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Dude, I was a history student. :) (I taught myself to program with library books and a C-64, starting when I was five or so.)

Just, it boggles my mind how many ideas from barely ten years ago seem completely unfamiliar to most programmers. As Steve Yegge put it, "Oh, right, I keep forgetting: you were born in nineteen-ninety something, and you're nineteen, and I'm ninety-something."

I'm only 27, but I'm starting to feel like I'm at least one programmer-generation back (and, occasionally, the cranky old man yelling, "get off my lawn!"). I find a lot of inspiration in the 70s-80s Unix-era books, for example. While some of the surface details have changed, those guys wrote lucidly about ways to design useful systems without them growing into impossibly tangled monstrosities (even before C++...). A lot of issues programmers struggle with today have been mulled over for decades, and there's a lot of good advice if you look. The field hasn't changed that much.

I see ideas that keep getting rediscovered, and sometimes it's really sad how few stick. Lisp had a lot of great ideas in it, yes, but it's not the only old language that did, and the way it gets exalted that way touches a nerve of mine sometimes. (FWIW, the second paragraph in my response above was saved right as the edit window closed. I was still rewriting it, and it sounds harsher than I would have kept.)



Yeah, the standards seem to be lower in general. Probably because the barriers to entry are lower. (-: As an oldie, I try to be humble by remembering the Flynn effect. :-)

And then...

Be happy kid, it gets worse. :-)

Exercise, take vacations and make certain you relax enough (a meditation-course is good; there are non-religious ones). Also, be careful with your teeth; an infection I had no other effects of, made me chronically tired for a long time and really destroyed my life (I thought I had burned out).

And work with stuff you care about, otherwise you'll probably hate yourself and everyone else.

Most other stuff you seem to know.

Sorry for that, but a 20-something trying to sound world weary needs a pat on the head. :-)




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