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Yeah I didn't realize I had my name up here.
If anyone i guess maybe the other developer at the company but I think he falls into the dark matter dev category so.... probably not.
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musicm122 wrote: probably not Hopefully.
And I hope things improve for you.
"the debugger doesn't tell me anything because this code compiles just fine" - random QA comment
"Facebook is where you tell lies to your friends. Twitter is where you tell the truth to strangers." - chriselst
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Thanks for the feedback. It was much appreciated. Its all to easy for me to have another gig though. Like most devs I get the recruiters calls and email a few times a month. The temptation is there but, I'd imagine those jobs wouldn't be a whole lot better. Especially not for the remote work situation.
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Pualee wrote: 1. Never stop looking for the next job.
2. A bird in the hand is worth 2 in the bush.
Honestly, this is some of the absolutely best advice ever.
It means: Always be learning, growing, ready to move forward.
Yet, always consider the fact that having a job and the ability to support yourself and your family is the most important thing of all (in career).
Great summarization of the everything you need to know for business.
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Life's short do what makes you happy!
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.0 Beta
There's a fine line between crazy and free spirited and it's usually a prescription.
I'm currently unsupervised, I know it freaks me out too but the possibilities are endless.
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Well I'm doing what makes me happy on the side anyway.. Making a game. But its not the sorta thing I expect to make enough to live off of anyway.
My wip game stuff[^]
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Awesome stuff, who knows you may be the next great game designer/programmer?
New version: WinHeist Version 2.1.0 Beta
There's a fine line between crazy and free spirited and it's usually a prescription.
I'm currently unsupervised, I know it freaks me out too but the possibilities are endless.
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Awwwww.... I am but a small fish in a huge pond as far as GameDev but thank you for the compliment. But I do enjoy the heck out of it anyway.
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musicm122 wrote: My wip game stuff[^] Why is the Jill of the Jungle theme stuck in my head, now?
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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musicm122 wrote: I'm doing what makes me happy on the side
That's the way it goes.
If you're fortunate enough to be able to support yourself off of a career that still affords you the ability to have down-time to do things that you want to do, then you are very fortunate indeed.
We always have dreams of supporting ourselves from the exact thing we love, but it is often unrealistic and it often compromises the the things we love anyway.
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First, the relevant and shameless plug for a blog entry of mine: Selling Ideas to Management[^]
If possible, try to focus some of your streamlining energy towards the tech support side of your job. You will need to make time to gradually improve the process heavy workflow as you can, as well as make improvements to the software that cause continual tech support headaches.
The way I see it, you are in a perfect position to learn what the customer really wants rather than guessing, and writing software dictated by some marketing research. This sort of experience will be invaluable to you as you progress in your career.
If you don't get to code nearly as much as you would like, and you are not overloaded with hours from your current job, create a hobby project, or contribute to an open source project that could benefit from your talents.
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Paul M Watt wrote: The way I see it, you are in a perfect position to learn what the customer really wants rather than guessing, and writing software dictated by some marketing research. This sort of experience will be invaluable to you as you progress in your career.
I hadn't thought of it that way. I guess I'm in a good position to level up UX and my general user interactions. Nice article by the way. I think I'll read over it again before the next time I think about talking to management about improvements. You totally had me pegged in the opening scenario. I guess, for me, what it boils down to is that I will just have to make the time for the things I think will make a difference.
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Thanks for the compliments.
musicm122 wrote: You totally had me pegged in the opening scenario.
I think this has happened to many people.
I played this game for 4 years at a company until I realized that we were becoming more and more successful, and they would never schedule time for the quality refactoring I was asking for. I also realized, that I could find time to to make those adjustments gradually. So that's what I did.
At the company I work for now, we have a yearly request of R&D ideas, and they fund the best ideas. As I put together my ideas, most of them we quality related. That's when a colleague pointed out to me that the R&D committee is looking for "value add" proposal's.
That's when it clicked for me.
Regards
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Perhaps you can start with something small where you can prove that you end up saving time and money.
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Thats a pretty good idea. I could whip out an installer for patch gen updates or something like that pretty easy.
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My suggestion, my opinion, been in your shoes before...
If you have one iota of an inkling to leave, then leave. You will never go anywhere in this business, without moving up and broadening your horizons, and wallet.
Always move up, never laterally. Always move up in pay, never take a new job for the same pay.
Follow you dreams and you and your family will go far.
I am extremely happy with my work and I make very good money. I provide very well for my family now. I didn't start off on easy street. I had to work my ass off, but my hard work and learning from the best around me, paid off.
Good luck.
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Slacker007 wrote: Always move up, never laterally. Always move up in pay, never take a new job for the same pay.
Follow you dreams and you and your family will go far.
More great advice.
This has been my experience too.
I agree 100%.
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You have to weigh those priorities of yours. I can offer one piece of advice. Years down the road you may regret not having as much time with your daughter. Would you say the same about any job?
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Something I should ask, I got a phone call from an agent last SUNDAY @ 10:13am, I took the call and I am told spoke to him/her/it(?) for around a half hour. The down side of this was I was recovering from a Saturday the marked a friends 40th (alcohol + curry + alcohol) anyone else been bother by an agent on a Sunday morning....
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He called during church to see if you're religious.
Whether or not you passed the test is entirely dependent upon his belief system.
Good luck.
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Quote: He called during church to see if you're religious. I did not think of that, might be why I have heard nothing since!
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If he called on a Sunday at 10, and you answered on a Sunday at 10... the probability is high that you are of a the same mindset regarding religion.
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Not if he's in a different time zone.
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Quite the sneaky way to get around discrimination laws, I guess.
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