I would like to pose an alternative conclusion: if you aren’t bored by web development you likely haven’t discovered far more interesting opportunities.
Web development deals with mostly solved problems and best practices to be followed for nearly everything. It’s not very intellectually stimulating, especially if it’s just typical CRUD stuff.
More exciting work can be done in writing device drivers for custom hardware, working on cutting edge AI, factory automation, reverse engineering, or even doing high performance game development.
There’s a big world out there, and web development is the least interesting and the lowest tier. Exciting if you’ve never done anything yet in your career (which makes it perfect for newly graduated young students), but very pedestrian if you’ve already been in the trenches for a while.
My main problem with programming interviews is that I can’t use external references to do them, which is totally not how I work. Even if I know how to solve something off the top of my head, I generally do a search to make sure there aren’t better ways of doing something that I don’t know about, and also to build confidence in my chosen solution. This is how I have discovered most best practices over my career.
If I’m given a task to solve some weird algorithmic CS problem, the first step would be to go to google and research the problem. If it’s solved, I implement that solution.
When there is no solution, I will put pen to paper and work it out myself. But that could take an unpredictable amount of time, and doesn’t help if someone is constantly watching me work or forcing me to explain what I’m thinking, because I think much faster than I can explain, and some lines of thoughts lead to dead ends, which can make people grow impatient with pointless explanations of things that will never work.
Of course, in an interview you can’t just use Google to solve everything, because interviewers will snigger and say “tHiS gUy DoEsN’t KnOw sHiT”, never mind that this is probably how 99% of developers work given the amount of questions and code reuse that is out there. It’s just not realistic.
I know a cybersecurity professional who was contracted by a hedgefund to investigate the claims by reverse engineering and present a report so it’s not entirely unlikely.
Because if you live in the first world, like most of these companies, you will feel the effects of climate change the least. Climate change is a bigger problem for developing nations with birth rates way too high and limited resources.
Not sure why it’s necessary to make a slight against our times? Even Osama Bin Laden was given a proper burial at sea, and he wasn’t even a soldier, he was a damn criminal. We didn’t even use photos of his remains for propaganda.
For those who do not see the danger of advanced AI generated text being rolled out everywhere, imagine a web where you have to carefully read everything you see in order to determine if it’s written by a human before you can start to take the text seriously.
That means no more skimming threads to get the gist of what people are saying, no more skimming through answers on stackoverflow, no more skimming through articles.
An article that looks reasonable on a cursory glance only begins to fall apart when you spend (waste) time reading it carefully.
It also means anyone posting content must spend extra effort proving they are a human for their readers.
No, civilization is not becoming inhospitable to humans, this is literally the best time in history to be alive, civilization has never been more hospitable than it is today.
We really do not need more humans, we are not an endangered species. The only reason we think we do is because many societies have essentially created Ponzi schemes where the welfare of the elderly generation relies on ever increasing numbers of younger generations, which will inevitably become unsustainable.
No, it isn’t. And I’ve said this before, a 45 year old has a grip on life that an early 20 something can’t even conceive of, especially if they’ve just lived a fairly easy life sailing through school and college thus far.
A 45 year old has a better idea of how life can be improved in ways that matter, and has the connections and skills to capitalize on it. Sorry kids, the big dogs will eat your lunch.
Logically maybe we shouldn’t, but humans aren’t known for doing everything logically. If you know someone is in trouble and you have the ability to rescue them it is human nature to do it, no matter the cost.
> The US public has been subsidizing pharmaceutical research for the entire world with these inflated prices and hopefully that changes soon.
This is what some people refuse to acknowledge when they mock the US for having such high prices. If US prices drop over night to match RoW pharma companies are not just going to go quietly into that good night, there will be consequences. Most likely, a lowering of US prices will result in a rise everywhere else, so enjoy your low prices while they last. It’s time for Americans to put America first.
I stopped doing fasts because even though I did notice a boost to my productivity, most of it was due to not having to stop in the middle of the day to eat or waste time thinking about eating. In terms of cognitive benefits, going for a run for 30 minutes in the morning still seemed far superior.
Indeed, as housing becomes prohibitively expensive everywhere that people want to live in the US, I doubt someone living off basic income will even be able to afford any kind of home.
If however, we had government built apartment buildings that could be partitioned out and made available for free only to those who need it, that would actually help solve real problems, and wouldn’t even disrupt those who depend on their property values rising. Imagine such buildings right here in San Francisco.
They can still do those things, but basic income isn’t something for you to be taking risks with, it’s the income you need to live, and should be spent as such. Anything else is irresponsible.
Web development deals with mostly solved problems and best practices to be followed for nearly everything. It’s not very intellectually stimulating, especially if it’s just typical CRUD stuff.
More exciting work can be done in writing device drivers for custom hardware, working on cutting edge AI, factory automation, reverse engineering, or even doing high performance game development.
There’s a big world out there, and web development is the least interesting and the lowest tier. Exciting if you’ve never done anything yet in your career (which makes it perfect for newly graduated young students), but very pedestrian if you’ve already been in the trenches for a while.