|
-
Jun 12th, 2001, 01:39 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Addicted Member
Do teen programmers have a chance?
Yeah, well, I ask this because my friend (numtel) and I are programmers and are in our teens and we want to know if our fellow programmers think that we could actually sell any of our stuph or get contracted out by someone to make stuph for them.
By the way, if you are looking for someone to write a program for ya, email or PM me. We're broke and we'll work for peanuts, literally!
-
Jun 12th, 2001, 01:41 PM
#2
Hyperactive Member
If your work is any good you have a chance....but you also have to be willing to work hard and continue to learn fter you think you've learned it all! The worst part about working as a programmer is that you have to satisfy the users requirements whether they make sense or not...you have to be willing to listen to their idiotic ideas and still come up with a good application.
-
Jun 12th, 2001, 01:42 PM
#3
Nobody's going to purchase anything you make if you continue to spell stuff like 'stuph', unless it's a promotion gimick.
If you spell correctly, people will hold you with more respect, and feel safer purchasing anything from you.
-
Jun 12th, 2001, 01:43 PM
#4
Frenzied Member
-
Jun 12th, 2001, 01:48 PM
#5
Frenzied Member
Originally posted by denniswrenn
Nobody's going to purchase anything you make if you continue to spell stuff like 'stuph', unless it's a promotion gimick.
If you spell correctly, people will hold you with more respect, and feel safer purchasing anything from you.
I'm with Dennis. Programmers are all over the place, and managers want little RAD designers, not necessarily good programmers. It doesn't matter how good you are, it matters how well you market yourself.
Travis, Kung Foo Journeyman
As always, RTFM.
WWW Standards: HTML 4.01, CSS Level 2, ECMA 262 Bindings to DOM Level 1, JavaScript 1.3 Guide and Reference
Perl: Learn Perl, Llama, Camel, Cookbook, Perl Monks, Perl Mongers, O'Reilly's Perl.com, ActiveState, CPAN, TPJ, and use Perl;
YBMS, but Mozilla doesn't.
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 04:05 PM
#6
Lively Member
Originally posted by CiberTHuG
I'm with Dennis. Programmers are all over the place, and managers want little RAD designers, not necessarily good programmers. It doesn't matter how good you are, it matters how well you market yourself.
Utter boll*cks. What are you talking about 'Rad' Programmers. You ask any self respecting manager of most companies who they would rather have with them; A good programmer or someone who will sit around saying 'Cool... what's VB again?'
Hey man, take a chill pill, I can't program but that's cool, 'cos I look good and sound good, so someone is bound to pay me loadsa moola, yeah man.
If you have talent you will be hired. If you have personality and talent you will definatly be hired.
Marketing yourself works for marketing jobs.
Now, aren't you sorry you didn't just keep on scrolling?
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 04:28 PM
#7
Monday Morning Lunatic
I was under the impression they wanted people who could write the programs they wanted A programmer should be familiar with many types of program, including but not limited to RAD. In fact most programs are non-RAD (anything made using the API).
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 04:37 PM
#8
Frenzied Member
Originally posted by Jamagei
Utter boll*cks. What are you talking about 'Rad' Programmers. You ask any self respecting manager of most companies who they would rather have with them; A good programmer or someone who will sit around saying 'Cool... what's VB again?'
Hey man, take a chill pill, I can't program but that's cool, 'cos I look good and sound good, so someone is bound to pay me loadsa moola, yeah man.
If you have talent you will be hired. If you have personality and talent you will definatly be hired.
Marketing yourself works for marketing jobs.
*rotflmfao*
No, RAD as in Rapid Application Development. 
In other words, it doesn't matter if you know the intracicies of OO, arcane C++, and assembly. They want VB.
There are some Java jobs to be had, and there are some mainframe side jobs (Rexx, JCL, C++), but most managers don't care about good, slim, updatable product that can become an institution, they just want RAD. Something that can be thrown away in a few years because we've developed an entirely new product.
Travis, Kung Foo Journeyman
As always, RTFM.
WWW Standards: HTML 4.01, CSS Level 2, ECMA 262 Bindings to DOM Level 1, JavaScript 1.3 Guide and Reference
Perl: Learn Perl, Llama, Camel, Cookbook, Perl Monks, Perl Mongers, O'Reilly's Perl.com, ActiveState, CPAN, TPJ, and use Perl;
YBMS, but Mozilla doesn't.
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 05:03 PM
#9
Frenzied Member
GOOD NEWS! I just got my towns newspaper. As a teen you may not be able to get a great programming job, but just try to do your best to get your name out. About that newspaper. My high school (which I attend(was too young for this though)) just placed 5th in the world in a computer competition! NOW THATS GETTING YOUR NAME OUT! Just volunteer as a computer counselor at a camp, or do competitions like these kids in my school. Also you could get a job at a computer store....maybe have them get your name out. Who knows what can happen. Good LucK!
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 08:21 PM
#10
Teen programmers might not like this idea very much but I'd say get a degree.
Anyone can program, but to write good software you need to know a lot. My uni course started with a pile of sand and we built a basic PC, OS and a language to make it do something useful. You need this level of knowledge to get the best from your hardware. The corporate world demands a lot of skills thesedays, including reasonable literacy standards, an understanding of quality assurance procedures and a good understanding of corporate machinations so you hit the ground running. I think designing a correctly normalised database would be difficult for a lot of teen programmers.
I don't want to be a wet blanket but I firmly believe a degree is necessary.
Failing that get a good suit, good haircut and go hard. IT is also about image, at least sell yourself well.
-
Jun 14th, 2001, 09:32 PM
#11
Frenzied Member
I think college is a must. It doesn't matter how good you are, you need to be an all around good student in school
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 12:30 AM
#12
Hyperactive Member
Originally posted by MadWorm
...My uni course started with a pile of sand and we built a basic sand castle.
Originally posted by MadWorm
You need this level of knowledge to get the best from your hardware.
*ahem* *bollocks*
Originally posted by MadWorm
The corporate world demands a lot of skills thesedays, including reasonable literacy standards, an understanding of quality assurance procedures and a good understanding of corporate machinations so you hit the ground running.
*ahem* *business anaylst*
Originally posted by MadWorm
I think designing a correctly normalised database would be difficult for a lot of teen programmers.
There's hope for them yet, then.
td.
Last edited by tumblingdown; Jun 15th, 2001 at 12:34 AM.
"One logical slip and an entire scientific edifice comes tumbling down." - Robert M. Pirsig
[email protected]
"but if Einstein is right and God is in the details, reality requires that we sometimes get religion." - Scott Meyers.
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 01:00 AM
#13
Thread Starter
Addicted Member
Well, thank you all for your input, but I have a more specific question. I'm not even 14 yet, but my programming knowledge is more than enough for me to be able to turn out good software. What I want to know is do you think that a corporation would even take me seriously, even if the software that I offered them was better than any other offer they had? I've found that I'm often laughed at (figuratively speaking) because of my age, not my programming ability. Frankly, it pisses me off.
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 02:24 AM
#14
Frenzied Member
The Darling brothers (Codemasters) started programming and selling software in their teens and are now multi millionaires.
They started a few years ago mind you when the personal computing world was in its early stages - a case of being the right age at the right time.
I don't think the world is ready for another BMX Simulator yet!
You say you are a good programmer but that's your opinion, whereas every one on the forum is aware of Kumaraguru Gajarajan's (Active) abilities and I feel that sort of talent WILL be noticed.
If you want companies to take you seriously you'll need to have your abilities quantified i.e. paper qualifications.
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 04:14 AM
#15
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by goudabuddha
Well, thank you all for your input, but I have a more specific question. I'm not even 14 yet, but my programming knowledge is more than enough for me to be able to turn out good software. What I want to know is do you think that a corporation would even take me seriously, even if the software that I offered them was better than any other offer they had? I've found that I'm often laughed at (figuratively speaking) because of my age, not my programming ability. Frankly, it pisses me off.
Don't stress about it!!!! You got years for that yet...
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 04:23 AM
#16
Monday Morning Lunatic
At 14 you have a lot more useful things to spend your time doing. Trust me, I didn't think so, but I'm bloody glad I did A-Levels. I have learnt a huge amount that despite not being specific to programming, is still good general knowledge (plus that integration by parts rocks ).
I've just got a job for next year (gap year so low pay ) in the IT department of a printing company in Cradley. Spend a couple of hours in the morning sorting out problems across the company with broken mice, monitors, that sort of support thing, and then program the rest of the day. Depending on if I impress them then I'm guaranteed a proper job afterwards, negating the need to go to Uni.
I refuse to tie my hands behind my back and hear somebody say "Bend Over, Boy, Because You Have It Coming To You".
-- Linus Torvalds
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 08:34 AM
#17
Gaffer turned into the Nature Boy suddenly 
Tip for young programmers. Keep up with growing and new programming technologies. Dont get the attitude many older programmers get these days and be so uptight about new changes to a language for the better and refuse to learn it.
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 09:40 AM
#18
Lively Member
I'm not 14 (in college now)but I'd like to think that you would find things more entertaining than programming, But if you do want it bad enough, and think you could pull it off, great. Only you should look around locally at some buisinesses possibly one of your parents, and see if they need any type of software that may make their lives easier. then do it, and give it to them for free. tell them to just try it. and if it is any good, they will more than likely start to take you seriously. and possibly come back to you with modifications that they would like to see. then start talking about some type of payment, may it be only 5 bucks an hour. I'm not sure what type of a place you live in but I did similar stuff when I was in highschool, only I'm more of a hardware person. I worked at staples, and when ever someone would come in looking for ethernet cabling I would politely ask what it was for, most of them were getting cable modems, or dsl and needed to set up networking stuff, so I would say "I'm your man if you need help" and got a pretty good name out, people started coming in to staples asking for me specificly, and I charged $25 an hour. Then I got a really great gig installing a complete network at a small business, we brought the server and everything, did all the wiring. This is also the place I'm currently employee'd maintaining everything. it's only a 30 computer network but it pays well for a college student. and will be great on a resume.
Vini, Vidi, Vici!
-----------------
say this 5 times fast
"I am not a pheasant plucker, I'm a pheasant plucker's son. I'm only plucking pheasants, till the pheasant plucker comes."
-
Jun 15th, 2001, 10:55 AM
#19
Fanatic Member
Originally posted by Cander
Gaffer turned into the Nature Boy suddenly 
Tip for young programmers. Keep up with growing and new programming technologies. Dont get the attitude many older programmers get these days and be so uptight about new changes to a language for the better and refuse to learn it.
Nature boy or nurture boy - I'm flexible with both titles 
You're right of course about changing and adapting with languages. What I can't grasp is the rush man. Cmon, you got a 5-6 year window to make your fu<k-ups. Get drunk, kiss girls and boys, get caught smoking pot in the bike sheds - you know where I'm coming from? Start stressing about how you're going to get noticed, or get into a particular market etc as an early teen, and your' going to be heart-attack material by the time your 30. Chill boys....
-
Jun 21st, 2001, 05:09 PM
#20
Goudabuddha,
It doesn't matter how old you are, it matters how good you are. If you are an exceptional programmer, and you really stand out among the rest, you should be able to get a job in no time. I remember I got my first programming job when I was around 15 or 16.
-
Jun 21st, 2001, 05:26 PM
#21
Every one had to start somewhere to the road of utter chaos on planet digital.
If you want to do your own thing, rather than work for a Boss, then find something people need. Maybe you have an uncle or something that needs a program written to help out with the milk round or something. Do it for nothing, then get a good reference from the person, and contact every company/software house in your area with your resume.
We just employed a guy who did exactly that, he should actually be productive within a couple of months And he is Eighteen with an attitude..............major problem NO BUSINESS EXPIERANCE.
-
Jun 21st, 2001, 09:44 PM
#22
Frenzied Member
Last edited by JungleMan; Jun 21st, 2001 at 09:48 PM.
I'm bringing geeky back...
-
Jun 22nd, 2001, 03:43 AM
#23
Fanatic Member
I started profesionally when I was 20, and now have nearly 3 years of commercial expieirence. my advice is to start small, get some experince and slowly build your way up, and in no time at all you will be able to have gaffer's job, as he is ****e anyway
Yeah, well I'm gonna build my own lunar space lander! With blackjack aaaaannd Hookers! Actually, forget the space lander, and the blackjack. Ahhhh forget the whole thing!
-
Jun 22nd, 2001, 04:07 AM
#24
Fanatic Member
Damn, my secret's out 
heheheh
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
Click Here to Expand Forum to Full Width
|