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abcde666777 | 19 days ago
Harsh take: nobody's stopping you from doing that. You can dust off an old computer right now and write software for it. All of that joy still exists. It's just that nobody's going to pay you for it and it's no longer mainstream relevant - the world's moved on from those times, in many cases for good reasons.
So I think what the person really wants is to have their cake and eat it too. They want to be mainstream relevant and employable... whilst having fun.
That's a luxury. More specifically it's a first world luxury. Most people don't get to have that. True, many programmers did get to have it for a time - but that doesn't mean we're entitled to it forever - not unless it's somehow directly tied to producing valuable results.
But you know it's strange to me that programmers lose sight of this. I became a programmer because I saw Wolfenstein 3D on a 386, and was inspired by there being a "world in the box". I wanted to make worlds too. That's an important distinction: I didn't become a programmer because I wanted to write code, I became a programmer because I wanted to create worlds. The programming is a means to an end, it's not the end unto itself - at least I never looked at it that way. And that's in spite of the fact that I genuinely enjoy programming in and of itself. But I still value the outcome more.
And in fact I actually went through a related transition some years ago on a personal level, when I shifted from always trying to write game engines from the ground up to being willing to use engines like Unity or Unreal. It felt like a betrayal - I no longer had a deep understanding of every layer, I could no longer bespoke craft everything to my personal whims. But you know what? It was absolutely the right choice because it put me on track to actually finishing the games I was working on, which was the entire point of the exercise in the first place.
So I don't bemoan or regret it for a second.
Anyway hope that didn't sound too blunt - it's just my way of speaking - I can sympathize with the author but I just think it's on the self-indulgent side.
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