Forums before death by AOL, social media and spammers... "We can't have nice things"
|    comp.misc    |    General topics about computers not cover    |    21,759 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 19,930 of 21,759    |
|    D to Johanne Fairchild    |
|    Re: AWK As A Major Systems Programming L    |
|    02 Sep 24 18:31:03    |
      From: nospam@example.net              On Mon, 2 Sep 2024, Johanne Fairchild wrote:              >> When I graduated from university, I wanted to become a programmer, but       >> at that time, only 10+ years of experience was wanted on the job       >> market, so life decided that I should work in infrastructure/system       >> administration instead.       >       > I always thought of system administration as a programming job. In       > fact, a fun one. Initially I wanted to be a UNIX system administrator.              Yes, having worked as one, I can see that. For me, the pleasure was       always in automation, and the quick feedback loops. I would work on a       piece of the infra-stack, automate as much as possible, and you can do       that in small cycles of days and weeks, instead of the endless bug       hunting the developers at one of my jobs did, in some kind of million+       line CAD software. I always got the feeling talking with them, that       their job would never end, and you would only see small,       micro-incremental improvements stretching over years.              Mean while, I'd happily automate my systems, deployments, reports,       statistics etc. so yes, some kind of programming always was there during       my time as a linux/unix system administrator.              > But my professional life began in a web world when most jobs I could get       > were all web related. Deep web projects always involve UNIX       > programming, but I was never really hired for deep projects. As a       > result, I kept doing web programming to pay bills. So I had to study       > and invent projects in order to study the other sides of computer       > science so I would not spend my life with technology and culture I did       > not even appreciate. That actually paid off. For the first time in my       > life, I can say I really like my job.              Happy to hear it! =)              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca