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I presume that many of you are currently not in your "dream job", although many of you probably have aspirations that are not yet realized. I'm interested to know what other developers look forward to in their career.

What goals would you consider the pinnacle of your programming career?

(And if you already have your dream job, what makes it special to you?)

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45 Answers

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Architect would be nice in 10 years

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Once I'm an Architect, I'll program the Matrix. – Bill the Lizard Dec 8 '08 at 20:57
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I want to get back into Geographic Information Systems at some point in my career. I'd also like a job where I can work at home much of the time - I like programming with my dog lying his head on my feet, and the coffee is better at home (my wife roasts her own).

Ideally, it should be something to do with aviation or outdoor recreation.

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Robotics programming would be neat.

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I would like to be my own boss. Make decisions about my software that will determine the course of my business.

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Just what does Be My Own Boss really mean to you? – Chris Lively Dec 8 '08 at 16:21
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I don't think you need to "be your own boss" to make those decisions. My own gig gives me a huge level of control over what I do, how I do it, when I do it, where I do it. Employment and professional freedom are not mutually exclusive. – Stu Thompson Nov 15 at 12:42
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I would like to code for living but without having all the stress on me (maybe having something on my own with other people that will have more responsibility). Having the pleasure to program in a place where it doesn't snow half the year! I think for both of that the only way is to have it's own venture.

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I suppose my greatest imaginable achievement would be to write the MMORPG that kills World of Warcraft.

Failing that, I guess I could settle for something easier, like inventing a human-level artificial intelligence.

(If we have to be realistic, I am currently in more-or-less my dream job as a freelancer. I love the autonomy and the variety of projects I work on. The primary thing that would improve on it would be to become well-enough known that I would be able to maintain a steady stream of work coming to me without having to take time away from programming to go find more work. I hate having to do sales/marketing.)

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Oddly, I've been doing programming long enough that I'm reaching the point where I want to try other things...

As a sideline hobby, I dabble in book publishing. It's fun, and it pays for itself, but it wouldn't pay the bills.

I've done most things already that people would want to apart from sell my own software product... I can tell you, working from home gets old after the first 18 months... You start to crave human contact.

Right now, I'm in a good spot... I do short term contracts (usually no more than 2 years), and keep things interesting by doing some side work as well as the book publishing. I also actively research things that interest me. This is about to turn a little more relevant as I'm about to start a PhD on the side... Hopefully I'll have enough spare time left over to eat/sleep/etc.

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I would like to develop something that gets deployed on a future Mars rover, or other cool NASA expedition.

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I've had jobs that are pretty close to dream jobs... but most of those work-environment factors like management, work-at-home, profits, etc are so ephemerial. Who will remember or care in a couple years about those things? I want my work to have a lasting, positive impact that really matters. When I finish my day, I want to know that my being there made a difference.

Working on the next iProfit to make someone else (or even my self) very rich isn't that satisfying...

The pinnacle of my career is knowing that my software helped to saved lives.

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The ultimate goal would be to get into game design and programming, but an equally attractive (albeit semi-unrelated) field would be a systems administrator. I like making things play nice together. :D

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It is better to develop a software for common people, for regular use purpose. Target application can be web application, daily use software etc. But in my view, Web is a best platform where people come to get help or get entertained. So, web applications & useful sites will be the future.

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I would love to be able to stay home and program whatever I wanted whenever I wanted. And of course make money off of it. I'm almost in my dream job now. The only problem is that I still get told what to build. :)

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  • Being my own boss
  • Working for NASA (doesn't matter if I code a calculator for them, it just sounds cool)
  • Being a game programmer in one of the big game studios (programming game engines and stuff sounds really fun)
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Work from home (20 acres of southern Oregon), work with a small team, have a product with social impact, have revenue tied directly to programming activity (more/better features = more revenue), and earn a reasonable living (fund retirement over ten years, pay off house, put kids through college).

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I think pinnacle is relative. Right now, the pinnacle of my career is something that I cannot necessarily see and achieve. However, once that pinnacle comes into range it turns into a goal and another peak looms into view.

It's easy to read that as goal setting, but I think as programmers our natural tendency is to get to a "dream" place and then push ourselves further, to be better or work on more difficult problems. Which is one of the reasons I love what I do.

Currently for me the pinnacle is to see Computer Science used to benefit developing nations ala "Engineers Without Borders"

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Being my own boss. Simply to use the tool and language I like. I am a .Net developer in my resume and will continue to be simply because "real" experience is what count when they hire you. It very hard to escape this once your started...

I wish I could put the bread on the table programming Ruby and various other tools as needed. Doing a product I like and care about. I am a bit sick of doing software so people can produce/sale more, when we already live in a overconsumption/overproduction world.

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What rewards me is knowing that the software I develop is used by people and is helpful. I'm lucky that my current job fulfils this aim, although I still get frustrated by management pressure, working with third parties who aren't entirely reliable and that sort of thing.

A dream job would be working on some skunkworks project for a company that really supports its employees, like the Google of old. Alternatively, I'd love to work for a respected games developer like Epic or Lionhead, but I know that my coding skills wouldn't be nearly l33t enough ;)

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Programming Device drivers in Assembly Language.

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Figuring out how to program my computer using a Guitar Hero interface, so I could be a "rockstar developer".

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This is the only context I ever want to see the adjectives "rockstar" and "developer" concatenated :-) – Ryan Delucchi Jan 28 at 0:55
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Sitting on a sailboat or a beach... - that is the pinnacle of a successful career for me.

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I wanna devise a virus and bring dire straights to your environment. Crush the corporations with a mild touch and make the world revert back to papyrus.

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I'm pretty happy with the job that I have right now:

  1. My kids think my job is totally cool (all else pales in comparison!).
  2. My work is important. People count on the systems that we develop.
  3. Sensible hours + reasonable home life balance.
  4. I get to work with nearly any technology that I can make a case for (e.g., we're always on the edge of stable Java releases).
  5. I get to go all over the world and do things that I've never even imagined in other jobs.
  6. I work with people that I genuinely like and am proud to associate with.
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Run a Company thas help people preserve the environment by developing high end solutions based on Ubiquitous computing. programming on an AERON CHAIR in a keyboard less computer

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Electronic Design Automation

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I wanna do something like Rodney McKay (stargate atlantis).. Something way cooler and cutting edge than what people do now. Maybe some project in NSA that is declassified after 30 years (and am not even a US citizen so cant make that happen :( ).

Normally in the industry "what is profitable" is generally not "What is cooler". I want something that pays enough for me and my family to have a decent living standard and something good enough to make Mondays much more exciting.

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I would like to be self-employed and work out of a low-population location in the Rockies like western Montana. The idea of being able to be my own boss and live in a rural area yet still do what I'm good at is extremely appealing.

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I want to be a game programmer, i love 3D and want to increase my skills in programming so that i can complement my artistic abilities

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Most of these answers are wrong.

Socrates already thought this stuff out. He even had Plato write it out for him in a book.

A lot of the answers here can be abstracted into one of the three things that drive the world... money, power, sex.

What we really (or at least should) want is happiness. And happiness isn't some crazy, hippy notion. It's defined as pursuing excellence. If you don't want to read the whole drab manual, the Oracle (not Larry Ellison's) even offers a somewhat relevant pithy synopsis:

  • know yourself, and nothing to excess

Find happiness by knowing your lot in life and making the most of it. Most of these answers are short sighted in that they focus on some concrete thing to want or have. Modern social scientists are putting metrics to the fact that getting these things doesn't make you happy.

As programmers, we probably share a lot of the same sentiments about what makes working tolerable or even fun:

  • being good at what we do
  • working with other people who are pleasant and good at what they do
  • having fun at work
  • once in a while, being intellectually challenged at what we do
  • making enough money to be comfortable

All of these things you can try to create in your work environment - no matter what title you have.

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I didn't -1 your opinion, but I think most of these answers are about happiness - freedom of being your own boss, coolness in getting something to Mars - and not about money, power, or sex. – David Dec 8 '08 at 20:42
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  • Being my own boss and choosing the projects I want to work on and how they should be done
  • If I had the know how, I would code against miniature devices and have them do my bidding. Make home automation cheap and efficient for all families to use and save money by.
  • Working from home where home is out west in the mountains.
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Ì want a job with a boss who understands how coding works, and that doesn't involve maintaining software written by someone who doesn't.

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