Originally posted by proggy
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Previously on "Can't perform like I used to 10 years ago"
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Just ask for his age, rather than asking like your wanting to start a fight. Or at least be funny.
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What age are you? It would help a damn lot in helping you if you gave us just this simple piece of information.Originally posted by ELBBUBKUNPS View PostI've noticed in last year or so my ability to grasp technical concepts, design decent data models or just get my head around any new system and data flows has gone down big time, things just don't synch in. Over the last few days I've been working on re-writting it an existing ETL process and I'm struggling with it, complex stuff but nothing I have not handled before. Looking back though 10 years I was working on more complex stuff and never had a problem.
Have others found the same as they got older, I can't tell if Im just getting slower to learn as I've got older or just had enough of IT and so bored it my brain is blocking it out.
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Most contracting roles are as dull as tulipe. Working for and with idiots on stuff that has been built by a long line of idiots.
I was hoping to get out with this one ending but I am being tempted back in with a real big earner. "Just one more year" I will probably say and I will hate myself for it.
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FTFYOriginally posted by Ignis Fatuus View PostLearning a language does not make you a programmer. Learning to blag does that.
-- Erik Dijkstra
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Learning a language does not make you a programmer. Learning to think does that.Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI don't know if that's really the case. Systems are arguably much more complex now, because there are so many interconnected applications running within and outside of clientcos, and the drive for quick delivery makes it difficult to sufficiently analyse a situation. BUT, I don't think the tools are any more difficult to learn than in the past, and in fact some testing tools are much easier to use these days; trouble is, many hiring managers and HR numpties seem fixated on the tools, specifying experience with Something 8.4, and insisting that Something 8.2 is not sufficient experience, when in fact, if someone give you a 5 minute explanation with a diagram of the architecture, you'll probably understand it.
-- Erik Dijkstra
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Neither can these guys:Originally posted by ELBBUBKUNPS View PostCan't perform like I used to 10 years ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Jackson
Whitney Houston - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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That's two handshakes not two jumps.Originally posted by MyUserName View PostRight AND left hand?
DKUATB.
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Right AND left hand?Originally posted by BolshieBastard View PostWell, I managed two jumps this morning so Im performing as well as I did 10 years ago!
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Well, I managed two jumps this morning so Im performing as well as I did 10 years ago!
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That might well be the case but it is not really what I meant. I work on C++, STL etc now and have done for several years. However, the complexity of the jobs I tackle now is far higher rather than the complexity of the tools, I was wondering if that might be the case for the OP.Originally posted by Mich the Tester View PostI don't know if that's really the case. Systems are arguably much more complex now, because there are so many interconnected applications running within and outside of clientcos, and the drive for quick delivery makes it difficult to sufficiently analyse a situation. BUT, I don't think the tools are any more difficult to learn than in the past, and in fact some testing tools are much easier to use these days; trouble is, many hiring managers and HR numpties seem fixated on the tools, specifying experience with Something 8.4, and insisting that Something 8.2 is not sufficient experience, when in fact, if someone give you a 5 minute explanation with a diagram of the architecture, you'll probably understand it.
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Are you seriously advising someone to follow your example as a guide to successful contracting?Originally posted by suityou01 View PostI've been off the tools for a couple of years. Recently had to get back on the tools. Built myself a VM, got a Microsoft Partner account and access to the MSDN.
Lots of new toys and unfamiliar things that turn out to be exactly the same as before but wearing a different dress.
Linq still mystifies me if I'm honest but I'm loving jquery and node.js.
So why not get a gig off the tools, then go back to it in a few months time and see how you feel.
By that time the .net framework will have it's on super framework where you draw applications on a tablet with your iCrayon
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I don't know if that's really the case. Systems are arguably much more complex now, because there are so many interconnected applications running within and outside of clientcos, and the drive for quick delivery makes it difficult to sufficiently analyse a situation. BUT, I don't think the tools are any more difficult to learn than in the past, and in fact some testing tools are much easier to use these days; trouble is, many hiring managers and HR numpties seem fixated on the tools, specifying experience with Something 8.4, and insisting that Something 8.2 is not sufficient experience, when in fact, if someone give you a 5 minute explanation with a diagram of the architecture, you'll probably understand it.Originally posted by MyUserName View PostIt also might be that the stuff you work on now is simply more complicated than what you did when you were younger and takes longer to learn?
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I've been off the tools for a couple of years. Recently had to get back on the tools. Built myself a VM, got a Microsoft Partner account and access to the MSDN.
Lots of new toys and unfamiliar things that turn out to be exactly the same as before but wearing a different dress.
Linq still mystifies me if I'm honest but I'm loving jquery and node.js.
So why not get a gig off the tools, then go back to it in a few months time and see how you feel.
By that time the .net framework will have it's on super framework where you draw applications on a tablet with your iCrayon
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Unless it is something medical then you should be fine.
What has probably changed is your enthusiasm and drive to learn.
It also might be that the stuff you work on now is simply more complicated than what you did when you were younger and takes longer to learn?
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