Life is a lie, there is only code. Through code, I gain work. Through work, I gain projects. Through projects, I gain junior devs. Through junior devs, my compilers chains are broken The code will fuck me.
The price of becoming a professional is not wanting to do the job anymore but people keep asking you and you convince yourself to do it again Plus money
I've definitely felt the "fear of being left behind" before. In a previous position we weren't using anything "modern," and I was only keeping up with newer things because I was sacrificing home life to learn. It was exhausting!
I think this is an important point. Sometimes there's a fear of falling behind because you're not growing in your job. Fear of not being on the front lines
there are some things that will just never die. Wordpress developers don't need to learn anything new. If you want to not have to learn every other day, just go do that. Similar pay too.
The real question, are those things worth to keep up with them? Maybe some new fancy stuff pops up and dies 2 years later, but it was a big hype at that time. Learn principles and you will be able to use any technology.
@@BusinessWolf1 It's pretty flexible, too. For example, if you do want to upskill a little then going headless using the Wordpress rest api allows for a more modern approach to your front end.
Software industry is weird because there are these cool fang influencers who tell everyone how the industry is, but they have jobs/work in enviroments that arent the reality for 99,x % of people. The only other industry similiar to that is finance, where influencers talk about their cool wall street jobs while 99% of their audience end up in a district savings bank where they permit loans for car port extensions or a new bath room. For many people, the path to unhappiness is predetermined from the very beginning!
💯 these major tech company devs live in a relatively cushy bubble. ample in-house resources and benefits. it's all become too trendy and I can't believe that those in these large companies can be maintaining the same level of skill that those in smaller companies HAVE to maintain just to stay employed. I wish software dev didn't become so popular cuz it's been flooded with "cool people" larping as devs in big tech thanks to their social status and network
Your comment about Hurry is something I realized in my own life recently. An example that clicked for me a while ago was someone describing koi fish swimming in a muddy river or pond. Those who swim too fast kick up the dirt and cloud the water, they are swimming fast but aimless. You need to go slow enough to not kick up the silt and dirt. And in the end if you do this by being intentional, you will get to where you want to go much faster worker a lot less hard/stressed. HUGE. Love the content!!
A similar idea can be found in racing, especially rally. "Going fast" is not about hyper optimizing the braking, turning, and gear-shifts. Its about having a consistent pace, so you dont wreck the car. 80 hour weeks is comparable to taking the highest risk on every corner to save a few milliseconds, it is not sustainable and you will find yourself in a wreck before the finish. the guy behind you will ultimately be more successful.
Prime is like that funny, friendly and extremely loving senior we all lack in our professional lives. You make me believe in the fact that programming indeed is a happy career if you're into it, I mean you have been in it for over a decade and yet you're never bored of it. A true inspiration.
@@dudedude6690most careers nowadays are based on staring at a screen 8 hours a day, so this is not only for developers, but then again, I'd to see a research about this. Also, people stare at screens most of the day, cellphone, UA-cam, tv
As a new software engineer back in the day I looked forward to learning new things with bright eyes. It was great. Slowly, slowly it downed on me I had spent two or three decades basically learning how to do the same things but in a different way. For a long time it seemed every project I joined used a different language: Algol, PL/M, Coral, Ada, Pascal, C, C++... that is great, they all have their sweet features, but it seemed to me they were all conceptually the same. I was not really learning anything new. I was just using new syntax, new libraries, etc for the same old, same old. Depression set in. I lost my will to even look at the new shiny things as they came along. I could say much the same about operating systems and other things. Having said that my career in software has been great. It has gotten me into places and industries I would never have imagined getting into. It has taken me to many countries. Perhaps I have been lucky but I have always worked with wonderful and smart, helpful people in great companies. Eventually a programming language came along that grabbed my attention. Finally a language that offered something conceptually new. A language that prioritised the value of correctness and robustness that was in my first love ALGOL. That language is Rust. Now I run my own little company, work at my own pace, using tools that I choose. Software Engineering is great again.
About burnout, for me it's the opposite, doing backend is the fastest way to burnout. But maybe it's like that because most of my time with backend is with Java (not because the language per se, but architecture of the majority of apps built with it), doing the simples change require an insane amount of files, connections, binders, configs. You spend more time debugging and tryind to understand what's going on and where you can put your code than actually coding
Nothing gets me burned out faster than wasting time on debugging environment issues. I recently worked on a web service that was split PHP 5 and 7 that made API calls to a python back end service. Thousands of random php files that were just building string of html/css/jquery while calling out to a python API to get data. I burned days just figuring out WTF was going on while having people breathing down my neck asking why stuff was taking so long. I have never felt so drained in my life working on that project.
I would argue your system hasn’t enough clear easy to use documentation. The process of ‘trying to find out where to put my code’ is suggesting this at least. There should not BE such a process. All that should be in the docs and should be easy to find (not understand necessarily). It’s like blaming an application for being shit but you never read the manual (or there isn’t one). Anyway if this is the case: time to move on! Never (almost never) work in an environment with poor documentation. It’s a huge sign of bad priorities.
@@paulholsters7932 I totally agree with you, sadly not every company force a policy of good documentation, features, MVP and deadlines takes over good documentation. I sadly worked with very big apps for a pretty large company. For example, the last Java project I worked with was a monolith with 100+ devs working on it. And not only had a massive large source code but also most of the flow was controlled by real production session, so it wasn't easy to debug and try things, all of that with pretty basic documentation. Maybe I had bad luck with the few companies I worked with. I still haven't seen a enterprise level Java which doesn't suffer from the overcomplex and oververbosity of it's architecture.
As someone who’s been in software and hardware professionally for 30. I can honestly say that I’m fed up with software engineering. You do the same crap over and over again with different languages and the challenge gets less and less. Ironically the hardware gets faster and the code gets bulkier and slower because of stupid choices like Rest APIs 😂 we code worse! I’ve seen software life cycles go from decades to on average 3 to 5 years. It’s sheer stupidity and that’s also what I see with most developers that graduates after 2000. The whole engineering part is gone it’s become software hacking, trial and error, patch in production. Something that’s just foreign to us old folks. My dad build online testing systems (hard- and software) for bespoke ball bearings. Some is still running in nuclear power plants’ crane that exchanges fuel rods. And tunnel boring machines. Some stuff he found out recently ran literally from the year I was born! That is a 50 year lifecycle! Even the hardware is still running in most cases - DEC PDP-11 is indestructible 😂He recently was invited to check out the new offices and they showed their old colleagues what was still around from their labour; As a token of appreciation for what these now 80+ year olds did. My dad was so proud to see that some stuff was still running on old hardware but even more proud that for newer hardware they’d recompiled his FORTAN code or ram in a PDP-11 emulator when it was the early assembly language stuff. The biggest challenge was creating new interface boards to connect the existing (often also bespoke) transducers to. Now that is rewarding. All my projects start or with “oh this just needs to last 4 years”. It’s not firing you up to do good engineering with that attitude.
@@ThePrimeTimeagen I guess you are right mate. And although I’ve had it, I do realize that it’s a blessed job compared to 90% of the people out there. It’s just normal I guess that when you turn 50, that you get fed up with everything 🤣
@@rusi6219 I know got a fact that in my country (the Netherlands) most influence comes from back crap companies that live management and processes more than engineering like IBM, Cap Gemini, Vodafone, TMobile. As they provide a lot of internship spaces. We as a small company registered as a “accredited learning company” by the government complained about the terrible syllabus because its all presentation, write a report, what is ITIL that sort of paper rubbish. And the school explained that this is what those companies request.
The "man of momentum" hit home, saw the same burnout when im back from a vacation I lost interest to quite an extent even on things that i was super excited to work on before vacation
I love being in software, because of what it allows me to do, but I also hate it, because it really is only truly good for people at the very top. It's always the whole Steve Jobs vs Steve Wozniak situation. You do all the work, but people only remember your marketing partner. At a vast majority of companies, you'll be treated as a human resource, and you'll be forgotten as fast as you were introduced
You're explicitly hired to automate something. That's literally the entire job, have a machine do all the computation for you. If your company is not project-based but instead in a transition from Manual to Automated, expect that to be finished at some point. Projects are the way to go, so either choose a big enough company with lots of internal transfer or something like games where it's inherently making small products over and over.
Try to be a software tester for a year and you will feel king again as a software engineer. You guys don’t know what ‘getting no credit’ actually feels like
The sword of Damocles is from a story where the king of Syracuse (I think) let a guy sit on his throne for a day but he hung a sword over his head to simulate the experience of being king
I've been programming since I was a teenager, it's my passion, and I'm 40 now but you couldn't pay me enough to program for 80 hours a week. Maybe when I was in my 20s but that would kill me now. If they're making people spend that much time at the computer then no wonder they hate their career.
Same here. I’m 39 and been in software engineering for around 20 years and I cannot physically do that kind of thing anymore. If I do a week like that I will be completely useless the following week and overall I will have been less productive over that two weeks. Partly it’s because I’m older but partly it’s because I did do it when I was younger. I couldn’t say no and wrecked myself. Now I’m realistic about things and don’t find it hard to say no. Most things people are working overtime for aren’t really important enough to warrant overtime. I still do plenty of reading and tinkering in addition to my day job but that carries zero stress and I enjoy doing it. I could probably work on an exciting personal project for 80 hours a week if I had no other work, but I won’t do it for someone else.
I'm currently reducing my paid hours at my job to 30, because I want to keep working on my private projects without taking all the time from things I need to stay healthy and happy (like sleep, time with my partners, sport). So yeah, while 60h is doable, I don't think it's sustainable - and 80h would burn me out very soon.
I had a lot of 80 hour weeks the last year. But since I'm now a "senior manager", I don't even qualify for overtime pay so I resent every single second of it since my family suffers.
Loved this episode, prime. I agree with many things you said. I also have the 3 foundations I try to keep by: eat well (no sugars, no fast/junk food, take it easy on the heavy meats), sleep consistently, exercise regularly. Community is also huge, but I also try to meditate every day. Stay healthy my friends.
I recently worked as a backend developer intern at a company and my experience there can vouch for everything this article has said. The boss once told me during a 7 PM standup that I can only leave after fixing a bug caused by some code written by the previous intern, even though I told him that my mom is calling and it's urgent. My mom fell sick the very next day and I quit the job after 30 more days torture known as notice period. After quitting the job with 4 months of experience, I can't find any other internship and I can understand why many people can't afford to say no to their boss. Some even develop Stockholm syndrome towards this behaviour just to survive because there aren't many jobs left and the market is very competitive.
I feel like a lot of the pressure and stress this guy or girl is talking about is self induced. They deep down feel like they need to prove themselves to themselves or others so they work more. It's hard to overcome especially if your family put pressure on you growing up, but you have to learn how to stop working so much if you want to survive.
people forget that SWE doesn't paid more by working more vs working less. Unless you're actually enjoying it I suppose you should start to say NO to overtime etc.
Agism and tech bullet lists mean 10 years of experience from 20 years ago is effectively useless; even legacy shops fancy themselves as on the cusp of upgrading and will pass you over. I personally love that there's always something new and shiny to play with, but I also get how it isn't really 'optional'. If you want to sit on your sweet vb6 or ROR skills, you'll eventually be stuck in a very poorly managed gig you hate with very few options.
It's refreshing to see a nuanced commentary on a topic that is usually treated as "this good the other thing bad". Thank you! On the topic of fearing obsolescence and skill depreciation : There is no magic in computer science, every new "thing" is an optimisation on a different older "thing", if you know the old thing, learning the new thing is relatively trivial: microservices is SOA but good, Go is Java but with a better GC scheme and channels, go channels are UNIX pipes, you get it. For anybody starting out, please don't fall for the marketing BS (learn this language or whatever to stay relevant). Knowledge never goes 'out of flavor', products do.
Prime is absolutely right, the hell in my head forced me to start looking at things with blind positivity or indifference. Its not easy but you can do it, trust me on that. The world is on fire, but atleast it means you arent gonna freeze to death. * This doesnt mean you shouldnt address the sources of negativity btw, but you can do alot by seeing the brightside.
Dude I'm literally two years in, but I'm already completely with you on the tools development. I've been working with Terraform to automate generic infrastructure deployments on as many cloud providers as possible so that anybody who has written anything for the web can deploy it anywhere they want with the click of a button if they package it correctly. And the package is containers. That's it. Just containers.
I don't understand why working from home blurs the line between work and home. I was warned about this when I started working from home. But when the work day ends I have family commitments that stop me from working? Why is anyone checking work emails after logging off?
i used to work in a place where i do the same thing over and over and over again, which i absolutely hate. Not only that, im also doing this like 12++ work hr per day. The overtime demand was so bad, i worked 450ish hrs per month. It was pure suffering, but i persevered. I came in as a boy, and came out as a man. Looking back, im so glad i kept suffering and become the man i currently am; i can see the positivity because i've been in bad places.
This sounds exactly like my time at university studying biotech. I ended up falling deep into apathy and escapism, which lead me to my expulsion at last year of study.
I just can’t relate to these stories, early on my career I was very overworked but one day I decided to say no more often and negotiate more, after that I never worked outside business hours and it didn’t affect my career, it helped me a lot, I naturally was more productive and had more time to study what I was interested. Most opportunities that I had came from side projects, usually dumb ones like telegram bots
@@jel1951 Yes, it is, but I really think saying yes to everything isn’t the way to prove yourself. Being able to negotiate a reasonable amount of work and doing that very well is probably the best way. Of course there are places where this isn’t possible, but if you’re stuck in this situation try to find a way get the hell out of this place as soon as possible. Software engineering is one of the few professions where we have that kind of power, so we better take advantage of it.
While I think Prime is a great influence for sofware folks, I respectfully disagree with his takes here. I feel it's important to acknowledge that a huge proportion of jobs actually look like what the article is describing and people feel genuine and, sometimes profound, dissatisfaction affecting their lives. I'm sure advices come from good intention but I'm also sure that hearing "learn to say no to people", "do more and be excited about it", "find a better job", "it's your fault for not doing enough for making things better" will not resonate well with many. If you read this and and fall in this category - my heart goes to you, the world can be a real tough place but you're doing great and take it easy on you ❤
There is not only the beautiful world of Netflix-culture, Mr. Streamberry, in big enterprises the blog article exactly describes the working environment. Complex legacy systems were you first debug the application before adding a new feature. Again, you rarely build new a application normally or cool new features on a green field in enterprise companies, you have to deal with old and worst designed existing software. Period. Everybody who isn't ready for this could find themselves very quickly in that exact very uncomfortable situation. So be aware when applying for a new job at an enterprise company.
I have been in this industry for not more than 1.5 years, but I completely understand what you mean. The way I deal with burnout is by continuously learning. By expanding my knowledge, I feel less stressed and I'm more capable of solving the problems I encounter. However, some may argue that excessive learning can actually contribute to burnout. Nevertheless, I have embraced this approach because I never saw software engineering as just a job; instead, I view it as getting paid for doing what I love.
I don't think this is an issue with software engineering, I think it's an issue with bad management. Being a dev sucks when none of the people who are foisting their bad decisions upon you are devs themselves... When product dictates the expectations, and devs dictate the implementation, being a dev is pretty awesome! It's when the lines start to blur that things get frustrating.
Awesome video, and your take is spot on. I'm on the tail end of recovering from burnout myself, and I definitely felt a lot of what this person was feeling. It was also almost entirely my own fault for exactly the reasons you mentioned. I willingly allowed work to take over too much of my life, and I won't even claim I'm anything more than an average performer in my field (if even). It doesn't really matter, because once you enter that spiral you end up in the same place, because the only direction is down. The moment you decide to start sacrificing energy from other areas of your life without a strict time limit, you're hosed. Then when you inevitably see your performance drop you try even harder, sacrifice even more, and that only adds more gasoline to the dumpsterfire that is your productivity and state of mind. I loved my job, loved the people I worked with, and was never pressured into overworking. Whenever I explain to people why I've not been working for months they seem to default to "it must have been an awful place to work", and I have to correct them. It's hard to explain how this happens, but you can see how if you just assume the perspective of this author. I absolutely love learning new things, but in my burnout I just couldn't do it because I felt the weight of how behind I was on projects because I was just not productive. The prospect of truly exploring and learning a new technology was daunting, and the pain is real when you see your colleagues doing these things while you're stuck. And attempts to help just make the problem worse, because nothing stings more than to become a burden to other people. I definitely say most of the blame lies with us, because we are still rare enough that no employer can afford to explicitly create a toxic work environment with extreme hours. We do it to ourselves and to each other by working extra hours, taking work home, and constantly trying to get ahead. I know there can be good reasons to compete and prove yourself, but I think for most people that kind of sacrifice is not warranted. I can tell you that having plenty of pretty numbers in your bank account won't mean much to you when you're burned out, your relationships are failing, and you have nothing going in your life other than binging TV or videogames by yourself because you feel too exhausted after working to do anything else. Even in a positive and friendly workplace you can put the weight of the world on your own shoulders, and you can easily create the toxic environment in your own mind. I think a lot of this does boil down to culture, though. Imagine the reaction you'd get as an assembly-line or retail worker if you took work home with you, or worked overtime for free. Sure, a salaried position does warrant *some* additional stake, but IMHO it should probably be bad form to do it without being directly asked to (and a balance of 40 hours really ought to be maintained). Constantly going above and beyond should be seen as a positive quality, but also as a problem that needs to be corrected for the good of the employee, their coworkers, and the corpany. Burning through bright-eyed recent grads who don't know what they're sacrificing (or who think they're the exception) cannot possibly be the most profitable system unless you have a shortsighted view of things. Not sure where I was going with this other than just ranting, lol. Oh, the bit about being momentum-driven makes me wonder if Primeagen might have ADHD.
The Sword of Damocles that’s based on Greek mythology. He was the executioner at the court of Syracuse. His sword was the method for execution. It’s a very famous European saying.
10:55 -- I mostly agree with this idea. If you're doing something that seems hard enough (but clearly doable) at a glance, and it will take over 2-3 weeks by your estimate, you really don't know how long it'll take. Most certainly, you'll uncover some part of the problem or process along the way that extends how long it'll take. Sometimes (rare), it could go the oppoosite way and you find that something you thought was north of 2-3 weeks is substantially less because you discover something that does the hard work for you. One of my pet peeves as a software engineer related to deadline pressure, is managers expecting you (the engineer) to put together months long project plans telling them week to week when pieces would be done. What the actual F purpose is this? A deadline as a date is fine, but giving them a week to week playback for that long of a period of time is always a pain in my ass. It feels like double talk because they would also say "oh, its fine if things slide, and get pushed back." So then why am I writing down when I think it'll be done rather than just focusing on getting it done? Why can't my plan list what the pieces are and how they depend on each other rather than spending time an energy describing a future that has a low chance of materializing? No one has told me if this is just a sh*ttest in the corporate world about something else. I've been hit with it way too often and I have easily proven I am a senior level engineer on long lived projects, able to meet deadlines or communicate effectively around realities no one reasonably beats.
Halfway done watching this and I already appreciate how easy of a time I am getting at my job... Therefore, more motivated to grind and do better here! Communicate and pray you have a good relationship with your manager (lots of things need to go right to accomplish this but if it does happen, it's the dream!)
I'm having such an easy time in my current job I'm worried that I'm not going to be pushed enough to get better! This article is a bit ridiculous Edit: the ending kinda saved the article a bit
As a software engineer that took that changed career path after a burnout in another field (no regrets, I love it and am very passionate about it, and learning so much and finding very motivated people), the problem of this person is not software engineering, it's time, people and boundaries management. You can do whatever you want, if you don't know how to set boundaries and take care of yourself and prioritize yourself, nobody will do it for you and certainly not your team who first of all is not in your head and does not know how you feel, and also benefits from you overworking yourself in the short term. If this person does not reconsider how they function, they could end up in this kind of spiral with any job. I know I did. It's not bad to mildly inconvenience your team for your own survival. If you need it, verbalize your need for clear boundaries between work and not-work, know your needs and wants of the moment and communicate them in a healthy way, I always do it and it's either well recieved or I don't want to work there anyway.
21:52 THANKS for the words of encouragement. The only issue is: I hate golang today. For it's interfaces, for the import cycles, for the mess that you get with absence of modules, just packages... My brain is very strained when using this POS
As a reskiller from the kitchens, it does get difficult to keep up with the hype trains on what is supposed to get you hired. I basically gave up on that and decided to start rolling an MSP with my buddy using modern technologies we like for their effectiveness rather than their popularity. Still getting some details together, but the bottom line is a good system lasts as long as it's well maintained. The less it depends on, the easier it is to maintain. I think if you can effectively leverage those facts, you can carve a niche for yourself. Still testing that theory.
Because the first generation of hackers/founders is still alive. Meanwhile hard-/software has progressed the equivalent of 800 years in just 80. That's bound to be the most interesting time humanity has ever faced!
I think the last line settles the problem: sometimes it is an issue of just surviving, you don’t have to thrive all the time. Just be ok with being human. Strive to thrive when you want and when you can afford to.
It's good to have experience in different things. Because it is exactly the same in any other job. You can be an translator, a builder, support engineer, whatever you want. If you think that you can escape this by not doing software, you just don't know life. If you don't set boundaries, the management and clients will do it for you and they always push for what they want. The irony here s that people fear that they will miss out, and be replaced, that they have to work long hours and always say yes to anything, but then they're surprised that it does not pay because that exact attitude makes them easy to abuse. If you don't do that, you'll miss the shitty jobs, sure, but maybe you'll have a shot at something better.
You cant tell someone how long its gonna take to complete something when you can't tell how long its gonna take to solve the bugs you have yet to run into.
0:41 you are mistaken the meaning is inherent in its construction. Utopia means "not a place". i.e. there is no such thing as a perfect place because everyone's ideals are different (so in a sense yes someones utopia could theoretically be dystopic for everyone else). There is word that is similar in actual greek eutopos which "good place" and it was a play on that.
4:09 It sounds like you have never really done UI development. Most UI development comes from a poorly thought-out image where as most UIs are dynamic. i.e. there are dynamic in at least 5 dimensions.X, Y, Z-Depth, Time (animations etc), any numerous interactions and states most of which are not documented, often derived or improvised and if not iterated on or documented in entirely inconsistent ways. No, GUI by nature of who is involved and the "expertise" everyone believes they have of design and aesthetics is a clusterfuck. Give me a loose technical spec for backend over a design spec any day of the week (because for a lot of UI devs design is an inherent and expected part of their job description).
As a software engineer of 7.5 years, this article is describing a completely alien world to me. I've never had a hard deadline. I've never had crunch at all, let alone for months. I've never felt a dire need to upskill besides a singular shift from web to mobile (which I got paid to learn on company time, was great). My job has almost never been terribly stressful and most the time it was had nothing to do with coding, but garbage people/situations like getting screwed out of a promotion to another team by my management. Recently the tide has shifted some, but generally software is an in demand field and that's why wages are so relatively high and perks so relatively good compared to most careers out there. Truly baffled by OP not just quitting and finding somewhere that wasn't a trash heap.
I wonder if Prime would have gotten to where he is now had he NOT been one of the people who didn't say no early in his career. Easier to let off the gas when you've already established yourself. At many of the companies I've worked at there has been a strong culture of "put in your 80 hour weeks when you're young and reap the reward later."
I actually really enjoyed this post. It was quite pessimistic, but I think it is someone really feeling it at the moment - they are almost writing this to themselves. I've been through this "dark side" as I had a toxic manager that slowly turned me into a pessimistic person, but now that I've been away for several years I've gotten through it. Sleep, exercise, eating healthily, and social interaction can be the base of the "light side" 💯. It didn't help that my "dark side" coincided with Covid, so my habits were thrown off. Best of luck to anyone going through this - just focus on those good things and take charge - for me it was holding out a little longer until I found a better job opportunity, and relying on my spouse.
I had the opposite experience building tools the last year. But that was because every time someone had a problem somewhere, it trickled through a game of telephone up the organization chart to the nearest common ancestor with my dev team, and then back down, picking up a lot of pointless requirements like "it has to have a SPA front-end" and "it has to look like Excel". We were never trusted to understand the original problem and come up with a solution for ourselves.
If you're worried about deadlines, you're either absent from the estimation process of which is very-very bad, or you're estimating too optimistically. You have to multiply your deadlines AT LEAST by 2, because there can be many unknowns along the way during development. Chief O'Brien and Scottie knew that.
"if you leave your job none of your coworkers will keep in contact with you" that hits hard cause it's been like that for me in school, highschool and University as well.
In my opinion Rust is very powerful and versatile thanks to its novel approach to memory management at compile time. But it is the first iteration of that idea in the wild, and I suspect we'll get a better approach on a future language. That, combined with a lot of features such as operator overloading, macros, traits rather than simpler interfaces, makes the language very difficult to learn. I think or hope we will get a language that a let's you do what Rust does, but feels and learns like Go. Imagine, for instance, optional GC except when you don't want it or prefer not to have it. Imagine optional goroutine like concurrency with optional runtime for that, only when needed and no async/await (colored functions).
I understand this guy, even if I do not share a lot of the experiences. I think the only thing I dislike are people with a mindset that tries to push the coders to their limits, which leads to such horrible environments. You have to research narcissism if you want to work in Tech, and know how to survive or cope with the situation if you have someone in your company who was hired to find the weakness. Also, it never works out, it will always be random people being fired. Toxic work environment never really saved a business, but it for sure killed them.
Fear of feeling left behind becomes real when you have to work in a legacy environment for a long time without any variance in work like tooling or something new. It's real imho and i've felt it aswell.
I can so relate to the momentum bit. That's literally what I face every time. I find it extremely hard to switch to vacation mode and then back to work mode. It always ends up being a half assed vacation because I always have it in the back of my mind to keep the work momentum going, knowing I have to go back and switch back and hit the ground running.
I work as a maintenance person for residential housing. What the article said at 12:54, the superman syndrome, is rife in this industry to. The sort of "go fix the thing" mentality, even if you have no idea what you are doing. Just the other day, they sent our painter who does minor repair tasks to uninstall furnace parts, when he has zero experience on furnaces and not even the correct tools to do it, and then got upset when he said he needed someone to help and show him what to do.
I've been in data science for 7 years now, and I have never had the opportunity to work with neural networks, and it feels like every company and their mom wants their own neural network guru, and I am stuck unable to find a job because I've never been given the raw resources to be able to experiment with NNs in an actual, real environment - the biggest company I've worked in is Coca-Cola, and the most powerful machine i've had there was my work laptop with an integrated GPU. I've worked for one of the biggest forex brockers in the world, and all the resources they dedicated to me for NN experiments were a server with 4 cores and 8 GB RAM which were also shared with some other services. I have no idea what to do, it just feels like my years of expertise building ML models are a bloody waste because I don't have the experience in my Resume.
In startups it's tough. I now see it's all round problem. The pressure is hight all the time but client deadlines are the greatest pain. Being the 'All in one' developer. Now with such experiences we get to endure the challenges that come a long. This is the iceberg that everyone does not speak about. We are only told of good salaries. This is an eye opener and good to know many devs also fee the same around the globe. Working on Bugs, Self growth, New features, Life balance and all these are always in conflict
IIRC: Utopia was coined by Sir Thomas More (for his book), based on Greek 'eu' meaning 'good' and 'topos' meaning "place". Dystopia was then coined off of utopia to mean the opposite
Just left a job where the standard deploy process was running serveral scripts in a specific order on your local machine, using your local code, straight to prod. And pushing directly to master was common. Also most files had 2000+ lines of unrelated code
It's not a burden to learn for prime because he even says he has no deadlines and no clients. But if you have deadlines, clients, and have to learn, it gets to be a lot. It's a hard balance. It's all about balance.
For a while I was tempted to say to the OP "quit yer whining and pay your dues kid," but I've been where he or she is, and it does suck, especially if you're dealing with poor physical and/or mental health. We're in a society-wide crisis of both and we've either lost or never learned how to deal with it, and the truth is that is the precondition to everything, including dealing with what is otherwise ordinary work stress. When you're unhealthy, even that can feel insurmountable and can even break you. At my most depressed, ordinary deadlines I used to be able to meet became unachievable, to the point where I lost more than one job because I couldn't keep my commitments. From the outside this looked like lazy irresponsibility, and that's not even untrue in a sense--but the very meaning of being ill is that you can't do well what you know you can (which makes you feel even worse). It really, really sucks. You have to be well in order to do well! The only thing I'd add to what Primagen is saying about sleep/diet/exercise--which is the first thing any therapist will tell you to work on--is to find a healthy community to belong to. The root of "toxic positivity" is the lie that we can do it all by ourselves and it's ultimately all our effort (read: all our fault individually if we fail). We need others in order to be happy and succeed.
Ya got me, I don’t know why I missed that, must have slipped my attention while listening…but great react with a lot of compassion and good advice. Thanks.
Use cost of delay instead of estimating time. Tell your manager how much money the software is going to make / save. It'll easily justify most budgets. Otherwise you should work on some other task. Make sure you get enough sleep, eat nice food and attend some hobbies. It recharges your creativity which is crucial to write good software. And btw, your creativity span is definitely not longer than 8h per day, probably only like 3h. It's ok to do the complex task tomorrow with a fresh mind. No one will enjoy a half-baked feature on a Friday release. Switch to an easy task if things go wrong to regain some confidence. Deliver something every day. It'll create trust between you and your clients that you can deliver value. Hope this motivated someone who's struggling.
10:45 Here's the gist of it: Damocles was punished by a king the following way: He was in a bed with all good foods etc. and was not allowed to leave it. At first he didn't noticed that it was a punishment, but then he looked up and saw a very sharp sword hanging from the ceiling only hold up by one string of horse hair and could as such fall on him at any moment (which would result in a painful death).
I've worked in really great environments and I've had really shitty experiences. Most recently was with a group contracted by the gov and everyday felt like the hunger games.
"I just don't like putting all the blame externally. I personally try to take on most of the blame, 'cause often all the things that go wrong are because I have misread the situation." And now we know the _real_ reason for your success.
Scope creep, managements fault or simply being a smart ass with the power of hindsight. It is easy to say "What I plan is what I build" if the most complicated thing you built was a calculator app.
My parents were bank clerks when computers and ATMs took off. Where I live, bank clerks used to be well compensated and to be considered in a position of trust. Then computers came along and they became essentially a cheap interface between the machine and the customer. So yeah... I have a pretty good life as a SE, but their history stuck with me. I am indeed afraid of becoming obsolete.
My extensive overtime and learning at home stopped when I went freelance. I work less hours now than ever and earn more than ever. Then again like I said I’ve done it all it’s just a different language or framework or even environment. But all my overtime was on me, because I was the tech lead and I found I had to come up with solutions. Now I realize if I’d done less they’d added another person into the team. When there’s no necessary to add people because work gets down, why add them?
I came into programming from another job (portfolio management). Every job can burn you out, especially if you’re driven. It’s really up to you to have discipline around habits, separating home and work, etc. Sometimes it’s not your fault, but you owe it to yourself to find out. Otherwise, you’ll find that every job burns you out.
Hot take: if you're doing regular OT in software, it may not be your choice initially but it eventually becomes your choice. Once you're mid-level, there are jobs everywhere you could get that don't do OT. Irregular OT in software is not your choice. ALL companies will have an OT spike here and there. That is just engineering. Sometimes that spike is a 45hr week. Sometimes it's an 80hr week. Game development is known to have regular OT, so if you do game development that was your choice. I would say anything more than 80hrs of OT across the year is not good. That allows for 4 weeks of an extra hour a day in 2 quarters (March and November crunch, if you will), and a catastrophic 6-days & 13hrs/day crunch (or production down), and an additional 24 days a year having an extra 10-minutes because of an end of day or sprint meeting going over time... this assumes there is no flex time and it's an extra 80hrs of OT, not "thanks for coming in 8hrs more last week, take this Friday off" situation. If you're doing more than that, it's just simply your choice for staying with a bad work-life balance.
To the person who asked how to develop a positive outlook on life. What Prime said is absolutely true, you need to push hard to get out of the slump you're in. Basically you need to get your head above water before you drown, and no its not easy, intact it's extremely hard, but once you're able to tread water and breath air, you realise that it's way easier to stay above water than to be under.
the darkside is not everyone knows how to set boundaries. I don't doubt that the same people complaining going to another skilled industry wouldn't have encounter the same issues.
"Sword of Damocles" is a Greek myth about the perils of Power. But people constantly miss-use it to mean "impending doom" or something along them lines. So don't worry about it... the author miss-used it as well.
This is your take. IMO the most interesting part of the story was that there was a sword above the throne and could kill you at any time, so people focused on that. After all the "perils of power" was just some BS excuse by the powerful, reality is if you are powerful and rich you are in less of a danger.
@@cherubin7th "if you are powerful and rich you are in less of a danger" Tell that to Nero, or Hitler, or JFK, or heck, Christina Grimmie. People with influence - which naturally includes political leaders and celebrities, so yes, power and wealth can be factors - have an enormous target painted on their backs by people who don't think they should have that kind of influence. _That_ is the "sword" hanging over their heads. Why do you think they tend to have entire teams of security when they go out in public?
In summary he isn't entirely wrong. Yes there are worse environments than others. But they are for the most part all somewhere along the road to what was described here. The trick is you have to really love the work. You have to be the sort of person that would be doing it in your free time even if you weren't getting paid to do it. That is most probably true for all careers and unfortunately what a lot of people trying to get into this dont realise. This isn't a job that pays well, it is going to be your life for most of your life. Inside and outside of work hours. Especially at the start of your career you will be spending a lot of time fighting against your personal redundancy and learning. Its inescapable and if you dont love it. That will chew you up and spit you out and there is no amount of realistic money that will offset that.
Any attempt to create a utopia inevitably creates a dystopia. “There are no solutions, there are only trade-offs; and you try to get the best trade-off you can get, that's all you can hope for.”
Utopia means an imagined place; the Greek origin (the word 'outopos') involves many concepts but ultimately it's a place / something that cannot exist. Which is funny right off the bat that the author says "Imagine being...". He was taking the piss on the whole concept immediately.
The fact that a guy with a CS degree, 40k hours of experience, IQ above 140, knows what a monad is, and works a netflix “got rejected from many a job” puts us all at ease about our job prospects 😊
Рік тому
“Yo dude, I don’t do that, why are you doing that? Why don’t you don’t do that? Have you tried that? Like, you don’t have to always do that. Now, sometimes you do…” 6:24
im in an awkward phase where I love and hate software, I dont see myself staying in it long term but I’m definitely not stopping it forever. Looking to pivot into another field while still writing software for fun on the side.
He has a point about the work following home, though for me its a bit different: I sometime still think about work and actual for work coding in my off hours, where its like a worm that intrudes into my mind and doesn't let me unwind.
The lack of reference for the Damoclese Sword might come from the fact that this became a expression in some languages / cultures. It's from a greek myth. A sword will fall and kill you if you do what you've been forbidden to do.
Going through this video, you've only seen the ideal scenario - Reminds me of the kid being offered a thousand dollar an hour salary out of college. Great for them, but that's often not how the world works. Have you ever been given a project at 4PM on a weekday that needs to be done by 7AM the next morning? Have you ever lived in a place with unemployment so bad, there are a thousand people willing to replace you for half your salary should you slip up - And that's just the CV's from that morning? Have you ever had to be the front-end dev, back-end dev, DBA, and network admin all at once? Have you ever seen people sleep at work because driving home and back wastes too much time? Have you ever considered $6 / hour to be "Well paid"? Have you ever worked somewhere where unpaid overtime was expected, and anyone who didn't put in the hours was "Let go" for not being"For the company"? Have you ever had to pull 120+ hours a week? You mentioned that you once did 80. For many, only 80 hours a week would be the dream! Have you ever worked at a company where being PAID for overtime was a laughable concept? Overtime is "paid for" in bonus vacation time (Which you'll never have time to take). Have you ever worked at a company doing an obsolete language in 20XX whilst all the other positions required Y years of experience in a language you've never had the opportunity to work with? For millions of devs, many of those are the norm. It's this, or working at McDonalds, unemployment, or finding a new career. Most devs don't just jump into the life of a high-paid dev working at a Fortune 500 company for a salary that 99% of devs will never get paid. You are the 1%. Consider yourself lucky.
I didn't like you very much till this video. Our outlook on life is similar, mostly positive, learning the new tech is very exciting and never feels like a burden, I don't fear being left behind but doing the same thing over and over sounds terrifying and I never hurry and I'm always intentional. I also struggled early to say no but no longer. Thanks for covering interesting topics.
The Darkside of Software Engineering is a pathway to many abilities some consider to be unnatural
Darth Prime the Wise
Life is a lie, there is only code.
Through code, I gain work.
Through work, I gain projects.
Through projects, I gain junior devs.
Through junior devs, my compilers chains are broken
The code will fuck me.
i was reading through and just about to add in my mind "code doesn't get you lai..." oh he addressed it on the last line hahaha😊😇
The price of becoming a professional is not wanting to do the job anymore but people keep asking you and you convince yourself to do it again
Plus money
Dreamberd be upon ye
As an unemployed software engineer, I'm glad that I'm back at the farm
My most fulfilling work is stuff I do on my own initiative. The stuff that people ask me to make tends to be boring and frustrating shit.
Stardew Valley?
Maggies Farm?
ignoring sarcasm assume its not then good for you
I've definitely felt the "fear of being left behind" before. In a previous position we weren't using anything "modern," and I was only keeping up with newer things because I was sacrificing home life to learn. It was exhausting!
I think this is an important point. Sometimes there's a fear of falling behind because you're not growing in your job. Fear of not being on the front lines
there are some things that will just never die. Wordpress developers don't need to learn anything new. If you want to not have to learn every other day, just go do that. Similar pay too.
The real question, are those things worth to keep up with them? Maybe some new fancy stuff pops up and dies 2 years later, but it was a big hype at that time. Learn principles and you will be able to use any technology.
@@BusinessWolf1 It's pretty flexible, too. For example, if you do want to upskill a little then going headless using the Wordpress rest api allows for a more modern approach to your front end.
That’s exactly why i left my previous Job. It was 10 years old tech. And I felt sooo stuck. Especially in front end devs
Software industry is weird because there are these cool fang influencers who tell everyone how the industry is, but they have jobs/work in enviroments that arent the reality for 99,x % of people.
The only other industry similiar to that is finance, where influencers talk about their cool wall street jobs while 99% of their audience end up in a district savings bank where they permit loans for car port extensions or a new bath room.
For many people, the path to unhappiness is predetermined from the very beginning!
💯 these major tech company devs live in a relatively cushy bubble. ample in-house resources and benefits. it's all become too trendy and I can't believe that those in these large companies can be maintaining the same level of skill that those in smaller companies HAVE to maintain just to stay employed. I wish software dev didn't become so popular cuz it's been flooded with "cool people" larping as devs in big tech thanks to their social status and network
Your comment about Hurry is something I realized in my own life recently. An example that clicked for me a while ago was someone describing koi fish swimming in a muddy river or pond. Those who swim too fast kick up the dirt and cloud the water, they are swimming fast but aimless. You need to go slow enough to not kick up the silt and dirt. And in the end if you do this by being intentional, you will get to where you want to go much faster worker a lot less hard/stressed. HUGE. Love the content!!
A similar idea can be found in racing, especially rally. "Going fast" is not about hyper optimizing the braking, turning, and gear-shifts. Its about having a consistent pace, so you dont wreck the car.
80 hour weeks is comparable to taking the highest risk on every corner to save a few milliseconds, it is not sustainable and you will find yourself in a wreck before the finish. the guy behind you will ultimately be more successful.
Prime is like that funny, friendly and extremely loving senior we all lack in our professional lives.
You make me believe in the fact that programming indeed is a happy career if you're into it, I mean you have been in it for over a decade and yet you're never bored of it.
A true inspiration.
It's bad because developer lose their eye sight in 5 years so definitely bad career
@@dudedude6690dudedude come on dudedudedude
@@dudedude6690most careers nowadays are based on staring at a screen 8 hours a day, so this is not only for developers, but then again, I'd to see a research about this.
Also, people stare at screens most of the day, cellphone, UA-cam, tv
Yeah, I often wonder: if people on Netflix is like this, I think I'd like to work at Netflix.
@lpls big tech is cushy let's be honest
As a new software engineer back in the day I looked forward to learning new things with bright eyes. It was great. Slowly, slowly it downed on me I had spent two or three decades basically learning how to do the same things but in a different way. For a long time it seemed every project I joined used a different language: Algol, PL/M, Coral, Ada, Pascal, C, C++... that is great, they all have their sweet features, but it seemed to me they were all conceptually the same. I was not really learning anything new. I was just using new syntax, new libraries, etc for the same old, same old. Depression set in. I lost my will to even look at the new shiny things as they came along.
I could say much the same about operating systems and other things.
Having said that my career in software has been great. It has gotten me into places and industries I would never have imagined getting into. It has taken me to many countries. Perhaps I have been lucky but I have always worked with wonderful and smart, helpful people in great companies.
Eventually a programming language came along that grabbed my attention. Finally a language that offered something conceptually new. A language that prioritised the value of correctness and robustness that was in my first love ALGOL. That language is Rust. Now I run my own little company, work at my own pace, using tools that I choose. Software Engineering is great again.
Amazing story man, props to you, what is the name of your company?
About burnout, for me it's the opposite, doing backend is the fastest way to burnout. But maybe it's like that because most of my time with backend is with Java (not because the language per se, but architecture of the majority of apps built with it), doing the simples change require an insane amount of files, connections, binders, configs. You spend more time debugging and tryind to understand what's going on and where you can put your code than actually coding
yeah, that stuff kills me
Nothing gets me burned out faster than wasting time on debugging environment issues. I recently worked on a web service that was split PHP 5 and 7 that made API calls to a python back end service. Thousands of random php files that were just building string of html/css/jquery while calling out to a python API to get data. I burned days just figuring out WTF was going on while having people breathing down my neck asking why stuff was taking so long. I have never felt so drained in my life working on that project.
I would argue your system hasn’t enough clear easy to use documentation. The process of ‘trying to find out where to put my code’ is suggesting this at least. There should not BE such a process. All that should be in the docs and should be easy to find (not understand necessarily). It’s like blaming an application for being shit but you never read the manual (or there isn’t one). Anyway if this is the case: time to move on! Never (almost never) work in an environment with poor documentation. It’s a huge sign of bad priorities.
@@paulholsters7932 I totally agree with you, sadly not every company force a policy of good documentation, features, MVP and deadlines takes over good documentation. I sadly worked with very big apps for a pretty large company. For example, the last Java project I worked with was a monolith with 100+ devs working on it. And not only had a massive large source code but also most of the flow was controlled by real production session, so it wasn't easy to debug and try things, all of that with pretty basic documentation.
Maybe I had bad luck with the few companies I worked with. I still haven't seen a enterprise level Java which doesn't suffer from the overcomplex and oververbosity of it's architecture.
Sorry to tell you that your applications are difficult to change.
You can employ a clean architecture approach that makes your work easier.
Honestly this is one of your best takes yet. The amount of support, understanding and overall good advice that you provide here is amazing. Thank you.
As someone who’s been in software and hardware professionally for 30. I can honestly say that I’m fed up with software engineering. You do the same crap over and over again with different languages and the challenge gets less and less. Ironically the hardware gets faster and the code gets bulkier and slower because of stupid choices like Rest APIs 😂 we code worse! I’ve seen software life cycles go from decades to on average 3 to 5 years.
It’s sheer stupidity and that’s also what I see with most developers that graduates after 2000.
The whole engineering part is gone it’s become software hacking, trial and error, patch in production. Something that’s just foreign to us old folks.
My dad build online testing systems (hard- and software) for bespoke ball bearings. Some is still running in nuclear power plants’ crane that exchanges fuel rods. And tunnel boring machines.
Some stuff he found out recently ran literally from the year I was born! That is a 50 year lifecycle!
Even the hardware is still running in most cases - DEC PDP-11 is indestructible 😂He recently was invited to check out the new offices and they showed their old colleagues what was still around from their labour; As a token of appreciation for what these now 80+ year olds did.
My dad was so proud to see that some stuff was still running on old hardware but even more proud that for newer hardware they’d recompiled his FORTAN code or ram in a PDP-11 emulator when it was the early assembly language stuff. The biggest challenge was creating new interface boards to connect the existing (often also bespoke) transducers to.
Now that is rewarding.
All my projects start or with “oh this just needs to last 4 years”. It’s not firing you up to do good engineering with that attitude.
its wild. and this is such a great reminder of where we came from and where we are at
@@ThePrimeTimeagen I guess you are right mate. And although I’ve had it, I do realize that it’s a blessed job compared to 90% of the people out there. It’s just normal I guess that when you turn 50, that you get fed up with everything 🤣
Ye ye but who's the ones designing curricula for the youngins
@@rusi6219 I know got a fact that in my country (the Netherlands) most influence comes from back crap companies that live management and processes more than engineering like IBM, Cap Gemini, Vodafone, TMobile. As they provide a lot of internship spaces. We as a small company registered as a “accredited learning company” by the government complained about the terrible syllabus because its all presentation, write a report, what is ITIL that sort of paper rubbish. And the school explained that this is what those companies request.
“Tons of rejection, tons of hardship, it’s all nostalgia at this point” -CHAD
The "man of momentum" hit home, saw the same burnout when im back from a vacation
I lost interest to quite an extent even on things that i was super excited to work on before vacation
its wild how it works
I love being in software, because of what it allows me to do, but I also hate it, because it really is only truly good for people at the very top. It's always the whole Steve Jobs vs Steve Wozniak situation. You do all the work, but people only remember your marketing partner. At a vast majority of companies, you'll be treated as a human resource, and you'll be forgotten as fast as you were introduced
You're explicitly hired to automate something. That's literally the entire job, have a machine do all the computation for you. If your company is not project-based but instead in a transition from Manual to Automated, expect that to be finished at some point.
Projects are the way to go, so either choose a big enough company with lots of internal transfer or something like games where it's inherently making small products over and over.
@@alexnoman1498 this is very real, thats why coding for hobby vs coding for work is like heaven and hell
Try to be a software tester for a year and you will feel king again as a software engineer. You guys don’t know what ‘getting no credit’ actually feels like
@@paulholsters7932 software tester is paid end-user
@@tonyhart2744 software testers have to be incredibly efficient at searching out potential bugs, it doesn't seem fun or relaxing in the slightest.
The sword of Damocles is from a story where the king of Syracuse (I think) let a guy sit on his throne for a day but he hung a sword over his head to simulate the experience of being king
I've been programming since I was a teenager, it's my passion, and I'm 40 now but you couldn't pay me enough to program for 80 hours a week. Maybe when I was in my 20s but that would kill me now. If they're making people spend that much time at the computer then no wonder they hate their career.
Yeah, 80h would be too much for, but doing 40h actual work + 20h own projects / reading books on the subject is doable
Same here. I’m 39 and been in software engineering for around 20 years and I cannot physically do that kind of thing anymore. If I do a week like that I will be completely useless the following week and overall I will have been less productive over that two weeks.
Partly it’s because I’m older but partly it’s because I did do it when I was younger. I couldn’t say no and wrecked myself.
Now I’m realistic about things and don’t find it hard to say no.
Most things people are working overtime for aren’t really important enough to warrant overtime.
I still do plenty of reading and tinkering in addition to my day job but that carries zero stress and I enjoy doing it.
I could probably work on an exciting personal project for 80 hours a week if I had no other work, but I won’t do it for someone else.
I'm currently reducing my paid hours at my job to 30, because I want to keep working on my private projects without taking all the time from things I need to stay healthy and happy (like sleep, time with my partners, sport).
So yeah, while 60h is doable, I don't think it's sustainable - and 80h would burn me out very soon.
I had a lot of 80 hour weeks the last year. But since I'm now a "senior manager", I don't even qualify for overtime pay so I resent every single second of it since my family suffers.
@@JP-hr3xqdamn
Loved this episode, prime. I agree with many things you said. I also have the 3 foundations I try to keep by: eat well (no sugars, no fast/junk food, take it easy on the heavy meats), sleep consistently, exercise regularly. Community is also huge, but I also try to meditate every day.
Stay healthy my friends.
I recently worked as a backend developer intern at a company and my experience there can vouch for everything this article has said.
The boss once told me during a 7 PM standup that I can only leave after fixing a bug caused by some code written by the previous intern, even though I told him that my mom is calling and it's urgent. My mom fell sick the very next day and I quit the job after 30 more days torture known as notice period.
After quitting the job with 4 months of experience, I can't find any other internship and I can understand why many people can't afford to say no to their boss. Some even develop Stockholm syndrome towards this behaviour just to survive because there aren't many jobs left and the market is very competitive.
The Damocles' Sword story is a very useful tale...
I feel like a lot of the pressure and stress this guy or girl is talking about is self induced. They deep down feel like they need to prove themselves to themselves or others so they work more. It's hard to overcome especially if your family put pressure on you growing up, but you have to learn how to stop working so much if you want to survive.
This is tough, sometimes it’s a loop where you can’t do better because you’re overwhelmed but you’re overwhelmed because you can’t do better
people forget that SWE doesn't paid more by working more vs working less. Unless you're actually enjoying it I suppose you should start to say NO to overtime etc.
A lot of people literally don't know how to handle stability because their entire life is stressing and cramming for tests in school.
Agism and tech bullet lists mean 10 years of experience from 20 years ago is effectively useless; even legacy shops fancy themselves as on the cusp of upgrading and will pass you over.
I personally love that there's always something new and shiny to play with, but I also get how it isn't really 'optional'. If you want to sit on your sweet vb6 or ROR skills, you'll eventually be stuck in a very poorly managed gig you hate with very few options.
Is it really ageism or just boomers being too lazy to adapt and grow bitter about it?
It's refreshing to see a nuanced commentary on a topic that is usually treated as "this good the other thing bad". Thank you!
On the topic of fearing obsolescence and skill depreciation :
There is no magic in computer science, every new "thing" is an optimisation on a different older "thing", if you know the old thing, learning the new thing is relatively trivial: microservices is SOA but good, Go is Java but with a better GC scheme and channels, go channels are UNIX pipes, you get it.
For anybody starting out, please don't fall for the marketing BS (learn this language or whatever to stay relevant).
Knowledge never goes 'out of flavor', products do.
If it’s on Medium I just know he’s going to read the worst takes ever.
This is true
Prime is absolutely right, the hell in my head forced me to start looking at things with blind positivity or indifference. Its not easy but you can do it, trust me on that.
The world is on fire, but atleast it means you arent gonna freeze to death.
* This doesnt mean you shouldnt address the sources of negativity btw, but you can do alot by seeing the brightside.
Dude I'm literally two years in, but I'm already completely with you on the tools development. I've been working with Terraform to automate generic infrastructure deployments on as many cloud providers as possible so that anybody who has written anything for the web can deploy it anywhere they want with the click of a button if they package it correctly. And the package is containers. That's it. Just containers.
I don't understand why working from home blurs the line between work and home. I was warned about this when I started working from home. But when the work day ends I have family commitments that stop me from working? Why is anyone checking work emails after logging off?
i used to work in a place where i do the same thing over and over and over again, which i absolutely hate. Not only that, im also doing this like 12++ work hr per day. The overtime demand was so bad, i worked 450ish hrs per month. It was pure suffering, but i persevered. I came in as a boy, and came out as a man. Looking back, im so glad i kept suffering and become the man i currently am; i can see the positivity because i've been in bad places.
What this guy doesn't realize is that your situation is the norm for many devs. He's the 1% saying that the other 99% should just git good.
This sounds exactly like my time at university studying biotech.
I ended up falling deep into apathy and escapism, which lead me to my expulsion at last year of study.
I just can’t relate to these stories, early on my career I was very overworked but one day I decided to say no more often and negotiate more, after that I never worked outside business hours and it didn’t affect my career, it helped me a lot, I naturally was more productive and had more time to study what I was interested. Most opportunities that I had came from side projects, usually dumb ones like telegram bots
it takes time to get to that point and i think some people don't have spines so its hard
@@ThePrimeTimeagen Its hard to say no when you're trying to prove yourself
@@jel1951 Yes, it is, but I really think saying yes to everything isn’t the way to prove yourself. Being able to negotiate a reasonable amount of work and doing that very well is probably the best way. Of course there are places where this isn’t possible, but if you’re stuck in this situation try to find a way get the hell out of this place as soon as possible.
Software engineering is one of the few professions where we have that kind of power, so we better take advantage of it.
While I think Prime is a great influence for sofware folks, I respectfully disagree with his takes here.
I feel it's important to acknowledge that a huge proportion of jobs actually look like what the article is describing and people feel genuine and, sometimes profound, dissatisfaction affecting their lives. I'm sure advices come from good intention but I'm also sure that hearing "learn to say no to people", "do more and be excited about it", "find a better job", "it's your fault for not doing enough for making things better" will not resonate well with many. If you read this and and fall in this category - my heart goes to you, the world can be a real tough place but you're doing great and take it easy on you ❤
There is not only the beautiful world of Netflix-culture, Mr. Streamberry, in big enterprises the blog article exactly describes the working environment. Complex legacy systems were you first debug the application before adding a new feature. Again, you rarely build new a application normally or cool new features on a green field in enterprise companies, you have to deal with old and worst designed existing software. Period. Everybody who isn't ready for this could find themselves very quickly in that exact very uncomfortable situation. So be aware when applying for a new job at an enterprise company.
I have been in this industry for not more than 1.5 years, but I completely understand what you mean. The way I deal with burnout is by continuously learning. By expanding my knowledge, I feel less stressed and I'm more capable of solving the problems I encounter. However, some may argue that excessive learning can actually contribute to burnout. Nevertheless, I have embraced this approach because I never saw software engineering as just a job; instead, I view it as getting paid for doing what I love.
I don't think this is an issue with software engineering, I think it's an issue with bad management. Being a dev sucks when none of the people who are foisting their bad decisions upon you are devs themselves... When product dictates the expectations, and devs dictate the implementation, being a dev is pretty awesome! It's when the lines start to blur that things get frustrating.
Awesome video, and your take is spot on. I'm on the tail end of recovering from burnout myself, and I definitely felt a lot of what this person was feeling. It was also almost entirely my own fault for exactly the reasons you mentioned.
I willingly allowed work to take over too much of my life, and I won't even claim I'm anything more than an average performer in my field (if even). It doesn't really matter, because once you enter that spiral you end up in the same place, because the only direction is down. The moment you decide to start sacrificing energy from other areas of your life without a strict time limit, you're hosed. Then when you inevitably see your performance drop you try even harder, sacrifice even more, and that only adds more gasoline to the dumpsterfire that is your productivity and state of mind.
I loved my job, loved the people I worked with, and was never pressured into overworking. Whenever I explain to people why I've not been working for months they seem to default to "it must have been an awful place to work", and I have to correct them. It's hard to explain how this happens, but you can see how if you just assume the perspective of this author.
I absolutely love learning new things, but in my burnout I just couldn't do it because I felt the weight of how behind I was on projects because I was just not productive. The prospect of truly exploring and learning a new technology was daunting, and the pain is real when you see your colleagues doing these things while you're stuck. And attempts to help just make the problem worse, because nothing stings more than to become a burden to other people.
I definitely say most of the blame lies with us, because we are still rare enough that no employer can afford to explicitly create a toxic work environment with extreme hours. We do it to ourselves and to each other by working extra hours, taking work home, and constantly trying to get ahead. I know there can be good reasons to compete and prove yourself, but I think for most people that kind of sacrifice is not warranted.
I can tell you that having plenty of pretty numbers in your bank account won't mean much to you when you're burned out, your relationships are failing, and you have nothing going in your life other than binging TV or videogames by yourself because you feel too exhausted after working to do anything else. Even in a positive and friendly workplace you can put the weight of the world on your own shoulders, and you can easily create the toxic environment in your own mind.
I think a lot of this does boil down to culture, though. Imagine the reaction you'd get as an assembly-line or retail worker if you took work home with you, or worked overtime for free. Sure, a salaried position does warrant *some* additional stake, but IMHO it should probably be bad form to do it without being directly asked to (and a balance of 40 hours really ought to be maintained). Constantly going above and beyond should be seen as a positive quality, but also as a problem that needs to be corrected for the good of the employee, their coworkers, and the corpany. Burning through bright-eyed recent grads who don't know what they're sacrificing (or who think they're the exception) cannot possibly be the most profitable system unless you have a shortsighted view of things.
Not sure where I was going with this other than just ranting, lol. Oh, the bit about being momentum-driven makes me wonder if Primeagen might have ADHD.
The Sword of Damocles that’s based on Greek mythology. He was the executioner at the court of Syracuse. His sword was the method for execution. It’s a very famous European saying.
10:55 -- I mostly agree with this idea. If you're doing something that seems hard enough (but clearly doable) at a glance, and it will take over 2-3 weeks by your estimate, you really don't know how long it'll take. Most certainly, you'll uncover some part of the problem or process along the way that extends how long it'll take. Sometimes (rare), it could go the oppoosite way and you find that something you thought was north of 2-3 weeks is substantially less because you discover something that does the hard work for you.
One of my pet peeves as a software engineer related to deadline pressure, is managers expecting you (the engineer) to put together months long project plans telling them week to week when pieces would be done. What the actual F purpose is this? A deadline as a date is fine, but giving them a week to week playback for that long of a period of time is always a pain in my ass. It feels like double talk because they would also say "oh, its fine if things slide, and get pushed back." So then why am I writing down when I think it'll be done rather than just focusing on getting it done? Why can't my plan list what the pieces are and how they depend on each other rather than spending time an energy describing a future that has a low chance of materializing?
No one has told me if this is just a sh*ttest in the corporate world about something else. I've been hit with it way too often and I have easily proven I am a senior level engineer on long lived projects, able to meet deadlines or communicate effectively around realities no one reasonably beats.
Halfway done watching this and I already appreciate how easy of a time I am getting at my job... Therefore, more motivated to grind and do better here! Communicate and pray you have a good relationship with your manager (lots of things need to go right to accomplish this but if it does happen, it's the dream!)
I'm having such an easy time in my current job I'm worried that I'm not going to be pushed enough to get better! This article is a bit ridiculous
Edit: the ending kinda saved the article a bit
Unfortunately sometimes a bad / unhealthy work environment is the only option for many people, especially juniors
As a software engineer that took that changed career path after a burnout in another field (no regrets, I love it and am very passionate about it, and learning so much and finding very motivated people), the problem of this person is not software engineering, it's time, people and boundaries management. You can do whatever you want, if you don't know how to set boundaries and take care of yourself and prioritize yourself, nobody will do it for you and certainly not your team who first of all is not in your head and does not know how you feel, and also benefits from you overworking yourself in the short term. If this person does not reconsider how they function, they could end up in this kind of spiral with any job. I know I did.
It's not bad to mildly inconvenience your team for your own survival. If you need it, verbalize your need for clear boundaries between work and not-work, know your needs and wants of the moment and communicate them in a healthy way, I always do it and it's either well recieved or I don't want to work there anyway.
What field did you switch to
@@dipanjanghosal1662 Was a speech therapist, switched to software engineering !
21:52 THANKS for the words of encouragement. The only issue is: I hate golang today. For it's interfaces, for the import cycles, for the mess that you get with absence of modules, just packages... My brain is very strained when using this POS
then choose rust :)
As a reskiller from the kitchens, it does get difficult to keep up with the hype trains on what is supposed to get you hired. I basically gave up on that and decided to start rolling an MSP with my buddy using modern technologies we like for their effectiveness rather than their popularity. Still getting some details together, but the bottom line is a good system lasts as long as it's well maintained. The less it depends on, the easier it is to maintain. I think if you can effectively leverage those facts, you can carve a niche for yourself. Still testing that theory.
The online software engineering community is such a bizarre space.
Because the first generation of hackers/founders is still alive. Meanwhile hard-/software has progressed the equivalent of 800 years in just 80. That's bound to be the most interesting time humanity has ever faced!
I think the last line settles the problem: sometimes it is an issue of just surviving, you don’t have to thrive all the time. Just be ok with being human. Strive to thrive when you want and when you can afford to.
It's good to have experience in different things. Because it is exactly the same in any other job. You can be an translator, a builder, support engineer, whatever you want. If you think that you can escape this by not doing software, you just don't know life. If you don't set boundaries, the management and clients will do it for you and they always push for what they want. The irony here s that people fear that they will miss out, and be replaced, that they have to work long hours and always say yes to anything, but then they're surprised that it does not pay because that exact attitude makes them easy to abuse. If you don't do that, you'll miss the shitty jobs, sure, but maybe you'll have a shot at something better.
You cant tell someone how long its gonna take to complete something when you can't tell how long its gonna take to solve the bugs you have yet to run into.
The money people will never comprehend that though
0:41 you are mistaken the meaning is inherent in its construction. Utopia means "not a place". i.e. there is no such thing as a perfect place because everyone's ideals are different (so in a sense yes someones utopia could theoretically be dystopic for everyone else). There is word that is similar in actual greek eutopos which "good place" and it was a play on that.
4:09 It sounds like you have never really done UI development.
Most UI development comes from a poorly thought-out image where as most UIs are dynamic. i.e. there are dynamic in at least 5 dimensions.X, Y, Z-Depth, Time (animations etc), any numerous interactions and states most of which are not documented, often derived or improvised and if not iterated on or documented in entirely inconsistent ways.
No, GUI by nature of who is involved and the "expertise" everyone believes they have of design and aesthetics is a clusterfuck. Give me a loose technical spec for backend over a design spec any day of the week (because for a lot of UI devs design is an inherent and expected part of their job description).
As a software engineer of 7.5 years, this article is describing a completely alien world to me. I've never had a hard deadline. I've never had crunch at all, let alone for months. I've never felt a dire need to upskill besides a singular shift from web to mobile (which I got paid to learn on company time, was great). My job has almost never been terribly stressful and most the time it was had nothing to do with coding, but garbage people/situations like getting screwed out of a promotion to another team by my management. Recently the tide has shifted some, but generally software is an in demand field and that's why wages are so relatively high and perks so relatively good compared to most careers out there. Truly baffled by OP not just quitting and finding somewhere that wasn't a trash heap.
Regarding the origins of the word Utopia, it derives from two Greek words: Eu-Topos (The good place) and Ou-Topos (The place that cannot be.)
I wonder if Prime would have gotten to where he is now had he NOT been one of the people who didn't say no early in his career. Easier to let off the gas when you've already established yourself. At many of the companies I've worked at there has been a strong culture of "put in your 80 hour weeks when you're young and reap the reward later."
I actually really enjoyed this post. It was quite pessimistic, but I think it is someone really feeling it at the moment - they are almost writing this to themselves. I've been through this "dark side" as I had a toxic manager that slowly turned me into a pessimistic person, but now that I've been away for several years I've gotten through it. Sleep, exercise, eating healthily, and social interaction can be the base of the "light side" 💯. It didn't help that my "dark side" coincided with Covid, so my habits were thrown off. Best of luck to anyone going through this - just focus on those good things and take charge - for me it was holding out a little longer until I found a better job opportunity, and relying on my spouse.
I had the opposite experience building tools the last year. But that was because every time someone had a problem somewhere, it trickled through a game of telephone up the organization chart to the nearest common ancestor with my dev team, and then back down, picking up a lot of pointless requirements like "it has to have a SPA front-end" and "it has to look like Excel". We were never trusted to understand the original problem and come up with a solution for ourselves.
Outopia means "no place" and eutopia means "good place."
If you're worried about deadlines, you're either absent from the estimation process of which is very-very bad, or you're estimating too optimistically. You have to multiply your deadlines AT LEAST by 2, because there can be many unknowns along the way during development. Chief O'Brien and Scottie knew that.
"if you leave your job none of your coworkers will keep in contact with you" that hits hard cause it's been like that for me in school, highschool and University as well.
Heh, people who worked on my team and left the company still get invited to some company parties. Different culture, I guess.
Sounds like you’re describing the utopia of Brave New World, where everything’s so perfect it’s numbing and dystopian
^ this
In my opinion Rust is very powerful and versatile thanks to its novel approach to memory management at compile time. But it is the first iteration of that idea in the wild, and I suspect we'll get a better approach on a future language. That, combined with a lot of features such as operator overloading, macros, traits rather than simpler interfaces, makes the language very difficult to learn.
I think or hope we will get a language that a let's you do what Rust does, but feels and learns like Go. Imagine, for instance, optional GC except when you don't want it or prefer not to have it. Imagine optional goroutine like concurrency with optional runtime for that, only when needed and no async/await (colored functions).
I understand this guy, even if I do not share a lot of the experiences. I think the only thing I dislike are people with a mindset that tries to push the coders to their limits, which leads to such horrible environments. You have to research narcissism if you want to work in Tech, and know how to survive or cope with the situation if you have someone in your company who was hired to find the weakness.
Also, it never works out, it will always be random people being fired.
Toxic work environment never really saved a business, but it for sure killed them.
Fear of feeling left behind becomes real when you have to work in a legacy environment for a long time without any variance in work like tooling or something new. It's real imho and i've felt it aswell.
I can so relate to the momentum bit. That's literally what I face every time. I find it extremely hard to switch to vacation mode and then back to work mode. It always ends up being a half assed vacation because I always have it in the back of my mind to keep the work momentum going, knowing I have to go back and switch back and hit the ground running.
I work as a maintenance person for residential housing. What the article said at 12:54, the superman syndrome, is rife in this industry to. The sort of "go fix the thing" mentality, even if you have no idea what you are doing.
Just the other day, they sent our painter who does minor repair tasks to uninstall furnace parts, when he has zero experience on furnaces and not even the correct tools to do it, and then got upset when he said he needed someone to help and show him what to do.
I've been in data science for 7 years now, and I have never had the opportunity to work with neural networks, and it feels like every company and their mom wants their own neural network guru, and I am stuck unable to find a job because I've never been given the raw resources to be able to experiment with NNs in an actual, real environment - the biggest company I've worked in is Coca-Cola, and the most powerful machine i've had there was my work laptop with an integrated GPU. I've worked for one of the biggest forex brockers in the world, and all the resources they dedicated to me for NN experiments were a server with 4 cores and 8 GB RAM which were also shared with some other services.
I have no idea what to do, it just feels like my years of expertise building ML models are a bloody waste because I don't have the experience in my Resume.
In startups it's tough. I now see it's all round problem. The pressure is hight all the time but client deadlines are the greatest pain. Being the 'All in one' developer. Now with such experiences we get to endure the challenges that come a long. This is the iceberg that everyone does not speak about. We are only told of good salaries. This is an eye opener and good to know many devs also fee the same around the globe. Working on Bugs, Self growth, New features, Life balance and all these are always in conflict
IIRC: Utopia was coined by Sir Thomas More (for his book), based on Greek 'eu' meaning 'good' and 'topos' meaning "place". Dystopia was then coined off of utopia to mean the opposite
Just left a job where the standard deploy process was running serveral scripts in a specific order on your local machine, using your local code, straight to prod. And pushing directly to master was common.
Also most files had 2000+ lines of unrelated code
3:40 Employee Number 427. Pushing buttons on a keyboard.
"Creature of momentum" you touched my heart in a profound way @theprimagean
Thank you.
It's not a burden to learn for prime because he even says he has no deadlines and no clients. But if you have deadlines, clients, and have to learn, it gets to be a lot. It's a hard balance. It's all about balance.
For a while I was tempted to say to the OP "quit yer whining and pay your dues kid," but I've been where he or she is, and it does suck, especially if you're dealing with poor physical and/or mental health. We're in a society-wide crisis of both and we've either lost or never learned how to deal with it, and the truth is that is the precondition to everything, including dealing with what is otherwise ordinary work stress. When you're unhealthy, even that can feel insurmountable and can even break you.
At my most depressed, ordinary deadlines I used to be able to meet became unachievable, to the point where I lost more than one job because I couldn't keep my commitments. From the outside this looked like lazy irresponsibility, and that's not even untrue in a sense--but the very meaning of being ill is that you can't do well what you know you can (which makes you feel even worse). It really, really sucks. You have to be well in order to do well!
The only thing I'd add to what Primagen is saying about sleep/diet/exercise--which is the first thing any therapist will tell you to work on--is to find a healthy community to belong to. The root of "toxic positivity" is the lie that we can do it all by ourselves and it's ultimately all our effort (read: all our fault individually if we fail). We need others in order to be happy and succeed.
hah! did you see that my 4th point was community?
we are social creatures, we require others
Ya got me, I don’t know why I missed that, must have slipped my attention while listening…but great react with a lot of compassion and good advice. Thanks.
Use cost of delay instead of estimating time. Tell your manager how much money the software is going to make / save. It'll easily justify most budgets. Otherwise you should work on some other task.
Make sure you get enough sleep, eat nice food and attend some hobbies. It recharges your creativity which is crucial to write good software.
And btw, your creativity span is definitely not longer than 8h per day, probably only like 3h. It's ok to do the complex task tomorrow with a fresh mind. No one will enjoy a half-baked feature on a Friday release.
Switch to an easy task if things go wrong to regain some confidence. Deliver something every day. It'll create trust between you and your clients that you can deliver value.
Hope this motivated someone who's struggling.
10:45 Here's the gist of it: Damocles was punished by a king the following way: He was in a bed with all good foods etc. and was not allowed to leave it. At first he didn't noticed that it was a punishment, but then he looked up and saw a very sharp sword hanging from the ceiling only hold up by one string of horse hair and could as such fall on him at any moment (which would result in a painful death).
I've worked in really great environments and I've had really shitty experiences. Most recently was with a group contracted by the gov and everyday felt like the hunger games.
You're uploading so much ❤ thanks!
Im doing a CS uni atm and one thing I hate with passion is writing stupid reports about ethics and philosophical crap.
"I just don't like putting all the blame externally. I personally try to take on most of the blame, 'cause often all the things that go wrong are because I have misread the situation." And now we know the _real_ reason for your success.
Scope creep, managements fault or simply being a smart ass with the power of hindsight. It is easy to say "What I plan is what I build" if the most complicated thing you built was a calculator app.
My parents were bank clerks when computers and ATMs took off. Where I live, bank clerks used to be well compensated and to be considered in a position of trust. Then computers came along and they became essentially a cheap interface between the machine and the customer. So yeah... I have a pretty good life as a SE, but their history stuck with me. I am indeed afraid of becoming obsolete.
My extensive overtime and learning at home stopped when I went freelance. I work less hours now than ever and earn more than ever. Then again like I said I’ve done it all it’s just a different language or framework or even environment. But all my overtime was on me, because I was the tech lead and I found I had to come up with solutions. Now I realize if I’d done less they’d added another person into the team. When there’s no necessary to add people because work gets down, why add them?
I came into programming from another job (portfolio management). Every job can burn you out, especially if you’re driven. It’s really up to you to have discipline around habits, separating home and work, etc. Sometimes it’s not your fault, but you owe it to yourself to find out. Otherwise, you’ll find that every job burns you out.
Hot take: if you're doing regular OT in software, it may not be your choice initially but it eventually becomes your choice. Once you're mid-level, there are jobs everywhere you could get that don't do OT.
Irregular OT in software is not your choice. ALL companies will have an OT spike here and there. That is just engineering. Sometimes that spike is a 45hr week. Sometimes it's an 80hr week. Game development is known to have regular OT, so if you do game development that was your choice.
I would say anything more than 80hrs of OT across the year is not good. That allows for 4 weeks of an extra hour a day in 2 quarters (March and November crunch, if you will), and a catastrophic 6-days & 13hrs/day crunch (or production down), and an additional 24 days a year having an extra 10-minutes because of an end of day or sprint meeting going over time... this assumes there is no flex time and it's an extra 80hrs of OT, not "thanks for coming in 8hrs more last week, take this Friday off" situation.
If you're doing more than that, it's just simply your choice for staying with a bad work-life balance.
To the person who asked how to develop a positive outlook on life.
What Prime said is absolutely true, you need to push hard to get out of the slump you're in. Basically you need to get your head above water before you drown, and no its not easy, intact it's extremely hard, but once you're able to tread water and breath air, you realise that it's way easier to stay above water than to be under.
the darkside is not everyone knows how to set boundaries. I don't doubt that the same people complaining going to another skilled industry wouldn't have encounter the same issues.
"Sword of Damocles" is a Greek myth about the perils of Power.
But people constantly miss-use it to mean "impending doom" or something along them lines.
So don't worry about it... the author miss-used it as well.
hah! that is beautiful
This is your take. IMO the most interesting part of the story was that there was a sword above the throne and could kill you at any time, so people focused on that. After all the "perils of power" was just some BS excuse by the powerful, reality is if you are powerful and rich you are in less of a danger.
@@cherubin7th ok commie
@@cherubin7th "if you are powerful and rich you are in less of a danger" Tell that to Nero, or Hitler, or JFK, or heck, Christina Grimmie. People with influence - which naturally includes political leaders and celebrities, so yes, power and wealth can be factors - have an enormous target painted on their backs by people who don't think they should have that kind of influence. _That_ is the "sword" hanging over their heads. Why do you think they tend to have entire teams of security when they go out in public?
Creature of habit vs of momentum. Love that
Hearing ppl with life figured out giving advice is always like yeah I'm 100% my worse enemy.
In summary he isn't entirely wrong. Yes there are worse environments than others. But they are for the most part all somewhere along the road to what was described here.
The trick is you have to really love the work. You have to be the sort of person that would be doing it in your free time even if you weren't getting paid to do it.
That is most probably true for all careers and unfortunately what a lot of people trying to get into this dont realise.
This isn't a job that pays well, it is going to be your life for most of your life. Inside and outside of work hours. Especially at the start of your career you will be spending a lot of time fighting against your personal redundancy and learning.
Its inescapable and if you dont love it. That will chew you up and spit you out and there is no amount of realistic money that will offset that.
Any attempt to create a utopia inevitably creates a dystopia. “There are no solutions, there are only trade-offs; and you try to get the best trade-off you can get, that's all you can hope for.”
Utopia means an imagined place; the Greek origin (the word 'outopos') involves many concepts but ultimately it's a place / something that cannot exist. Which is funny right off the bat that the author says "Imagine being...". He was taking the piss on the whole concept immediately.
The fact that a guy with a CS degree, 40k hours of experience, IQ above 140, knows what a monad is, and works a netflix “got rejected from many a job” puts us all at ease about our job prospects 😊
“Yo dude, I don’t do that, why are you doing that? Why don’t you don’t do that? Have you tried that? Like, you don’t have to always do that. Now, sometimes you do…” 6:24
25:48 this hit home so hard
im in an awkward phase where I love and hate software, I dont see myself staying in it long term but I’m definitely not stopping it forever. Looking to pivot into another field while still writing software for fun on the side.
Contrasting this to the articles that states they never lift a finger.... Even software devs don't understand statistics..
Primeagen is also a Chad, dude has been through a lot and still has a Chad mentality
Help me become like you, Mr. DisresPrimagen. I'm more in the "darkness video club" than your relaxing 1 sec rollercoster elite club, damn
He has a point about the work following home, though for me its a bit different: I sometime still think about work and actual for work coding in my off hours, where its like a worm that intrudes into my mind and doesn't let me unwind.
I don't understand how anyone can enjoy working. I only program because I hate it the least, but I still hate it.
Don't want a latte that is too hot, too. Might burn your tongue on that first sip.
very true
The lack of reference for the Damoclese Sword might come from the fact that this became a expression in some languages / cultures. It's from a greek myth. A sword will fall and kill you if you do what you've been forbidden to do.
Going through this video, you've only seen the ideal scenario - Reminds me of the kid being offered a thousand dollar an hour salary out of college. Great for them, but that's often not how the world works.
Have you ever been given a project at 4PM on a weekday that needs to be done by 7AM the next morning?
Have you ever lived in a place with unemployment so bad, there are a thousand people willing to replace you for half your salary should you slip up - And that's just the CV's from that morning?
Have you ever had to be the front-end dev, back-end dev, DBA, and network admin all at once?
Have you ever seen people sleep at work because driving home and back wastes too much time?
Have you ever considered $6 / hour to be "Well paid"?
Have you ever worked somewhere where unpaid overtime was expected, and anyone who didn't put in the hours was "Let go" for not being"For the company"?
Have you ever had to pull 120+ hours a week? You mentioned that you once did 80. For many, only 80 hours a week would be the dream!
Have you ever worked at a company where being PAID for overtime was a laughable concept? Overtime is "paid for" in bonus vacation time (Which you'll never have time to take).
Have you ever worked at a company doing an obsolete language in 20XX whilst all the other positions required Y years of experience in a language you've never had the opportunity to work with?
For millions of devs, many of those are the norm. It's this, or working at McDonalds, unemployment, or finding a new career.
Most devs don't just jump into the life of a high-paid dev working at a Fortune 500 company for a salary that 99% of devs will never get paid.
You are the 1%.
Consider yourself lucky.
I didn't like you very much till this video. Our outlook on life is similar, mostly positive, learning the new tech is very exciting and never feels like a burden, I don't fear being left behind but doing the same thing over and over sounds terrifying and I never hurry and I'm always intentional. I also struggled early to say no but no longer. Thanks for covering interesting topics.
I smoke pot every 3-4 hours and it is my treat for myself