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Hi Guys,

I just want to get an opinion, I only started web programming last year and am 28 years old. So far I enjoy it , although would my age make it difficult for me to get a job in the industry and is it somewhat too late to make that change?

Cheers
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Baji Jabbar 18-Oct-10 5:33am    
Good luck dear... Be confident yourself and nothing will come against that. I am also so thrilled and become so confident to read all the comments below..

CrimeanTurtle2008 wrote:
is it somewhat too late to make that change?


Hell no!

At 28 you're just a puppy. I started programming at 20 - FORTRAN, I'm afraid - and used it in my career for years, adding languages and operating systems about as fast as they were invented. Somewhere along the line I no longer had the need or desire to program (and, admittedly, Windows was a lot of it because the ratio of presentation to functionality went suddenly from 20:80 to 90:10, and UI design bores me). Still, I've been trying to catch up lately. You never lose the bug once you're bitten.

Having one career in your life made sense when we could look forward to only about 45 years, according to my dad, and that made a lot of sense to me. Lifelong learning is the key to happiness, he taught me, and he proved it by living a long, happy life embracing several career paths. At my age (54) he had just completed his second Masters degree - in Landscape Architecture - having already been a mechanic, plant pathologist, real estate appraiser, creator of a new Masters degree program at Harvey Mudd college, and wood carver. He never found his age to be a barrier to entry in any field; in his retirement he was asked to write a comprehensive manual of climate-compatible plants for the state of Washington, and to design roadside viewpoints for their state highways.

I adopted his style, and have been a cook, dishwasher, waiter, real estate broker, stock broker, mechanic, electronics engineer, tax advisor, programmer, and power system engineer. In the past six months I've had to learn to design steel substation structures, and the concrete foundations to support them. If my performance reviews are any guide, I've been good at all of them; I've never had a salary raise less than twice the company average for the year.

If you want to program, program. If you love it, the jobs will find you (with a little work on your part, of course - they won't come knocking at your door). Any limits you might feel are entirely in your own mind, so lose them. Argue for your limitations, and you get to keep them; that's a tip that will serve you well to remember, whatever you decide to pursue in your life. You will experience failure, but there's absolutely no reason to let that stop you. Robert Heilbrunner once wrote that every young person should experience being fired. It teaches you two things; one, that your job is not your life, and you can go on without it, and two, that you can always find another job. This gives you the freedom to take risks without fear, to speak up when the boss is being an idiot, to stand up for what you know to be right.

You want to learn programming right now, so do it and don't let anyone scare you off of your chosen course. Certainly there will be challenges, but those will only make you stronger and smarter. If you love it, your day will come; if not, you'll be guided by experience into other pursuits. Just don't let fear be your guide, and don't worry about your age. You're just starting out in life, and it's an adventure. Have fun! :-D

BTW - You couldn't have chosen a better place to come for assistance. The people here are (generally) wise and helpful. Good choice.
 
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v2
I taught myself C++ at 30 and got my first job after 6 months. That's 10 years ago. It's not too late.
 
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Comments
Yusuf 16-Oct-10 18:07pm    
<evil sarcasm=""> So are you suggesting he start with C++
Yusuf 16-Oct-10 18:08pm    
I hate when I put angled brackets and forget to encode them, that was meant as [evil sarcasm]
28?

A Mere stripling.


I was using computers from the age of 11, on mainframes at 16 and I was as AS400 sysop by 25, then changed direction.

Only when I was fast approaching 40 did I get back into them in a big way, technology had moved on, and I had a lot of catching up to do.

If an old dinosaur like me can do it, you certainly can!
 
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It's in the movies that all the hard core coders are shown as nerdy pre-teens. Go to a real life programmer's conference and you'll be surprised to find all these ancient looking geeks, aged anywhere from low 40s to some folks in their 60s. So if you enjoy programming, go for it, and you will eventually get a decent job.
 
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v2
Always try to look at the better side of life. Go ahead and keep it up.Every day is a learning process where age should not be a constraint.
 
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v2
I started programming at 22 and you see there's no big difference. Age is no barrier to anything. You have chosen an excellent career path. Keep up your work. All the best.
 
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I do not think it is too late, carry on :-D
 
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Age is not important.Important is that how much you have learn ability and interest
 
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Hi

My Brother also started at a latee stage in his life and he is doing great thus far

Really go for it :D
 
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I started programming nine years ago at age 40. No problems with age at all.
 
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Nope.

I started in earnest when I was 26 (though I'd been mucking around with computers since I was 9). Before that I'd been a science teacher and tech support guy. What matters to most employers is how good a developer you are, and an ability to communicate what you are doing to non-techhies.
 
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Hi Crimean Turtle2008
Of course you can .
beleive me you have to be pacient i hope i spelled the word correctly
but once your personality posses this you shall love computer and many of those people who are working on (mostly) the same computer language
listen or read this carfully
i realized that i am a poetr writting poetry to decribe my loved computer if you can read arabic i can send you few of my poet if you need it in english my pleasure you can have it too
after writting alote of programs and being puzzeled among tremendous very huge number of errors along the age the brain sweep into another world to me it was not a music but to a poet i am not kidding any way go a head and join us
you will be activatting your memory too .the rules in this site is restrictted so i will stop writting more
khalid sabtan
saudia arabia
 
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v3
I can't really believe that you're concerned about this. Your ability to learn has less to do with your age than it has to do with your ability to comprehend what you read and your *desire to learn*.

However, just in case you can't cut it as a programmer, you should also work on a fall-back vocation, such as sweeping standing water off sidewalks, simple landscaping, or maybe relying on money you make by volunteering for experimental medical procedures.
 
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I started programming seriously when I was around 28 but that was 15+ years ago. It was very simple stuff, writing excel macros (I beleive version 4)on the mac. Age was not a problem.

I would also note that among the people I have hired over the years, I had the best fortune with people who had been moderately successful doing something else and then decided they wanted to program.

If it is what you want to do, just go for it. It is not always easy, regardless of age. It can be an awsome thing to do though.

Ken
 
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I started programming when i was 27 (C#) 2 years ago.
Google,Youtube and MSDN.
Never programmed before,a year ago I got a job.
I did an "exam",got production numbers from 2 plcs (opcserver) and wrote it down in excel spreadsheets (com interop).
My boss loved it and asked if i could do it bigger with database storage and reports.I said yes and spent a few sleepless nights learning as much and fast as i could since i didn't even know what multithreading was.Hahaha

Still working on the huge system with an automation programmer.
I'm loving it and my boss and his boss loves the results,they keep dumping work on me to automate the oldschool paperwork.
Based on my own experience i think you should go for it.:thumbsup:
 
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20 years ago when I started programming, I had an illusion that it could be a life long career. Nowadays I'm pretty sure that it's not going to take long before all programming job move to India, Vietnam, China or to some other place where people willing to get a college education and then work for $12/hr. If it's not too late go back to college and get an education in medicine - after all when you are sick you try to find a local doctor.
 
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Comments
CPallini 8-May-10 12:38pm    
Sooner medical doctors will be replaced by our softwares... :-)
If you are enjoying it, you are doing it wrong!!! ;P

Ok, joke aside age is not a factor, of course start young have a lot of advantages but i believe everything is about dedication.

So good luck
 
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