I caught the car

(undecidability.net)

23 points | by holden_nelson 2 hours ago

10 comments

  • BowBun 1 hour ago
    When I meet fellow devs, I ask what projects they've shipped. Roles are near-meaningless across companies and convey 0 information about what their work involves in my experience. I appreciate that OP learned something about the job through this article.
  • retired 1 hour ago
    I was senior in about three years. It helps to work for a consultancy company, they can charge a higher rate by calling me a senior.

    Personally I don't think you can be a senior before ten years of fulltime work.

    • hyperhello 58 minutes ago
      Maybe not neccesarily exactly ten years, but you couldn't be both a junior and a senior so far as the roles have meaning. A senior is supposed to know how to function within the company and obstinately perform certain roles in their certain way, but a junior is supposed to come into the company fresh and try to simplify the work with their eyes that are not trained to do it the senior's way. Neither person is wrong but the roles need to be in opposition.

      That's why it's so annoying to read about companies who think they can replace junior workers with AI. While imagining they're living in the future, they're not thinking about the future at all.

    • ghaff 58 minutes ago
      That’s sort of how it works in banks where basically everyone is a VP.
  • thisisauserid 1 hour ago
    "what does the dog actually do if it catches it?"

    Author achieved the senior role, but is unsure what comes next.

  • JSR_FDED 56 minutes ago
    Humblebrag masquerading as self-reflection.
    • Paracompact 44 minutes ago
      Eh, kinda. But there was enough self-deprecation there that it doesn't leave a bad taste in my mouth, and I consider this a genuine reflection.

      > Why did I need validation from my org chart? > Pretty quickly realized I was being kind of a bitch. > I have a bad case of Why Not Me syndrome.

      These cut deeper than faux modesty and are clearly insecurities. It's the rebelling of a sensible superego against an id hungry for validation, and the author doesn't downplay either of the two.

      But yes, I'm sure he also gets a perverse thrill out of advertising his achievement, even if he intends to disparage it. It's a complicated psyche I'm rather familiar with.

  • Neywiny 1 hour ago
    Do we have thoughts on how important "senior"/"staff" is vs bullet points on resumes and the years of service?
    • ThrowawayR2 1 minute ago
      [delayed]
    • Swizec 22 minutes ago
      > Do we have thoughts on how important "senior"/"staff" is vs bullet points on resumes and the years of service?

      As a hiring manager, I only read the bullet points. I’ve interviewed startup CTOs who were mid-level engineers at best and “Software Engineer” vanilla titled engineers who have shipped and owned impressive things over years.

      The scale, complexity, and variety of the systems you’ve built, shipped, owned, and maintained trumps all else.

      And yes we can see through the bullshit. Everyone has built a “semantic document retrieval system” in the last 3 years. That’s a weekend project, gonna need a little more to be impressive :)

    • wat10000 21 minutes ago
      I ignore job titles on resumes. I want to know what they did, I don't care what their company called them.
    • Hamuko 1 hour ago
      I have no idea what goes on in the minds of HR people.
      • Neywiny 49 minutes ago
        An interesting point. Presumably you'd come at it from a different though equally valid angle
  • wewewedxfgdf 56 minutes ago
    Who cares about titles?

    It's a really bad signal when a software developer cares about their title.

    All that matters is are you good at the work.

    • tom_ 32 minutes ago
      The title often relates to the money, which is the bit you probably want.
    • iwontberude 52 minutes ago
      When you work for a company like Google, that title change determines whether or not you are taken seriously. People that get stuck at the same level are often pushed out of teams with performance improvement plans. They expect you to strive for promotion and the culture in these places is reinforcing this progression. It's mostly theater but the outcomes for people's pay is very real, thus the focus on title.
      • wewewedxfgdf 46 minutes ago
        Sounds awful, spending headspace and energy on trying to climb some stupid corporate ladder.
    • keybored 27 minutes ago
      Junior programmers are the idiot foil of all anecdotes on HN in the last three years. Only juniors do that; everything went fine until the junior...; anyway, the junior sent me a eight thousand diff of obvious slop; so now I got my first gray hairs, thanks Jane Junior; juniors writing naive, clearly quadratic code.[1]

      Naturally these are the least skilled of your colleagues so that part is a given. But almost all anecdotes are about them as foils. Very few about them as the next generation being mentored.

      It’s so slanted that people have to actively temper the euphoria shared by tech billionaires and 100X engineers with 25+ years of non-slop code experience: well until the seniors get an immortality pill you still need to raise new 100X engineers.

      Of course the response to this will be, “I never cared about titles! The “juniors I talk about have work experience ranging from zero to thirty years!”...

      [1] Sources: all made up.

  • ludston 1 hour ago
    First of all, congratulations. As somebody that also achieved the senior developer title within the first three years of being hired out of University, mostly by luck: Yay money, but I wasn't a senior engineer really for another five years. For me, I needed to see the long term effects of the changes that I'd made and the software I had written to really understand the difference between cargo cult behaviour and what really mattered for the business I was working for.
  • AIorNot 1 hour ago
    So many kids on hacker news

    - I’d say SWE is an experienced engineer not a senior developer- for Pete’s sake he graduated in 2023 that was 3 freaking years ago

    I’ve been developing production software for 20 years now -

    What other profession counts someone with 3 years of professional experience out of college as senior?

    Maybe competitive sports? Or academic math?

    If it means this kid is smart and good at coding sure ill buy that but experiences and wisdom are something else entirely..

    • beau_g 7 minutes ago
      I disagree and think the software model described works better when done well. I have seen this within a company, where both the hardware side and software side used the same titles (senior, staff, senior staff, principal). The hardware side used largely a combination of industry tenure and especially whether they had PHDs/patents/inventions or not to determine these titles, while the software org was very gung ho on using responsibility and influence to determine promotions. The other thing this led to is in the hardware org, often people would get hired on as senior staff or principal, while this almost never happened on the software side (nobody could get hired on as these roles as they couldn't possibly meet the rubric, as it required some outsized impact in the company with thousands of people using software you near singlehandedly developed and maintained).

      As other people pointed out in this post in a roundabout way, titles only matter at all internally to a given company. And considering that, compare these two systems; yes the software org in this system does end up in a position where a 25 year old that's been at the company for 3 years could be senior staff, but that's very telling, to do that, they absolutely had to ship something novel, useful to many, and keep it running and good. Knowing that someone is a very well educated graybeard that invented something at Sun in 1989 is also some good information, but from the context of communicating with people in other orgs within a company I don't know so well, it's more valuable to me personally to understand whether they are responsible for a large running process and to what degree, moreso than how long they have been around and what they did elsewhere.

    • tekla 42 minutes ago
      Haha, I know people who have worked on designing a single part smaller than a closed fist for over 5 years and were still considered just over junior because they didn't have enough experience with the system it was used in.
  • keybored 36 minutes ago
    > When I had learned that, my first instinct was to be happy for him, proud, impressed, etc (genuinely). My second was to want the same for myself. Badly.

    > [...] Think back (addressing you, the reader, now) to the time when you were happiest in your career or academic life. Was it when some sinecurist asshole in a gown handed you your diploma?

    Uh, what? This is what this person wanted. Now after the fact they’re an anti-credentialist rebel.

    Well, thinking of people who make a lot of money and then insist that money doesn’t matter. It makes sense.

    > Going forward, the only person I need to impress is myself.

    Thinking of the few things that I take quiet pride in because I only want to impress myself... I keep myself in check by not talking about it. lol.