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Do Old Programmers Need To Keep Leaping Through New Hoops?

Nerval's Lobster writes: In recent years, it seems as if tech has evolved into an industry that lionizes the young. Despite all the press about 21-year-old rock-star developers and 30-year-old CEOs, though, is there still a significant market for older programmers and developers, especially those with specialized knowledge? The answer is "yes," of course, and sites like Dice suggest that older tech pros should take steps such as setting up social media accounts and spending a lot of time on Github if they want to attract interest from companies and recruiters. But do they really need to go through all of that? If you have twenty, thirty, or even forty years of solid tech work under your belt, is it worth jumping through all sorts of new hoops? Or is there a better way to keep working — provided you don't already have a job, that is, or move up to management, or get out of the game entirely in order to try something startling and new.

17 of 242 comments (clear)

  1. Stupid question. by khasim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you have X years of programming experience, then you should be able to sell yourself based upon that.

    Social media and such would be useful to programmers JUST STARTING THEIR CAREERS.

    BUT! If you are an older programmer you DO need to keep expanding your knowledge. Learn newer languages / systems.

    1. Re:Stupid question. by satch89450 · · Score: 5, Informative

      The problem is that the HR departments want X years in specific technology. I still remember years ago an ad wanting a programmer with 10 years of Java programming experience...and Java was just turning five.

      The last time I was looking for work, I found ads that were so specific that I surmise the hiring person had a specific person in mind, but was required to put job openings out to the world. I do know one instance where the job was intended for a H1-B visa applicant; no way they were going to hire a citizen for the position.

      Yes, I agree that people should continue to learn new stuff. I'm picking up Python as part of my current job.

    2. Re:Stupid question. by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Social media and such would be useful to programmers JUST STARTING THEIR CAREERS.

      The only "social media" you need to be active on as a senior dev is LinkedIn. Github seems irrelevant unless your career is built on open source development.

      BUT! If you are an older programmer you DO need to keep expanding your knowledge. Learn newer languages / systems.

      Yep: it is important, to keep your skills and problem domain modern, unless you want to be constrained to an ever-shrinking niche. I started as a mainframe dev, and while a lot of the concepts are still useful (since the Cloud is just the new mainframe), none of the specific skills are. Even C++ is starting to become a bit niche, with new projects that fit in the gap between C and managed languages becoming rare (but as long as Google does a lot of C++, it's not really a worry, as enough people copy Google). Thank goodness jobs requiring COM or CORBA experience are mostly gone.

      Bit by bit, specific technical pieces become irrelevant, so it's important to keep up. Can you write a horizontally scalable application in the cloud? Bit by bit, the new stuff becomes more important (once time enough has passed to weed out the fads). There's lots of money to be made as a senior dev with a deep understanding of all the new stuff, as that's a high-demand, low-supply job.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  2. Old programmers for old systems by satch89450 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There has been quite a discussion (including in CIO magazine) about old programmers being exactly the right people to deal with "ancient" legacy systems. There is still a lot of systems in current use written in COBOL out there, even COBOL that predates the ANSI version. FORTRAN is still surprisingly strong in the scientific community.

    The article mentions programmers continuing in niches. Me, for example. I've discovered a very nice corner where I work with RS-232 serial ports and the mistakes engineers/programmers 20-30 years my junior inflict on the community. Schools don't teach the National Semiconductor 16550 UART anymore; not to mention all the errors made trying to utilize the FIFO capabilities. (It's not engineers using the chips themselves, it's the ASIC people using the 16550 from the cell libraries!)

    I'm on the wrong side of 60, yet I've not decided when I'm going to retire...if I retire. I may just decide that, as long as I can find people who need my skills, I'll keep going until they carry me out feet-first.

  3. Keeping up by RLBrown · · Score: 4, Informative

    To be honest, as an "old" programmer, I do not have any trouble keeping up. But I am not special -- anyone who makes the effort can keep up. I think that is the point of the Dice article cited in the post -- you can keep up and it is not that hard to do so. And you can change you job with the times. I have worked in my fundamental area of physics, then process engineering, then metrology, and now programming and communications. For the software portions of my work, since starting in 1969 I have used 8 languages, on 7 operating systems.Toss in a few variations for different frameworks. So long as I can read, I can keep up. As for the "dead at 35" meme expressed in the cited InfoWorld article (which the article author Neil McAllister promptly kicks to the curb), I just say "See here kid, I'll retire when I'm good and ready."

    --
    -- Perhaps I see less than some, but more than many.
    1. Re:Keeping up by dbIII · · Score: 4, Funny

      "damn, I can't focus close enough on this ultra-tiny low contrast font on this power supply, I need someone with young eyes to read it"

      I was in that situation and the person with young eyes took a photo with their phone and zoomed in.

  4. From the 2nd article by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Companies say they can't find enough qualified candidates. "

    Law of supply and demand affects salaries. Companies that have not learned this, can't find qualified candidates, because they're not paying enough.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    1. Re:From the 2nd article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Companies that have not learned this

      Companies fully understand what they are doing.

      It's called 'lying'.

  5. Do old Nerval's Lobsters need to keep submitting? by timrod · · Score: 5, Funny

    In recent months, it seems as if Nerval's Lobster has evolved into a submitter that lionizes single-source stories based on Dice advertisements. Despite all the press about Nerval's Lobster only posting Dice stories, is there still a significant market for older submitters, especially those who post actual news stories? The answer is "yes," of course, and sites like the comments section of Slashdot suggest that Nerval's Lobster should take steps such as posting something that isn't a single-source story from Dice and spending a lot of time on submitting actual quality stories if they want to not be mocked by commenters. But do they really need to go through all of that? If you have twenty, thirty, or even forty years of Dice link submissions, is it worth jumping through all sorts of new hoops? Or is there a better way to keep working — provided you don't already have a way to bypass the editorial system, that is, or move up to management, or just keep posting Dice links?

  6. The last time by schnitzi · · Score: 5, Funny

    The last time I jumped through a new hoop, I broke my hip.

    --



    I object to that article, and to the next reply.
  7. Keep up your verbal and written skills too.... by technomom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, you should stay current. That doesn't necessarily mean GitHub, but you should at least have a pretty good idea of what GitHub is, what it does and how to use it.

    Here's the thing. If you want to get a programming job today, chances are you'll need to pass through some kind of "white board" programming test. That is, a 1-3 hour session where the hiring manager and team will sit you down and ask you to come up with code and architecture to solve a real world problem. That means that you'll need to be able to think on your feet. It can be a terrifying, humbling experience if you are not prepared for it or even if you are. So, the best thing you can do is be prepared.

    If you're selling yourself as a Java developer, you had damned well know Java inside out. Yeah, that means crack open a recent website and read up not just on all the fundamentals you've forgotten but also read up on some of the newer stuff that Java's added in the last few years. Walk through some sample interview questions on the web.

    Secondly, work on your people skills. You'll have to be able to explain yourself clearly and concisely. You can be a brilliant technical person but if you cannot be understood, you won't get the job. During the white board session, people aren't looking for perfect syntax. What they are looking for is how you approach a problem, how you break it down, and how you communicate your path through the problem. Again, this all comes down to good communication skills as much as how well you sling code.

    For the record: I'm a 53 year old programmer. I just "retired" from one company and landed in another with a 20% pay raise and better opportunities to move upwards. And yeah, I did have to pass a grueling 3 hour "white board" test. It can be done.

  8. Re:Uh, what's the problem? by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What's so hard about being active on social media and GitHub?

    Jesus wept.

    It's not what's "hard" about it. The problem is that you have to live with yourself afterwards, with a bunch of strangers sending you highly-refined stupidity and looking for "follow-backs" and "likes" and "favorites". People posting pictures of their goddamn dinner. Then there are the bots dressed up as humans. Saying stupid cut and paste friendliness, but you don't want to block them because it just doesn't feel right and then it'll bring down the number of accounts that follow you to single digits.

    For me, social media always brings to mind the quote by the poet Charles Bukowski:

    "I don't hate people. I just feel better when they aren't around."

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  9. You still go through HR for jobs? by tlambert · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The problem is that the HR departments want X years in specific technology.

    You still go through HR for jobs?

    That's so darn cute!

    1. Re:You still go through HR for jobs? by thegarbz · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This is marked troll but it is right on the money.

      I have been on the job market for the last 6 months due to an imminent redundancy coming my way (I was lucky to have a lot of notice). After 6 months my resume and experience didn't even land me an interview, yet a phone call or two with a few acquaintances and even to a vendor netted me 2 actual offers.

    2. Re:You still go through HR for jobs? by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is marked troll but it is right on the money.

      I have been on the job market for the last 6 months due to an imminent redundancy coming my way (I was lucky to have a lot of notice). After 6 months my resume and experience didn't even land me an interview, yet a phone call or two with a few acquaintances and even to a vendor netted me 2 actual offers.

      Exactly.

      When people talk about the "hidden job market" - be aware it's real. No, you do not go to a website and there's no "magic" way to look at the "hidden job listings". Those don't exist. There is a market, and if you've got the experience and the knowledge, it can land you a job quite easily.

      Thing is, to access it requires soft skills. I know there's a strong temptation to "bottle up" and be one with the machine, but you have to realize that your next job will come from your coworkers. So do socialize with them, do spend time going out on lunches together, make friends and be civil.

      Because when it comes time to jump ship, being able to call a friend or an acquaintance is what will get you the job. Sometimes it may be more runabout - you got a job from a friend-of-a-friend-of-a-friend who heard you're looking around and knows someone is needing someone.

      And yes, this job market is hidden. Because if you're good, companies will make a job for you. Their public postings may be slim, but going in the back door, especially at smaller companies, may create a job just for you.

      The HR and job posting thing will never find the best candidates (only the good ones amongst those looking). It's why companies have referral bonuses because they know great employees don't answer job ads. All it takes is someone putting your resume on a manager's desk, say "we need this guy" and you're in.

    3. Re:You still go through HR for jobs? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's a bit OT but this effectively dispels the myth that hiring is a meritocracy. It's often more about who you know, and who you are known to. That's why companies are making so much effort to improve their hiring practices and diversity levels - otherwise they end up just hiring more people like the ones they already have, rather than the best ones from a wide pool.

      As you say, many HR departments are clueless which really doesn't help.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  10. Old Programmers Vs Young Programmers by sycodon · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you want a mobile client to send 180 character messages out to millions of people, hire a young programmer,
    If you want your networks to support messages going out to millions of people, all the time, every time, hire an old programmer.

    If you want a really cool interactive website where employees can manage the benefits and see how much is in their 401k, hire a young programmer.
    If you want your payroll to run and people to be paid accurately, every time, all the time, hire an old programmer.

    If you want a fancy game, hire a young programmer.
    If you want a system to manage the business that sells the game, hire an old programmer.

    If you want an employee that sees stuff as fun toys and re-invents the wheel at every chance, hire a young programmer.
    If you want an employee who understands that this is a business and that people's livelihoods depends on it being right, all of the time, hire an old programmer.

    --
    When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.