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zetx | 1 year ago
To my mind it just seems like something one would get assigned or throw into when looking into improving a process similar to the company in this story, but perhaps I am missing something.
zetx | 1 year ago
To my mind it just seems like something one would get assigned or throw into when looking into improving a process similar to the company in this story, but perhaps I am missing something.
btrettel|1 year ago
The job ad will probably not directly say anything about code archaeology. If the job ad mentions some sort of in-house simulation software, and the organization is 50+ years old, I'd say it's a coin toss as to whether you'll have to be this sort of software archaeologist from time to time.
SonOfLilit|1 year ago
Just make sure to set it up as a consulting gig and never, ever, work for a bank.
Muromec|1 year ago
Go work a normal engineering job for a bank or government on something close to whatever was the core system 30 years ago. You should see the signs when you get close enough.
zellyn|1 year ago
One of my hobbies is feeling dumb for not understanding something, being willing to ask, realizing _nobody_ knows the big picture, and trying to document it.
tbh though I have also occasionally fantasized about finding a job that was _only_ software archeology.