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I've spent about 2 years gathering my initial requirements & re-learning coding for my upcoming major project. Apart from some VBA & LISP in AutoCAD to automate some boring tasks, my last major project was a 9-screen graphical adventure game on a Vic 20 in the mid 90's.
I wrote that for the same reason I am writing my new project. Yes, I'm going to write code because I love what I can make a computer do for me.
A real coder at heart! I would love to hear more about your project. Is it to be a business or opensource?
Mine is a business venture - basically I'm automating some process and using a database to track changes in the process of designing broadcast systems. My approach is different to that of existing solutions in that I respect existing procedures which generally involve drawing the designs in AutoCAD. My aim is to analyse the designs and find errors & omissions as well as track changes on both the design and installation side.
The target market is ... well, it's me and people who design television stations. I plan to offer it as a service rather than as a packaged piece of software because it will need setting up for each design environment and on-going tinkering. It's the sort of thing I can lob in (international travel - cool), set up & nick off, administering and tinkering remotely.
Even if I never get an external client it will streamline my job a lot which means I can charge by the job and my effective hourly rate goes up ... lots. Presently most places do a lot of the design process manually and it is horrifically error prone. The network I am at these days has about 60,000 cables to keep track of. Other automated solutions hijack your existing workflow and force you to work their way. Engineers don't like change much and they don't have time to learn new shit. My theory is that if my system needs any RTFM then it's a failure.
My project isn't open source but that's not to say I have no plans to contribute to the ether that is the on-line community, and also to the community that I plan to market to. I plan to blog my opinionated methodologies on AutoCADding in the manner to which I am accustomed. I also plan to write some helper tools for AutoCAD, some of which may be offered free of charge.
Enough about me ...
Your chosen path sounds like an interesting adventure. You have a tenacious and rabid curiosity which is the one thing you will need to make your life interesting. That will scare the shit out of the doubters and nay-sayers. F**k 'em.
p.s. Thank you, doubters and nay-sayers have no place in my life and never will ;-)
We have a main developer at work. I'm the IT Director. On our walls we have various code charts and web app cheat sheets. Every time Roger puts one up he stands back, stares at it, and says "Chicks will dig me."
The truth is, only other programmers will really dig it - even my dual monitors aren't that cool, or the server rack I built in the corner.
I have much better luck telling people I wrote one of the Star Trek books (I did) And soon hope to be cool again when the wife and I write one for Stargate Atlantis...
D
I wrote mainly here about the trend amongst coders. However there is also a mainstream change, while a server rack ins't cool yet , having built a web application is.
Thanks
joy kill
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