If you aren’t becoming a SWE you are probably waisting your time
4 points| TerntUpAcademy | 4 years ago
If you’re in college, there is a good chance you should switch majors or at least figure out how to increase your chances of landing a dev job. (Maybe something like BIT?)
As someone who attempted to become a SWE for a few years now and failed miserably I have to say it is gut wrenching to see most people around me making absurds amount of money while I’m still stuck in the learning phase. But I hope that will chance soon.
If you can live knowing you have the opportunity to easily make well over 6 figures and work from anywhere but decide to do something else, power to you. I genuinely hope that in 10 years you have that same mentality but there’s a good chance you won’t.
TLDR: investing the majority of your time and money into becoming a software engineer provides the greatest return on money and work/life balance by an almost unfathomable margin.
unknown|4 years ago
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andymoe|4 years ago
Btw, I’m hiring Python inclined people with strong Linux and distributed system experience to work on rockets. If this interests folks please get in touch.
jaclaz|4 years ago
Side question: Is correct English spelling required to become a SWE?
andymoe|4 years ago
(Ps. I’m a native English speaker and a terrible speller)
TerntUpAcademy|4 years ago
dusted|4 years ago
If you can program a computer, you can get a job. If you can't program a computer, you're probably not very interested in programming computers, because if you were interested you couldn't have avoided learning it.
I can only imagine the excruciating misery it would be to program computers for a living and not enjoy it, it'd be absolute torture. The worst combination in that case, of difficult and boring.
- A SWE