active questions tagged job-satisfaction - Stack Overflowmost recent 30 from stackoverflow.com2009-11-29T07:51:44Zhttp://stackoverflow.com/feeds/tag/job-satisfactionhttp://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdfhttp://stackoverflow.com/questions/1772340/what-is-the-worst-programming-job-you-ever-had-and-why23What is the worst programming job you ever had and why?Sonny Boy2009-11-20T18:17:01Z2009-11-23T19:40:29Z
<blockquote>
<p><strong>Similar but not an actual Duplicate:</strong><br>
<a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/741581/what-are-the-worst-working-conditions-you-have-written-code-in">What are the worst working conditions you have written code in?</a> </p>
</blockquote>
<p>Hey all,</p>
<p>If you're like me, you've worked for a number of places and not all of them were great. Sometimes there are many different reasons not to like a role but I'm trying to find out the most common reasons. Was it the tools you had to use or the lack of tools? Pushy clients and/or managers? Low pay? Long hours?</p>
<p>For me, I'd have to say one of my first programming roles was my least favorite. I was just learning .NET and it was a small software house with two other programmers. One of the other programmers was actually learning on the job (he was a Math major in college) and the senior developer came from a VB6 background and was teaching himself VB.NET as we worked on the project. I liked everyone there, but there were very few opportunities for learning. A lot of the work we completed seemed to be lacking polish and I felt it could have been done better. As the company started to encounter financial trouble I felt it was time to go. So basically a lack of learning opportunities coupled with an uncertain future made me unsatisfied with the role.</p>
<p>What are your guys' views?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1734015/what-to-do-when-co-workers-code-badly3What to do when co-workers code badly?Tim2009-11-14T11:46:28Z2009-11-14T18:35:48Z
<p>I am working part time in a small software company to raise some money. Without sounding arrogant: some of my co-workers I am working with in a team are writing horrible code. Both syntax- and algorithmic wise. Sure there are moments in the shadow of a deadline where things get a bit hacky but they do it all the time. Every time I have to read code like this it hurts. I want to be able to stand behind the product we are developing. But I can't do that with the knowledge of crap under the hood. Besides when their code surprisingly results in failures I'm the assignee of those issues. So I guess the project manager thinks it's my fault (ok maybe my ego speaking here just a tiny bit, too).</p>
<p><strong>So to finally get to my question:</strong> What should I do? I am just the part time college student at the bottom end of the hierachy. Am I "<em>allowed</em>" to stand up and tell them their stuff just sucks? Or should I just keep silently fixing their code if I have enough time? In general the job is pretty great. I doubt I could get that much responsibility and involvement in another student job (it is badly paid though).</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/417819/is-it-time-for-me-to-make-a-career-change27Is it time for me to make a career change?Jack Sparrow2009-01-06T19:41:26Z2009-11-13T21:55:18Z
<p>Does anybody else feel like they need to change jobs every year or two to stay sane and happy or am I just in the wrong profession entirely? I think I am burned out both on my current job and burned out on programming in general.</p>
<p>Let me explain. I have been a software engineer for going on 8 years and I am now nearly two years into my 4th real job. At first, I really like a job. I like the challenge and the satisfaction of solving tough problems and learning new things. At a certain point, I reach some kind of peak. Then I start a downward spiral. I start to lose energy and motivation, then I am less productive, then I feel guilty, then I like it less, then I lose more motivation, etc. Eventually, I get to a point where I loath the job, I can not focus on any task, I am overwhelmed with guilty feelings, and I feel like I am losing my mind whenever I am at work. Usually, I find another job. Now I am looking around and nothing out there sounds even slightly appealing.</p>
<p>I have experienced the following negative factors at ALL of my jobs:</p>
<p>tedious tasks - I get tired of random intermittent bugs that are very difficult to reproduce.</p>
<p>repetitive tasks - I am always fixing the same or similar bugs.</p>
<p>negative atmosphere - I am constantly hearing the negatives like customer x is unhappy or there are y number of bugs to fix for this release and rarely hearing positives despite the fact that the company is profitable.</p>
<p>lack of recognition - I wonder what is to motivate me to continue doing my best when it doesn't really matter to anyone?</p>
<p>lack of reward - The work does not have an intrinsic value for me personally, I can fix tons of bugs, add features for customer x and make the company a bunch of money, but it does not really mean anything to me. I would rather do something that helps other people directly.</p>
<p>feeling lonely and isolated - More often than not, I go the entire day without speaking to another person.</p>
<p>being sedentary - I am by nature an active person and I find it difficult to sit in a chair at a computer for long periods of time.</p>
<p>annoying coworkers - There are the ones that make strange (although sometimes entertaining) personal calls right there in the next cubicle for all to hear, to the know-it-alls who act like everyone else is stupid, to the just plain creepy (feels like he is watching me again), to the machine-gunner keyboarders that make it difficult to concentrate.</p>
<p>burnout and boredom - The results of the previous factors.</p>
<p>I try to get regular exercise and take breaks at work and take vacation days. I even tried cutting back my hours. Nothing helps. Is there a way for me to fix this problem or is it time for me to move on and find a totally new career?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1677954/java-web-development-without-local-environment0Java Web Development without Local EnvironmentAEIOU2009-11-05T02:25:21Z2009-11-05T13:03:28Z
<p>I started a new job recently. I've been a Java & XML Web Developer for two years. The new place I'm at has several large web applications, but none of them deploy to my local JBOSS server because some genius decided to create a Java Projects instead of a Dynamic Web Project. I tried following the steps to convert the project but that creates a bunch of errors which I cannot resolve.
The people I work with are all consultants and never give me a straight answer on how I can develop/test my changes locally.
Has anyone had to program in a similar situation, if so any advice?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/770841/how-important-is-phd-research-topic-to-getting-a-job8How important is PhD research topic to getting a job?thornate2009-04-21T02:33:18Z2009-10-12T17:59:20Z
<p><em>EDIT: This has been closed and I realise that I may not have been specific enough with the original title. I ask two questions here: The general one (Does a PhD help get a job?) which has been asked elsewhere, and the specific one (Is it possible to get work outside of the specific research field?). Assume I've already decided going to do the phd. I'm just stressing about the research topic.</em></p>
<p>Well, I'm one year out of university (Mechatronics engineering and Software Eng double bachelors), worked for a few months then got retrenched (yay economy!). It's looking less and less likely that I'll get a job worth having with the job market as it is, so I'm thinking about going back to uni to do a PhD. I figure that by the time I'm done, the job market will have improved and hopefully I'll have something on my resume that is more attractive than spending three years doing customer support for accounting software. </p>
<p>So, my question is to people who've done PhD's. Would you say that they were worth the effort? How important is the research topic to future job-seeking success? The idea I have is a computer-sciencey/neural-networks/data-mining thing which I think is very interesting, but not a field I want to be in forever. My potential supervisor claims that employers don't care so much about the topic of the research but rather the peripheral skills that are developed through a PhD; time managment, self-restraint, planning and whatnot. </p>
<p>How does this mesh with people's real world experience? I'd appreciate any advice before signing my life on the line for the next three years.</p>
<p><hr /></p>
<h3>See also:</h3>
<blockquote>
<ul>
<li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/52254/should-developers-go-to-grad-school">Should developers go to grad school?</a></li>
<li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/326159/best-reason-not-to-hire-a-phd">Best reason not to hire a PhD?</a></li>
<li><a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/717992/how-to-find-an-entry-level-job-after-you-already-have-a-graduate-degree">How to find an entry-level job after you already have a graduate degree?</a></li>
</ul>
</blockquote>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1552848/which-one-is-important-job-satisfaction-or-compensation0Which one is important - job satisfaction or compensation? [closed]PJ2009-10-12T05:21:36Z2009-10-12T05:33:10Z
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I am having a debate with one of my friends regarding which one is important - </p>
<p><strong>1. Job satisfaction</strong></p>
<p><strong>2. Salary</strong></p>
<p>For me Job satisfaction comes first as if you are not satisfied with your job that you have to perform on your day to day life then it becomes bosesome to stay in that organisation.</p>
<p>But according to my friend, we all are woking for the sake of money and if the company doesn't provide me a good compensation then what is the use of staying there. If there is no job satisfaction at all and the organisation provides me a good package then it is good to stay there instead of looking for job satisfaction.</p>
<p>Please advice who is right as we both are arguing in this topic for the last one week.</p>
<p>Thanks in advance.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1494446/a-hairline-away-from-quitting-my-current-job-should-i-take-the-plunge0A hairline away from quitting my current job - should I take the plunge? [closed]Mnm2009-09-29T19:24:39Z2009-09-30T09:58:25Z
<p>I graduated college in 2005 as a computer engineer and comp sci student. As I stepped into the working world, I had 1 rule that I intended to follow - never work anywhere for too long so I cam absorb and learn as much as I can.</p>
<p>The plan was working really well until I quit my first job (after 1 year) and got into my second job. I had planned on being at the second for a year also - 3 years later i'm still here.</p>
<p>Why am I here? Money...</p>
<p>They pay me pretty good and it's hard to walk away from a cushy job that pays me bucks. This is the kind of place people want to make their careers - but I don't want to make a career now. I want to take risks and grow as fast as I can. </p>
<p>Problem is, this is one of those BIG sucky companies. I'm sure you all know what i'm talking about...</p>
<p>Every day I come into work, I get this overwhelming feeling of despair. The work here SUCKS - it's no fun and i'm not learning anything anymore. Most of the work I do is big-company overhead crap. Rarely do I get to push my development skills and become a stronger programmer. I own several applications which are garbage and I inherited from other fired developers. This company is plagued with half assed rules and policies and indecisiveness. You're not allowed to touch ANYTHING unless there is a project code for it.</p>
<p>Overall, I hate working here. I want to start learning again. I want to love my product and enjoy coming to work. I want to be part of something small and promising... </p>
<p>So... i'm 2 seconds away from quitting my job.</p>
<p>Some of you might say, "Don't quit your job until you find another" - and I understand why that's important. But here's the thing - I want the time off. I want to be able to have all the free time I need to explore, read, and grow as a developer. I want a few months to myself before I go looking again.</p>
<p>So... any advice before I take the plunge? Given the state of the economy, am I crazy to do this? It's great money and very cushy... so difficult to quit but I can't stop thinking about quitting every day I come here.</p>
<p>(When I look for work again, It will either be in california or north Jersey/NYC).</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/145989/strategies-for-retaining-technical-talent7Strategies for retaining technical talentMikeJ2008-09-28T14:47:23Z2009-09-02T20:13:56Z
<p>There was an interesting question this morning about why <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/145890/why-did-you-pick-your-current-job">Why Did you pick your current job?</a>. More interestingly, I think is why do you stay? What is it that keeps you happily working at your company? perks, environment, status, satisfaction, challenge? and what change at the company might make you leave?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1355338/fed-up-with-my-programming-job-what-should-i-do38Fed up with my programming job: What should I do?Eduardo León2009-08-31T00:40:28Z2009-09-02T14:14:22Z
<p>When I was a teenager (about 8 years ago), programming used to be fun. That alone led me to study Systems Engineering. (Later, I found that SE wasn't only about programming, but that's another story.) However, my first experiences working as a programmer haven't quite been what I expected. Most of the time, those I work for don't expect me to carefully design my programs before I write them. They seem to think of programming as a physical production process in which the most obvious way to improve productivity is to speed up the process.</p>
<p>Writing code that validates data input against business rules is boring, but tolerable. But being forced to do a half-assed job just to finish projects under unrealistic schedules puts me off, to say the least. It's the opposite of what made programming so attractive to me.</p>
<p>What do I do to fix this?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1084212/developer-to-dba3Developer to DBA?TheGambler2009-07-05T14:53:04Z2009-08-24T17:19:42Z
<p>I have an opportunity to make a career move to dba from developer. I graduated college two years ago and enjoy development but I feel like I need to be researching new technologies if I'm going to keep up with the industry. I enjoy development but I also find it fun when trying to come up with complex sql statements. I'm thinking of switching to dba where I work and will be dealing with oracle and sql server databases. Here are some of the reason, I'm thinking of making the move:</p>
<p>1) Becoming an rock star dba doesn't seem like a moving target like being a rock star developer does.</p>
<p>2) Seems like a specialty career so that if I'm really good at what I do, it would be easy to change companies and demand the big bucks. </p>
<p>3) Kind of related to #2, but it seems like it's a more stable career( dbas aren't outsourced that much, probably would be easy to find a job ) and can potentially make more money. </p>
<p>Is this a good idea?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1323087/how-should-i-respond-when-i-find-that-i-cannot-do-the-job-ive-just-been-hired-fo0How should I respond when I find that I cannot do the job I've just been hired for? [closed]picardo2009-08-24T15:34:33Z2009-08-24T15:45:36Z
<p>I just took a freelance job that I started today. I now realize that I don't have the skills to complete it. If I walk out will I get sued? How should I respond?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1225839/for-those-whose-programming-job-is-their-dream-job0For those whose programming job is their "Dream Job" [closed]Pranav2009-08-04T05:46:39Z2009-08-04T06:17:51Z
<p>What exactly do you do, and what do you love about your work? </p>
<p>P.S. Im looking for technical stuff like an interesting domain, challenging problems and not non-technical factors like being self-employed, work-life balance, flexible hours etc. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1138776/quit-my-job-because-i-dont-evolve8quit my job because I don't evolve [closed]tanderson2009-07-16T16:29:39Z2009-07-21T00:32:22Z
<p>Hi guys,</p>
<p>I've worked for some time(few years) for my company. As time passed, the important tasks with new technologies started to be given to my colleague although I've asked several times for more challenging projects. I believe this could be because I asked a few times for a raise when I had more responsibilities for the projects and the boss might have been irritated. </p>
<p>Now, I feel my work is becoming boring, I don't evolve and the time is passing by. I was thinking I could ask for the rest of my vacation and then to retire and stay home and work for my personal project. </p>
<p>My wife has a job too that could maintain both for some time. However, I think the ideal option would be for us both to stay home and work for personal project since the project would evolve much faster with us both concentrating full time on it. </p>
<p>But with this option, there's the money issue. </p>
<p>We have some savings(about 20K) and I guess they could sustain us both for about an year. However, since we might need some money to invest in the project I'm not sure how much we could hold on(1 year was without project investments). It's our first project and I don't know how much money we need to get it started. </p>
<p>To launch the project we'll need to first build the specs(I guess about 3 months of work at least where it's all research and paper work) and then to pay for programmers to implement them. </p>
<p>So my question is, did you face a situation similar to this or what advice could you give me so I can continue achieve the best results? </p>
<p>Here is a comparison of my current choices: </p>
<ol>
<li><p>continue to work for my company </p>
<ul>
<li><p>Advantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>constant monthly income </li>
<li>ok environment - the co-workers are friendly and the work schedule is flexible </li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>Disadvantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>time passes by and the experience is not advancing</li>
<li>I always do what my boss needs, not what I'd like to do</li>
<li>my moral goes down as the time passes</li>
</ul></li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>work for my personal project full time</p>
<ul>
<li><p>Advantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>learn many new things and have challenging experiences</li>
<li>when time will be against me(aka 35-40 years old) and the employers will look for younger and with more time to spend for work employees, I'll have my own project to work for</li>
<li>any success in the project would be a huge upgrade in my moral than to work for the boss where any success you have doesn't matter so much per total</li>
</ul></li>
<li><p>Disadvantages: </p>
<ul>
<li>financial issues if the project will eat much money(I'm not that experienced in how much money a project could eat, so any suggestions are welcome)</li>
<li>income comes after the project is launched, and it is not constant</li>
<li>economic climate(is the current economic climate still ok to start your own project?)</li>
</ul></li>
</ul></li>
</ol>
<p>I appreciate any insight on this matter because it's been haunting me and my wife for some time now and we really would like to take a decision.</p>
<p>Thanks for any help you can provide!</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/633792/how-to-check-if-potential-employer-uses-rich-programming-environment10How to check if potential employer uses rich programming environmenttomaszs2009-03-11T09:02:15Z2009-07-01T21:18:02Z
<p>Lately I was thinking about job interviews. Most of time you can see information about how to look for a employer, how much you can earn or what do you look for in new employer and how to show from your best side.</p>
<p>My concern is slightly different. You go to job interview to a employer you would like to work for next 1 or 2 years (or more). The job offer you found in newspaper or on the job offer website was "has everything" one. It is fitting your experience and money thing looks ok.</p>
<p>But in the advertisement there is no information about what environment you will be working in. If you will learn new stuff and get new experiences.</p>
<p>So I would like to know how to examine future employer if I will be working in rich development environment, where I will learn the "state of art" techniques of software development.</p>
<p>To be more specific I would like to point out some parts of "state of art" techniques that I am talking about, but these are only examples, you can think about something totally different when talking about "rich software development". </p>
<p>My examples are: unit testing, using known and good methodology of developing software, short cycles, full cycles (project, development, testing, release), work types divided into people (everyone does what he is good in, not everything).</p>
<p>So there are some things that can decide that work with your future employer will be very rich experience in your programming life or not.</p>
<p>And as mather of fact - you will not know this from job offer and from job interview if you do not make the effort to ask right questions!</p>
<p>This questions can be simple like "do you use unit testing" to some specific and more tricky like "what methodology do you like the best".</p>
<p>After asking this questions to several employers it would be easier for me to make effort to choose work environment where I can develop my skills on the high level.</p>
<p>So my question is - what questions ask on job interview to check how rich will be my work experience with this particular, potential employer?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/173955/what-makes-you-leave-the-job-after-two-years10What makes you leave the job after two years?sonstabo2008-10-06T11:35:13Z2009-06-25T14:06:58Z
<p>I found this question on the issue: <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/129508/when-did-you-know-it-was-time-to-leave-your-job">http://stackoverflow.com/questions/129508/when-did-you-know-it-was-time-to-leave-your-job</a>. But I would like to get more "under-the-skin" on the responses. The other question's answers included commuting, personnel conflict, when you are not getting anywhere professionally speaking. </p>
<p>Let's say I meet with your boss and talk to him about resources and how they are treated within the company. And let's say that he is honest in his reply. What would he say was his top-three list in regards to losing his best programmers? </p>
<p>Let’s leave out rotten office space, low salary, bad hardware, not getting the tools needed for the job at hand, bad assignments, disruptions from team, customer support, etc. I would like to know the things that make him lose his experienced developers after 2 years. What did you tell him to fix that he was unable to fix? </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/719573/how-to-overcome-unit-test-frustration29How to overcome unit test frustration?Brian Schimmel2009-04-05T19:53:26Z2009-06-18T21:55:04Z
<p>I'm a developer and have very much fun at nearly all stages of software developent, from gathering requirements, deciding on language, libraries and tools, sketching the architecture to implementing. Even bugfixing is fun. Unit testing is not.</p>
<p>Writing a unit test is not that bad, I can get over it. But the quantity of work involved in testing it right makes me shiver. I fear that I will spend much more time on testing than on actual implementation.</p>
<p>I've always managed to deliver working software without unit testing. But my current project is different from the ones before, and I know I finally have to get into it and write a whole lot of high quality tests. There are several points that make me not want to do it:</p>
<ul>
<li>I don't know much about unit testing, but a short look into books like <a href="http://xunitpatterns.com/" rel="nofollow">XUnit patterns</a> made me realize that I'd need months or even years to learn enough about it to do it right. I'd like to spend those years learning about <em>real</em> developement skills.</li>
<li>We have a whole bunch of code with nearly no tests. The code is known to be buggy ans was never used in production, so we absolutely need tests. I think I could spend several months just writing tests and some more month to make them all pass before I can write my own code on top of it.</li>
<li>I'm coding something and realize <em>Hey, I need a method Xyz(int abc) for that</em>. I write this method in 30 seconds. If I now write all the tests needed for Xyz() then I spend 5 Minutes on writing tests. After that, I will have forgotten why I needed Xyz() in the first place. It just kicks me out of the zone.</li>
<li>Writing unit tests has linear complexity (e.g. x tests for each class / each method), but integrations tests seem to have quadratic complexity, as I'd need x * n * n tests for n interacting classes.</li>
</ul>
<p>I've been programming for more than 16 years now, mostly as a hobby. If my future would be doomed to writing tests most of the time, this would make me want to change my profession.</p>
<p>So how do I overcome my aversion, get some motivation, and just do it? And do you think unit testing might ever feel <em>natural</em> to me, or maybe be fun in the end?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/526925/how-do-i-pursue-a-better-career9How Do I Pursue A Better Career? [closed]Name Withheld2009-02-09T01:55:55Z2009-06-01T17:28:35Z
<p>Greetings, Stack Overflow. My question today is, "How do I get from where I am at in my career and life to where I want to be?" Being unable to wander through every path in life, I seek heuristics (advice) from those who have or are travelling different paths.</p>
<h1>The Initial Condition</h1>
<p>I went to a technical school to become a video-game programmer, and did so professionally for three years. My wife and I felt strongly that we needed to move to a rural area where family is, and I am now employed as a system administrator in a school division; we have also recently purchased our first house and are not keen on moving. I am 28-years old, have two sons, and have payed off my student loans.</p>
<h1>The Goal Condition</h1>
<p>I would like to work at something meaningful and interesting<sup>1</sup> where I am respected and able to maintain a good work/life balance<sup>2</sup>. My wife and I have a dream of living on a farm as self-sufficiently as possible<sup>3</sup>. The optimal situation would involved working nearby as a programmer, or, next up, would be to telecommute<sup>4</sup>.</p>
<p><sup>1</sup>Meaningful/Interesting work. What makes working for this school division egregious is that I became a game programmer in the hope of making educational games--of creating a funnel whereby students, who will spend large amounts of time playing video games, actually get some benefit from it--stealth learning, if you will. Working here, we are so undermanned as to be unable to keep all of the computers running, students logging in, and software working, much less provide any significant benefit to the students' educations.</p>
<p>Interests of mine include robotics, artificial intelligence, computational linguistics (although I know so little about it), and, of course, game programming. I used to think that being a database administrator would be mind-numbingly boring, but now I think it could be rather interesting. Web development holds some appeal--things sure have changed since I wrote web-pages a decade ago. Management holds a rather limited appeal for me at this time, as does, say, starting a business, and yet these are the most common things that come up when one asks how to increase one's paycheck.</p>
<p><sup>2</sup>A work/life balance to me chiefly includes spending evenings and weekends at home with my family and leaving work (with its attending stresses) at work. It also includes making enough money to maintain a comfortable lifestyle. When game programming, I commuted 1.5 hours each way from the suburbs to a city, and, come crunch time, spent many an hour working unpaid overtime. At my current job, the ratio of work-to-be-done per skilled practitioner is overwhelmingly high, and my employers really don't care so long as they don't get screamed at as much by unhappy teachers. My pay will cap off at a rate that will render me unable to pursue my dream of having a farm, and, indeed, may make raising a family difficult.</p>
<p><sup>3</sup>A farm is really expensive and is well-nigh impossible to maintain through a farmer's income. Besides which, I want to program.</p>
<p><sup>4</sup>I recognize that telecommuting is not the most effective way to do things, and that such employees are first on the chopping block and slow to be advanced. It is hard to be on a team when you are working alone. Unfortunately, farms are not usually proximate to good employment for programmers.</p>
<h1>Successor Functions</h1>
<p>I'm not sure where to go from here. If I do nothing, I guarantee the result that I do not want--being where I am now in 5 years. Edison said that "Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." I am certainly willing to work.</p>
<p>Although I am loathe to go through a discontinuity, especially one wherein I go from earning money for my family to spending money to be educated, I think the <a href="http://ozone.wordpress.com/2006/04/05/the-panda-principle/" rel="nofollow">Panda-Thumb Principal</a> applies. [Basically, Pandas have a sub-optimal thumb that is evolutionarily at a local maximum. They can not get a better thumb without having a worse one first.]</p>
<p>I see these as my primary options.</p>
<p>I. I could look for different work.</p>
<ul>
<li>There is a small city an hour away, and, despite worldwide economic conditions, I believe I am readily employable.</li>
<li>I could look into telecommuting work, or become a contractor.</li>
<li>I could turn my back on IT and look for something different.</li>
</ul>
<p>II. I could supplement my education.</p>
<ul>
<li>I could try to get a bachelor's degree. (Right now I have a diploma or certificate, and, frankly do not expect things to transfer well.) I am strongly considering a business programming degree at a technical school, but can't help but wonder if a Computer Science degree at a university is the way to go. [As an aside, is a job as a researcher a good one? It sure sounds nifty.]</li>
<li>And, I could also study books and things on the internet and expand my education in that way. </li>
</ul>
<p>My suspicion is that going back for further education is the most viable way to get from where I am to where I want to be. I do love learning. It seems that I stand at a chasm in the dark and am just not sure if I really want to run up to it and jump for all I am worth.</p>
<p>Thank you so much for taking the time to read this, and for your thoughtful consideration of it.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/886602/programmers-productive-work-time13Programmer's productive work timeCarlo2009-05-20T07:27:59Z2009-05-29T19:38:06Z
<p>Well, this question might be prone to discussion, but I'd really like to know your take on this, SPECIALLY if you are a Lead Programmer, Product Manager, or just if you have programmers that report to you.</p>
<p>A little more than a year back, I started in this company, I was the only programmer there, and I still was in a Jr. level. So after a few months, the company hired another programmer and a software architect. The other programmer and I would report to the architect, and we were going to work with the AGILE methodology.</p>
<p>Well to the point. When the software architect started explaining our roles in the AGILE methodology, she said that our work-time in a day is expected to be only 6 productive hours, not counting lunch break; and she said it like we should already know it. So that means, if we're 9 hours at work, 1 would be our lunch break, 2 to just relax, and 6 to work. I was astonished by this remark since in my then short work experience I have had never heard anything like that.</p>
<p>I'd love to know what you guys think about this. I personally don't feel very comfortable just "chilling out" 2 hours at the office, I always try to be as productive as I can.</p>
<p>But is a programmer really expected to just work 6 hours a day?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/785510/commercial-coding-for-free-how-much-if-any-should-you-do1Commercial coding for free - how much if any should you do?MaSuGaNa2009-04-24T11:47:22Z2009-04-24T11:57:27Z
<p>I recently answered a <a href="http://stackoverflow.com/questions/784895/persuade-boss-dump-terrible-architecture/784927#784927">question</a> with a proposition that the asker should improve his resistant-to-change boss's legacy system by coding the alternative in his spare time and then presenting it as an alternative approach to his peers.</p>
<p>It got me thinking about all the <em>unpaid</em> development work I have done in my working life. Although I know it is our character to work late, in darkened rooms, eating pizza and slouching in front of a couple of monitors when do <em>you</em> shutdown and go home?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/207925/how-to-keep-business-support-team-motivated4How to keep business support team motivated?Totophil2008-10-16T09:28:24Z2009-03-30T23:29:54Z
<p>In the course of my career I've noticed that developers working on new functionality are, as a rule, more cheerful than these assigned to troubleshooting and fixing bugs.</p>
<p>Good tips on keeping business support a happy? Organising business support in the way that team's morale isn’t hurt?</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/695949/whats-the-best-part-of-being-a-programmer0What's the best part of being a programmer? [closed]jerebear2009-03-30T03:46:31Z2009-03-30T03:52:38Z
<p>Some days I feel a grand sense of accomplishment when I'm able to help a business improve what they do and capitalize on new opportunities.</p>
<p>So what's your favorite part of being a programmer?</p>
<p>I'm going to supply another answer, and it's sincere: </p>
<p>Having such a rich community of programmers such as StackOverflow and not once have I seen any childish, idiotic or critical responses to the thousands of questions on here.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/606830/what-should-i-do-when-my-boss-tells-me-to-make-passwords-the-same-as-usernames-by4What should I do when my boss tells me to make passwords the same as usernames by default in our software?Dan Roberts2009-03-03T15:27:59Z2009-03-03T16:26:41Z
<p>My boss is against requiring our users to have secure passwords, even going so far to request they be setup by default to have passwords the same as their username. What should I do in this situation? What would you do?</p>
<p><strong>Update</strong> - Some users have brought up the question of whether the application needs high security. This isn't credit card information for example but does include sensitive information and a mailing list management and sending functionality.</p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/343450/job-change-to-get-more-time-programming5Job change, to get more time programmingEspada2008-12-05T10:37:32Z2008-12-05T11:58:38Z
<p>Lately I have been bogged down with my job. I'm working on open source software all of my free time(outside of my job) and that is my passion. However my job zaps me for energy with endless meetings, talks with dumb customers, ridiculous deadlines and a boss riding my ass from the start of a project to the end(even though I'm the top programmer there). I don't want my job to interfere with what's really important; My open source contributions(mostly damn fun programming), so I'm looking for a job change.</p>
<p>My new job needs to be kinda effortless(or as close as it gets to that) so I can do it and still be in top notch form for my open source programming. I wouldn't mind something like bagging bananas, but I don't think I am going to get that kinda job with my MSc degree. So maybe something CS related, but not as demanding as my current job as a do everything developer.</p>
<p>So any ideas for
1. Entirely new line of work.
2. CS related but less work. </p>
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/130771/what-tips-do-you-have-to-keep-developers-happy6What tips do you have to keep developers happy?KiwiBastard2008-09-25T00:24:07Z2008-11-05T21:07:38Z
<p>Some developers get itchy feet after a year or so, some stay in the same place for years. If you are the latter - what is it that keeps you happily at the same place?</p>
<p>Environment? Challenges? Access to lastest tools? Good management? </p>