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Ask Slashdot: Life After Software Development?

An anonymous reader writes "I've been writing database apps for various industries as the senior developer or tech lead on a given project for most of the past 20 years. The last few years have become particularly taxing as I struggle to reiterate basic concepts to the same technically illiterate managers and stakeholders who keep turning up in charge. While most are knowledgeable about the industries our software is targeting, they just don't get the mechanics of what we do and never will. After so many years, I'm tired of repeating myself. I need a break. I need to walk away from it, and want to look at doing something that doesn't focus heavily on the IT industry day in, day out. Unfortunately, I'm locked to a regional city and I've just spent the majority of my adult life coding, with no other major skills to fall back on. While I'm not keen on remaining in front of a screen, I wouldn't be averse to becoming a tech user and consumer, rather than a creator. Are there similar Slashdotters out there who have made the leap of faith away from tech jobs and into something different? If so, where did you end up? Is there a life after IT for people who are geeks at heart? Apart from staying in my current job, is there any advice for someone who can't really risk the mortgage and kid's education on a whim?"

2 of 416 comments (clear)

  1. Keep the job by jelizondo · · Score: 5, Informative

    Been there, done that.

    A few years ago I quit a good job because I was tired of the same thing, day in, day out.

    Decided to try my hand at different things, collapsed economically, got depressed, felt I was useless and then...

    I got me a job (lower paying) as IT Manager again. Guess what, I'm happy because I know what I'm doing, I feel good because I know the ins and outs of the job and it is, frankly, a piece of cake.

    So take a vacation, cool off and get back to the good job you have.

    --
    Be very, very careful what you put into that head, because you will never, ever get it out. - Cardinal Wolsey
  2. Re:Write or teach. by OutputLogic · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm an author of a reasonably successful technical book. I can attest that a market for technical books is rather limited, and it's unreasonable to expect the same level of income from book royalties as from a normal job.