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【自民党】小泉進次郎(衆神奈川11)「『現役』の定義を18〜74歳に変えます。定義を変えれば現役世代の割合は30年後も変わりません」★5 (1002レス)
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名無しさん@1周年
2019/01/20(日)13:18
ID:QfXIgShy0(71/155)
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https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9497721
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401: 名無しさん@1周年 [] 2019/01/20(日) 13:18:00.58 ID:QfXIgShy0 >>395 >>827 >>828 >>829 >>810 >>811 >>812 I am 64. I wrote my first program in 1970 and have worked as a programmer since 1976. Programming was a good career choice. For many years I was a manager and pretty much hated it and returned to programming. I quit my job and went to work at IBM as a software engineer the year I turned 50. I was the oldest person in my department, and was a bit of a father figure to some of the kids there. Otherwise I did not fit in and left after two years. I worked at about the same salary on a job for the next ten years and now, at 64, I have a nice job helping to translate COBOL to Java. I am still making a six figure salary, but I will retire in 313 days I'm in my early 40's, but I've recruited software engineers for almost 20 years and I until recently I ran a large Java Users Group over 15 years, which gave me quite a bit of exposure to an older range of engineers. I know many 50+ programmers who are doing quite well (monetarily, respect, responsibility, balance). Some independent consultants, some at startups, some with big firms, etc. A fairly wide variety. Not all had to go to management - in fact, I'd say most of the ones I know didn't. The one trend I've seen is that older engineers that ended up staying with a single employer for the longest (say 10+ years in one job) generally have the most difficulty finding new work when the time comes. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9497721 http://asahi.5ch.net/test/read.cgi/newsplus/1547953450/401
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