowered so will be the graduates ability to handle stress or workload.
All my interview questions start with:
What's your passion?
The candidate's truthful answer will tell you all you need to know.