Ya this article was great. I wish I could convince my coworkers to take a deep dive into Git. I do it probably once a year and it's helped me be the "hero" with confidence several times.
Git is exciting/interesting to me....it is not normal.
Ya this article was great. I wish I could convince my coworkers to take a deep dive into Git. I do it probably once a year and it's helped me be the "hero" with confidence several times.
Git is exciting/interesting to me....it is not normal.
I just took a stab at git worktree
at work this week after rereading this article. It's amazing. We were in the process of upgrading our UI component library and I was able to checkout pre/post upgrade branches without having to continuously npm install
to swap between dependencies.
Plus I'm pretty sure I could have both "versions" of our repo locally running at the same time so I could do UI comparisons...but I didn't actually get that far.
I'm going to be honest. I like this thread. Not only is the article long and "thorough" (whether you agree with this form of thoroughness or not) but the responses are too.
I can appreciate what the author is trying to express. I also related to how he's trying to express it because it's very similar to how I try to explain my opinions, shower thoughts, meanderings....which typically earns me eyes glazing over from my conversation partners haha.
I have many many thoughts on everything being discussed here, but rather than contribute, I'm going to sip on my coffee and keep reading.
P.s. I'm liking PD better than Reddit. Actual conversation happening.
Thanks for the detailed write up! Send the "whole rant" my way. I'd read it.
Thanks for the in-depth reply!
3.5 years. But that's because I haven't found "the place" yet like it sounds like you have.
8-10 hours with few breaks. (I used to skip breakfast and sometimes lunch too...coffee diet) It started as a necessity and then became a habit. I have to retrain myself to take breaks and walk away and give my brain some breathing room and fresh air. This doesn't include the time I spent thinking about problems while driving or in the shower.... I've made progress breaking those habits though.
Nice, congratulations! Sounds like all good things!
I'm happy that I switched from electrical engineering to software engineering. I feel like the prospects are better and still feel that way even though things are rough right now.
I regret being scared during my first 5 years as a software engineer. I've stayed in jobs too long. Going forward, once I get that feeling that I've outgrown a role I know its time to start looking for the next thing. No more lingering for that extra year. I'm in my mid 30s and so am feeling the age pressure to make my next couple big moves soon before I'm looked at as too old to be an "IC with a bright future" haha.
Nice! Is this your first dive into programming?
That sounds tough. What's your job search criteria? And... What kind of work are you trying to do?
Some great comments here. Tangentially, I occasionally day dream of running or working for a company that flips typical corporate "intention" on its head -- Specifically by placing employees at the highest place of priority and let profits, progress, customers, share price etc. be what they'll be. I think that would be a very interesting experiment.
As far as how that relates to pay, part of the experiment would be to pay each employee more than they are "worth" to market. Just to see how it changes things for them and the company.
At the same time, "freeloaders" and folks that just can't cut it would need to be identified and separated from, to protect those that recognize and appreciate that the company is truly looking out for them and are reciprocating with true hard work and value creation.