I am obviously the dinosaur of the group. I learned to program in FORTRAN on a mainframe using punch cards before my senior year in high school. I was fascinated at the ability to give a machine a list of things to do and have it follow my instructions. In college, I hung around the computer room and saw people do interesting things, such as ASCII plots, and experimented until I could do it too.
But I never considered it as a career since all the guys hanging out at the computer room (it was rare for a woman to come there), the computer science majors, had no social skills. Even I, a Geek physics major, recognized that.
But in graduate school, I got my MS in physics largely because I was able to do data analysis on the computer. And as I started work in the Air Force, I found at each job I could contribute the most by automating things. After a while, it became the main thing I did at each new job. Although I have retired from the Air Force, I still work full time as a scientific software developer.
But I am also a programmer as a hobby. I can’t stand the majority of commercial software because it doesn’t work the way I want it to. I still want the computer to do what I want. Computers do work for me… I will not do work for a computer.