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I'm not sure if enthusiasts are the exception rather than the norm? I've noticed in the last few years, a lot of junior engineers do not have much active coding experience outside of their university education, they aren't the traditional "obsessed with computers and programming as kids".
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There has been a much higher demand for software developers over the past 10-15 years than there are people who are obsessed with computers and programming

If you look at the general topic shift on HN over the years it's obvious most people are getting into tech because they want power and money, not for love of tech


> If you look at the general topic shift on HN over the years it's obvious most people are getting into tech because they want power and money, not for love of tech

I think that is a bit presumptuous, even if there is a hint of truth there. Just because a kid didn't grow up around computers and programming shouldn't exclude them from the tech path or mark them as imposters/pretenders.


It does not exclude. But the expectation of larger money has to go. They're literally competing with 100 dollars a month.

That is more a sign of our messed up society. Yes, techies earn middle class salaries that are hard for everyone else to earn, but the issue was everyone else falling behind, not techies racing ahead (our salaries are extravagant becuase…we can buy a house like our very normal salary parents could).

I agree it definitely distorts the market because what else are kids to do?




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