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> I'll never start a company that sends a man to Mars or discovers the cure to a horrifying disease.

Maybe not, but you can work at one: https://jobs.counsyl.com

I work at counsyl and we're hiring generalist programmers, devops, etc.



But we all can't work there. Not only are there not enough jobs at That One Company That's Changing The World, someone needs to provide the tools and services the business is built on; all the ancillary things that allow Us to make progress (computers, operating systems ... vehicles and their fuel ... food for the humans ... waste receptacles and their sanitation ... etc)

How am I changing the world? A) By educating a future generation (my own children) in the ways of the world, by supporting their dreams and showing them how the world must function so they can realize their dreams; and B) by working for a company that provides services to its customers to use to make their employees more productive to grease the wheels of innovation and creativity so their own lives are enriched and their own dreams (and their children's dreams) can be realized.


> there not enough jobs at That One Company That's Changing The World

I met some Counsyl devs at PyCon last year, they were wonderful. We talked about meaningful work.

There are so many companies and nonprofits trying to change the world. They need help with software. A partial list:

Broad Institute: http://www.broadinstitute.org (disclaimer, I work there)

JCVI: http://www.jcvi.org

Sanger: http://www.sanger.ac.uk

23andme: https://www.23andme.com


Thank you for this list! It'd be great if there was a resource somewhere that aggregated these companies so hackers could reference it as they look to switch jobs.


That's an interesting idea.

Whatever anyone thinks of the periodic surfacing of the feeling that Raganwald was expressing, the fact that it does come up with a degree of regularity indicates there's an unfulfilled need here.

What can be done to help people fill it?

It seems one thing that factors in is that people feel helpless to get started on the path to working on "big problems". What can be done to make it not feel so overwhelming? What can help us all find our way to approaching these questions and actively searching for solutions?


It's called "mid-life", and it ultimately doesn't care what you're actually doing. If you're just making money, you feel bad that you aren't helping people, or that you aren't accomplishing enough. If you're helping people, you feel just as bad about how you don't seem to be helping people, or about all the ways you could imagine doing more.



Many of the JCVI programmers groan and complain that they can't turn that organization around. I am not convinced additional programmers will fix JCVI.




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