Skip to main content

The three stages of a tech career

  • Stage one - You don’t know much
    You are in awe of all the other techs. You make a lot of dumb mistakes. You feel like you are swamped all the time. You have to read a lot before you dare try anything for fear of breaking something. Everybody dumps on you because you are the new kid. Things take longer for you to accomplish. You work a lot of overtime, often without pay. You don’t get paid a lot. You wonder if you’ll ever get a break. You realize that school didn’t quite prepare you for the real world. Work hard. You’ll make it.
  • Stage two - You know a lot of stuff
    You’re good and you know it. So does everyone else around you. They can see that you are good. You don’t have to tell them. Things get done quickly. You even amaze yourself sometimes. You are valuable and can command a good salary. The managers and business owners want to keep you on board. They want you to be happy and offer perks to entice you to stay. You get calls from headhunters all the time. It is very flattering and a nice position to be in. Life is good. Enjoy it while it lasts.
  • Stage three - You don’t know much again
    Technology is passing you by. The young techs seem to know so much more than you. It takes longer to figure things out again. You are probably in a position where you can delegate so you do. You are most likely in a management role and spend more time with people issues than tech issues. You are looked on as wise and experienced. You seek input from other techs before making big decisions. It’s not a big deal that you don’t know all the details anymore. You’ve got the big picture. Let others work out the details.

Ref: Techrepublic.com

Comments

Luke Clifford said…
It's sooo true!

made me laugh.
good blog. :)

Popular posts from this blog

Google dialogflow - How to train a chatbot to answer questions related to your office and how to make it better than just a Q&A bot?

  First lets look how to do it the basic way. To train a conversational AI chatbot for answering office-related queries using Dialogflow, you will need to follow these steps: Create a new agent in Dialogflow. Collect a dataset of office-related queries and their corresponding answers. This dataset can be obtained through various means, such as scraping websites, conducting surveys, or manually creating a dataset. Create intents in Dialogflow for the queries in your dataset. An intent represents a user's intention, such as asking for office hours or requesting a vacation day. Add training phrases to each intent, which are examples of how a user might ask the question. Provide responses for each intent, which will be the chatbot's answer to the user's query. Test the chatbot using the "Try it now" feature in Dialogflow. Once the chatbot is working well, you can deploy it to a platform of your choice, such as a website or mobile app. However, if you follow the basic ...

What if we combine Scrum and DevOps?

To understand how an agile project management methodology like scrum and the DevOps mindset work together, let's look into an arbitrary software development team called the dream team. I will tell you how they use scrum with their DevOps practices like a small story so that it wouldn't feel like you are trying to learn these concepts by reading an article.  The dream team was tasked with building an online bookstore. Their vision was to create a platform where readers could easily browse and buy books. In the team, there was a Product Owner, a Scrum Master, a UI/UX designer, a couple of developers, and a database engineer. They started their journey with a meeting led by the Product Owner, who had a clear idea of the features needed for this platform. This list of features, known as the product backlog, included user authentication, a book database, a search function, a shopping cart, and a payment system. The Product Owner, the Scrum Master, and the rest of the team then held ...

“The crazy dual booting…! Aren’t there an easy way???” what about Virtual PC?

You have always wanted to learn many Operating systems, probably other than windows, but your concern is the pain taking dual booting process, where you install windows and Linux on the same machine or even multiple windows OS when it comes to learning and getting ready for certificate exams like MCSE and so forth. So here is the solution for that! I am talking about Virtual PC, referred as hardware virtual machine, a Software application that is built to work as a virtual PC so that you can install multiple operating systems on the same computer without formatting the hard disk and without making any damage to the actual system. That’s not all; you can even work on different Operating systems simultaneously. Sounds good? Let’s see what we have to do to make this as real as you might imagine. Getting handy with a Virtual PC Software application. First thing you need to do is getting a virtual PC software and there are two good products out there that I recommend, one is VMware and anot...