• Aganim@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      What? I make that kind of money by dabbling in Ansible, Python and Kubernetes. $5000 sounds pretty lowball for fairly niche knowledge like COBOL.

        • Aganim@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          I don’t know, but for me it was undiagnosed ADHD. 😋 Fortunately IT is one of the areas where lack of a degree isn’t a showstopper.

          • spicy pancake@lemmy.zip
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            7 hours ago

            i mean i recently did a contract gig updating a 6 year old legacy codebase in a language I’ve never used

            oh also I’ve barely coded anything in my life

            you guessed it, i used an LLM (as the contracter requested, but still…) ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

            so i keep waffling between “my (then) undiagnosed ADHD would have stunted my CS learning hard enough that I’d barely be any more knowledgeable than I am now anyway” and “despite it being a terrible fucking idea companies are going to try their damnedest to replace all software engineering with vibe coding”

            so i end up back at “at least i have a degree in pipetting and can go get a $20/hr job moving small volumes of liquid back and forth until pipetting robots become cheaper than me”

    • Ephera@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      Pretty sure that knowing COBOL isn’t the hard part. It has relatively few language concepts.

      This lack of language concepts just makes it difficult to reason about it, so that’s what you’re getting a paycheck for. Well, and possibly also because it might take months to have a new dev figure out your legacy codebase, so it’s cheaper to keep the current dev by paying them competitive prices.

      • AngryCommieKender@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Not quite. More like per 40 hour week with no overtime, but my father insists on having up to 20 hours a week of overtime he’s allowed to burn, so it’s kinda like $7,500 a week. He generally gets paid byweekly or monthly. Subcontractor and all that BS