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Having worked in software development for 12 years, I've recently started to worry about ageism in the industry. Seeing I'm not too bad at what I do I've never really worried about where my next job's going to come from, but the more I look around me the younger software developers seem to get.

Although I feel I'm now at the top of my programming game, I have some management experience and I'm now wondering if I should make a fully-fledged leap from development to ensure future career security.

I know ageism has traditionally be linked with the IT industry, but given modern employment law makes discrimination illegal, is ageism still a real problem for software developers? Or are my aging neurons deluding me?

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vote up 82 vote down

I've entered my 40's, and worry about this myself. I still make very good money as a developer, but I'm fearful that all the people who understand my value will retire or switch jobs or something, and then I'll be competing with the twenty-somethings who work for $20/hour.

My personal strategy for success is this:

  • Work very hard at keeping my skills up to date, and let everyone know I'm doing so
  • Stay away from "commodity development" that anybody can do (CRUD screens, drag-and-drop development, etc.), and instead focus on those things that an experienced person does better than a novice
  • Take managerial roles when necessary, but turn down any promotion that is going to take me too far away from daily coding
  • Try to be a mentor to younger developers, and don't talk down to them or treat them with disrespect. (Every co-worker could eventually be a boss or a client.)
  • Keep plenty of money in the bank, so I won't be desperate if I need to search for a new job
  • Do whatever is asked of me, with a smile
  • Don't be a jerk
  • Schmooze

There are plenty of employers out there who value some gray hair in their ranks. If you want your salary to keep increasing, you may have to accept some managerial responsibilities, but you don't have to stop being a developer.

Don't let DrPizza and his ilk scare you. You don't want to work for someone like him anyway.

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Great answer, +1. I'm only 19 but this "problem" has crossed my mind several times which makes me worry for the future. Thanks for the tips. – Dennis Jun 3 at 5:38
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vote up 29 vote down

One way older guys tend to get into trouble is by not keeping up with new technology. They might be assembler gurus, but how many jobs have a requirement for assembler these days? Knowing relevant information is what will make you attractive to future employers, not what you're age is.

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Well for starters, not many "new / young" programmers start off learning assembler or cobol or something. Of course there will be some, but like you say, the jobs for those roles are few and far between. The best thing to do is keep on top of your skills - old and young. – Mark Ingram Feb 6 at 17:09
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@le dorfier, what the hell are you talking about? It isn't ageism to point out that as a generalization people tend to stop learning the latest x/y/z after dozens of years in the game. – Simucal Feb 7 at 5:54
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vote up 26 vote down

In many ways many corporate structures treat development as quite a blue-collar activity - it can't be something that people will want to do their entire career. If you're a widget-maker turning a crank every day, then you want to get a promotion to be the supervisor (or to be on the machine that turns out luxury widgets). Then the line manager, then the plant manager and then the company - BWA-HA-HA, the power and the glory!

But software development is not widget cranking: a painter doesn't aspire to promotion to be a gallery owner? Perhaps a surgeon or a colleage professor has levels of responsibility, but many jobs tie together more responsibility with administration and management of colleagues. A teacher who doesn't become school head isn't considered a bad teacher.

Much of what I perceive as ageism, therefore, stems from the assumption that if you're still cutting code into your forties then you must be bad, because why else aren't you managing people? I know many coders who've eschewed promotions for precisely this reason. Why would I want to do a job which involved more meetings, more HR issues and less of the stuff we actively enjoyed and which drew us to this in the first place.

I'd employ the person that could do the job. Too often, though, older people are too skilled in some areas and will be commensurately more expensive. That's not ageism, that's economics. I don't assume someone over 40 to be a bad coder, but I'm not going to employ them as an entry-level generalist doing the database grunt work and the boring admin tasks - they'd leave and I'd be interviewing again really soon.

Over time you develop into a niche in your profession - you become more specialised and are harder to employ on that basis. Ask anyone else in other walks of professional life - senior doctors, tax lawyers or accountants struggle to move jobs, too.

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+1: "a painter doesn't aspire to promotion to be a gallery owner". Well said mate. – Andreas Grech Feb 8 at 5:13
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vote up 15 vote down

If you are doing purely development tasks, will you be able to compete with a 'Developer' ten years younger?

Probably not.

You will be more expensive, will not work long hours as you have a family to go to and so on.

As you get older you need to find ways of adding value to your employer/team/whatever. You mention management - you could go that way. You have to get into some sort of leadership role - 'people' leadership (management), technical leadership (architecture), domain leaderhip (subject matter expert). Once you start doing more leadership tasks, you are doing less coding, which means you are no longer a developer - and ageism does not apply.

Although to maintain some street cred, you still have top coding skills in something.

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vote up 13 vote down

I think, as long as you are producing great software, you shouldn't worry much, but do note how other developers are coping with their ageisms:

  • Moving to upper/middle management
  • Writing books
  • Publishing blogs (esp., "experience stories" blogs)
  • Conducting seminars
  • Training other devs
  • Setting up companies

Choose your poison, but remaining in development job (especially in senior developer positions or "legacy systems maintenance") is definitely still an option!

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vote up 13 vote down

I'm 49 and I'm a programmer.

Well actually I'm a DBA, IT consultant and Business Analyst too. But in my heart I'm a coder - and I think I'm getting better with age. And I make a nice living at it, thank you - but I put a lot of effort into setting myself up that way.

There has always been ageism in IT. I entered commercial IT relatively late in my mid-20 after being a research scientist (biological - but writing scientific code for analysis). WHen I went to move jobs at 28 looking for an Analyst/Programmer job one recruitment company told me I was 'too old'.

Ha. Since then I've done a rollercoaster so far as coding is concerned - followed the big corporate trail up though systems analyst to project manager by my mid-30s before deciding a really missed coding. Went to a small organisation as senior developer then morphed into DBA for 7 years - but started writing code at home which grew contacts and income until I started running my own consultancy a little over 10 years ago. I purposely don't grow larger because I don't want to spend my time managing other people having fun writing code, but I do have a large network of other consultants in complementary fields (graphics, management consultancy etc) I can collaborate with.

My clients are nearly all in the SME sector, most I talk to the boss directly and they no or limited development support inhouse. Age in this case is an advantage as experience with systems in business means that people trust me as I can both deliver software, and deliver the right software for the business context. There is something awfully satisfying about being able to go to a client and say 'you need to spend $10k on this hardware and software development to support this' and the client does it because they trust your abilities and the experience you bring to recommend that decision.

So I spend about 50% of my time writing code, 25% doing 'business IT consultancy' and 25% general purpose IT to support that - for instance several of the systems I've developed for my clients are web based - and I run the web servers to host them.

And lastly it's a great job for fitting with family life and commitments. I have my office in the house (large room, lots of computers and screens) and I work probably 10 hours a day, but it fits with family. I've been at home when my kids were small and when they've come back from school as they've grown older. I don't even have to be in one place - last week I had to see a client on site at the same city when my son is a student, so I go in, see my client at lunchtime, sit in Starbucks all afternoon coding on my laptop, then take him out for dinner. Perfect mix :-)

So ageism - phah. Ageism is only a problem if you associate with people who are ageist - and as a society we're growing older and many of those older people who do have work going are not going to be comfortable with giving it to ageist whippersnappers like DrPizza. There's plenty of opportunity for older developers, but you have to play to the strength of the experience you've accumulated and adapt. If you don't learn new technologies and stay excited by what's happening then that's your problem, not ageism.

Myself I see myself coding until I drop. I'm actually looking forward to being more flexible as I get older - when all the kids have left home we've plans to equip a camper-van with all the tech I need and wander around europe nomadically for a year or three working remotely as needed.

Coding is the best occupation ever invented. Who on earth would want to give it up?

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vote up 11 vote down

@DrPizza

Such a sweeping statement about 40+ year olds being bad developers is simply a nonsense. Maybe it applies to areas you have experience of (database/web/corporate internal apps? ), but it certainly does not apply in the area I work in which is much more technically oriented - CAD, graphics, performance systems, mathematics, real-time, development of SDK's to a technical customer base, etc. I.e. "Scientific" programming vs "database". I.e. there is an enormous amount of valuable domain expertise locked into an older brain, and that is something that can't be replaced by cheap labour.

Over the years I have come across many a 40-something who is simply very good at what they do. Not all personality types actually want to be "management" - many shy away from the personal interaction that is implied. Others are simply interested in the technical aspects of the work they do.

A difference in behaviour, perhaps, is that your young-gun probably devours books in his own time, works silly hours, and types lots and lots and lots of code. Whereas your older statesperson (to not be sexist here) probably is more selective in reading, and has a home family life to go back to. Trust me, it's hard to read a 750 page technical book with a 4 year old jumping on your head.

Back to the original question on jumping to management. The assumption that this makes you more secure is not necessarily true - often the technical manager is the easiest person to get rid of, and the last position a company will fill by external recruitment. Based on purely anecdotal evidence, I would hazard that most software management positions are filled by internal promotion as it is normally the local guru/expert who naturally floats there.

I would certainly back up other replies saying that you should always try to keep up to date with some new technology, and also mentor the younger guys.

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vote up 10 vote down

One of the reasons why there are not that many old guys in IT is simply that it hasn't been around as a mainstream career for that long. In ten years time I am sure most of us will still be in the industry and you will steadily see more people in their 40s, 50s and 60s.

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vote up 7 vote down

As a developer pushing 50, I can't hold DrPizza's obvious lack of experience and mental acuity against him. After all, it wouldn't be fair to pick on a kid.

Oh, what the hell - here's DrPizza in a nutshell: "if you are good at something, you won't keep doing it."

How do these statements sound to you?

  • "If you are still performing surgery in your 40s you are almost certainly a bad doctor."

  • "If you are still representing clients in court in your 40s you are almost certainly a bad lawyer."

Of course it helps to have more to your career than just slinging code as you reach your 40s and 50s if only because there are so many people like Dr.Pizza there. But I'd have no problem hiring another developer at my age as long as they still loved the field.

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vote up 6 vote down

I believe developers should worry about ageism, because typically it's going to be exhibited by PHBs who think that if your were any good, you wouldn't want to be programming. It will limit our ability to acquire interesting work in the future.

A number of times I've been asked in job interviews, "Where do you see yourself in five years time?" My stock answer, "Doing what I'm doing now: programming" seems to disappoint interviewers; clearly they think anyone worth their salt would aspire to management roles (strangely, I prefer job satisfaction to some vauge managerial power).

With my economist's hat on: on the other hand, demographically workers (regardless of age) will be in demand due to the aging population of most western societies.

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vote up 5 vote down

I believe it's important to stay current. It seems too many people try to rest on the skills they have and expect the company they work for to keep them current. I have always made the time to keep my skills current and to make sure that I can apply those skills at work.

It's also important to be realistic in what an appropriate salary is. A 50+ year old developer's salary requirements isn't the same as a 21 year old. When looking for a job an older person may not get it just because they are demanding a higher salary. I don't consider that ageism, but it is a side affect of aging that I believe is more relevant.

@DrPizza, That is ageism. I'm 54 and curious as to what your rational is for your statement?

@DrPizza again. You make the statement that "If you're still writing software in your 40s you are almost certainly bad at your job". I'm blown away by your lack of understanding. All good programmers need to stop writing software when they turn 40?

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vote up 3 vote down

I'd be hesitant to hire anyone over the age of about 40.

From DrPizza's Profile:

Age: 27

That's that mystery solved then.

In saying that, I'm 26, and I sometimes find it difficult to relate to people in say their 40's.

When speaking about technical/work issues, I get along just fine, but when people start talking about taking their kids to school and all that kind of stuff, it's hard to say more than "oh, um, yeah."
That's kind of a conversation killer, and does make it hard to bond with people. It might not make sense, but those random 'water cooler' chats you have with your co-workers go a long long way towards making a happy team.
Legal or not, age does provide a huge barrier towards that kind of thing.

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vote up 3 vote down

Ugh, Digg-like comments on Stack Overflow already?!

Anyway, I think this kind of dialog more than proves why younger developers differ from wiser developers.

As I got older I found that 1) I was less willing to do interesting work for less than top dollar, and 2) As your salary increased, so did corresponding expectations from the employer. This tells me a 40+ developer can survive in the technical ranks, but must do so in ways different than a 20-something coming right out of school. e.g. Consulting tends to demand top-notch talent in exchange for ridiculously good pay, if you can keep up with the pace.

After all, unlike my 20's I now have a house, wife, kid, dog and a heap of bills to take care of before my own interests. The money is much more important now.

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vote up 3 vote down

Ageism (or any negative ism) is a frame of mind. I've seen feeble old people I wouldn't put in charge of collecting milk money, I've also seen old people whose minds are sharper than tacks. I have a great aunt who has been legally blind for over 10 years, yet if you drive her out of her old home and around town, she can tell you where you are at any given point better than I can by reading street signs.

There is a common logical fallacy that goes something like "after the fact, therefore because of the fact" Or the "causation vs. Correlation" thing. If you get fired from your job in today's climate and are over 40, are you the victim of age discrimination, or are you being downsized because your salary (with 15+ years experience) is too large for the company to afford? The traditionally large salaries are reserved not for the elite of the elite in the programming room, but for the fragging suits that do nothing all day*.

*to the suits reading this, no offense!

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vote up 2 vote down

I think it depends on your personality and skill sets. We are subject to fierce collaboration and ever changing technology. As some get older, some tend not collaborate very well (take criticisms personally) or do not understand simple concepts like DRY. Meanwhile many others lead the industry as thought leaders, or lead their team as gurus.

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vote up 2 vote down

When I look around me I think it's the other way around. There are lots of young programmers because most of them get management jobs eventually. I know a lot of companies that tried hiring experienced programmers (ie 20 years of programming experience) but there can't find them.

I hope Í can keep developing for a long time but I'm not too worried about my employment possibilities in the future.

When you're in a more senior programming-job employers will probably expect more of your social skills though. So it might be a good idea to invest in those skills.

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vote up 2 vote down

I think that it works both ways,

I'm a good decade or so younger than the other developers on my team at work (I'm mid 20s, they're mid 30s/40s). I worry that they consider me too young for the position and don't give me respect as a result - even though I'm equally qualified for our current tasks with up to date and relevant experience. I get very frustrated by the dogma surrounding software development and really don't feel my age should have any bearing on my ability to write good code.

While kronoz makes a good point that age discrimination is officially illegal (I'm in the UK too) - I think there's a natural tendency for people to group around their own age, and at most places there's a well established company culture that has an intangible but real effect on hiring decisions. Age equality on hiring is clearly very difficult to enforce, and much harder to gauge from the subject's perspective than when they're actually in a role and being missed in promotions/raises etc.

I think none of us can tell you if your ageing neurons are deluding you, because we don't have experience of your specific circumstances and the culture at your place of employment. The only advice I can give is if you really think you're at the top of your programming game - make a conceited effort to stay there. Good code is good code and if your employer is of any merit that should shine through regardless of age.

I'd also say typically people look to those older for advice and wisdom (the natural path to management), so it might be an idea to focus those skills, to mentor those junior to you and at the same time making your worth to the team/company higher. But that said, if programming is what you love, stick to it. There's no use worrying over something like age because you can't change it. There are good employers out there who won't care about your age. Don't change what you love doing because of a number. It's cliche, but life is short and you need to be happy working.

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vote up 2 vote down

@DrPizza

While it's apparent a number of people find your comments distasteful, I have to say there's definately some resonance with your comments and the IT industry.

I've come across a number of managers who felt they were pushed out of development to prove they were any good, and, as Unsliced said, development is often treated as a blue collar job which means you have to progress away from coding if you want to climb the ladder.

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vote up 2 vote down

Most employers don't offer dual career tracks for non-managerial staff to rise through the ranks whilst allowing them to do the things that they are good at (i.e. writing programs).

That is true of most bad employers, but the trend is changing at more enlightened companies.

As such, typically anyone with any great proficiency will cease to be a developer sooner or later. If you're still writing software and you're in your 40s it tends to mean only one thing: you're not very good at it.

That has not been my experience. Many developers realising that there is limited opportunity for career progression and bored of office politics, take the obvious root that allows them to earn a good income and do what they love; they become contractors. In a large financial centre like London, good contractors can easily earn £600 (>US$1000) per day, so in the contract market the opposite is true, if you're still getting contracts in your 40s it is because you are really good.

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vote up 2 vote down

@Unsliced

I think you hit an important nail on the head by mentioning economics. Since most people want their salaries to increase with age, perhaps it's fair to say there's an inherent ageism in the ecomonics of software development.

Although businesses will invariably pay for a few expensive coders, as developers age a lot of them will need to move away from coding if they want their salaries to increase. This also offers an explanation for why old devlopers are sometimes thought of badly. Old developers either prefer coding to maximizing their earning potential, or they couldn't make it up the ladder from development and probably write bad code to boot!

Perhaps if code made the world go round instead of money it'd be a different story for those of us with greying hairs. Sigh.

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vote up 2 vote down

One of the best programmers I ever meet was guy who was 70+ y/o. No, he hadn't kept up with the times, but if you needed a RPG400 programmer he was the go to guy (no pun intended). I can only hope to be a 1/2 as sharp as this guy when I'm 70.

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vote up 2 vote down

I mean, that sounds kind of flip. But I'm serious: most software developers are godawful and so I'd rather just go for the cheapest ones I can find.

Wow, your the classic PHB.

You do realize that its people like you who have brought software quality down, thus lowering the bar and allowing more worthless programmers to get jobs, further bringing quality down?

Good Job!

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vote up 2 vote down

Well the arguments about programmers above 40 are simply stupid. Those have learned the basic skills and not just the click-here-click there get 100 thousand pages of code attitude. I suggest to see when in some areas you may get considered master. You'll hardly find them in the below 40 years area, (exceptions just prove the rule). It would really interest me to see comparisons of maintenance costs of code written elder-school and current educated. I'd be quite interested also in any figures on how outsourcing and letting down ones own educated programmer staff turned out to work.

I bet in the short run the outsourcing will win, but let wait till that code will get legacy....

It's definitly a thing of personality. If you do like to solve problems, do like puzzles and the like then you have the persistance to do programming. If you just see how code bloat is spitted out these days you shudder if you just think of the poor soul having to maintain that mess.

I for my part would more likely hire an older programmer, than someone having left with nothing more but some crash course about Java. It would probably be very funny to get suc a person to maintain some C code.

The base things to programmming have not changed a bit. You have to read code and you have to understand it. If the code is written in Assembler, C, Prolog, xfoowhatever does not matter, and it's get much more important once that the base has been set.... And thinking that we all know much better than the old-ones. Simply swept under the carpet achievements they laid the ground, just check Smalltalk-Workstations, Lisp Operating Systems and Unices...., see the hyped OO stuff.

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vote up 2 vote down

Ageism is out there: I remember being a developer in my late 20s sitting in an open plan area next to my 30-something manager. He was on the phone to a recruitment agency looking for more developers. "Don't send me anyone over 30. If they haven't made manager by 30 they can't be any good". I promptly resolved to quit (OK there were other reasons too). Funnily enough, shortly before I was gone there was a reorganization and a bunch of 40+ "company old guard" developers were assigned to our team. My ageist manager simply couldn't deal with them; he couldn't even interact with them without a lengthy roundabout "hows the wife and kids ?" preamble.

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vote up 2 vote down

It's a huge problem in my life. I've developed videogames for over 25 years ... recently I had some cardiac trouble, and had to take a month medical leave of absence from my current employer (unpaid). The third day of my leave, I was notified that I had been fired. It's very VERY difficult to find meaningful work as a developer in a field where the average age is 25. Nobody wants to bother with you .. why should they?

In the videogame business, anybody over 40 is looked at with suspicion and doubt. It's pretty much always been that way. After my most recent experience, I'm deciding to not work in the field anymore.

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vote up 1 vote down

In the UK age discrimination is illegal and you can sue a company for blatantly discriminating on that, so first and foremost companies just aren't allowed to do that, not in the UK anyway.

Having said that, I would say it all depends on the company you work for - I imagine something like a start up or similar with a young culture will be more likely to discriminate than not.

Personally I've not experienced it, I work with people my own age (20's) and people in their 30's and 40's too and there's no problem.

The only problem I've encountered is wondering how on earth some programmers with vastly more experience than me are barely that much better than I am, it can be very disappointing. I imagine you are a far better programmer than that though :-)

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vote up 1 vote down

Perhaps something interesting to throw out there, but ageism also exists when you're a young developer. Not when you hit a 'normal' age to be working for professional positions at, but certainly there's a concept of "well, you're only young so you can't be that good".

Interesting how things come full circle for older programmers. As a young programmer myself, the main benefit of working with older, more experienced programmers seems to be what you learn from them. And sure, the vast majority of people over a certain age are in management - but there's nothing that says if you like a position or just sitting coding all day, that as long as you have the skills you shouldn't be doing it.

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Heh... DrPizza's not saying 40-year old programmers are bad by default, just that circumstances at a majority of companies do not produce good 40-year old programmers.

MSN

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I find it funny that some of the posters seem to imply that age doesn't matter in terms of the quality of the code they produce. If you're older, you have a wider and deeper experience, which does allow you to make better decisions and write better software, you've made more mistakes in the past, youv'e had more time to get your head wrapped around some of the important problems. Granted, if you're young you can whip out the syntax all the same, but that's certainly only a small part of software development, design and planification mistakes are extremely costly in the business of building complexity. Also, while it is true that some of an older dev's experience is obsoleted by new technologies, much of the spirit of these things doesn't change. That's why it's good to know the fundamental stuff very well, because there is much power in recognizing bad reinventions of older things better though out. Everyone should be familiar with the power of LISP, for example, and relational databases.

I for one believe that I'm getting better and better with age, and I don't foresee this stopping anytime soon. A potential problem is that some of the people who are in charge of hiring in large firms don't understand what it takes to get good developers on board--they see them as replaceable monkeys, because they are so far from understanding what they do.

In summary: older developers have more experience, and thus are more likely to produce better software. Note that "more likely" is not a guarantee of "better". Some young people are talented, the problem with it is that it is a non-obvious judgement call to make.

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vote up 1 vote down

im glad to have seen this.. i share your sentiment as i am also in the IT industry for a dozen years now, and ive started asking myself the same things...

in the past 5 years i've been doing both administrative and technical tasks. i just couldn't leave programming and all that crazy stuff behind. although management is as challenging as coding, but my heart and passion still longs for doing the dirty work..

my stand is if we can do both, we've got an edge. not everyone can excel @ managing people and doing technical tasks @ the same time. with age comes wisdom and i guess that's our edge over the newbies. if the passion for newer things are there, don't lose it. if higher opportunities comes our way, lets consider them! even steve jobs and bill gates has to pass the baton...

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