I consider myself to be a relatively experienced developer, and even still, reading this blog post really lifted my spirits.
I write code for a living, and even though no one has ever told me they weren't happy with my performance, the constant influx of new techniques, languages, algorithms, and systems in the programming world have always made me feel like an inferior developer. I constantly feel like there's so much to learn, that I can't possibly be good, as if the only worthy developers in the world are the top 500 geniuses that work for Google and Facebook and are somehow capable of magically knowing everything.
Knowing that this isn't the case, and that companies like Twilio are finding value in employees with skill sets much narrower than mine, is a good feeling. It's also really nice to know that they're open minded to the point that they respect this guy's talents as a developer just as much as they did as a customer service rep. #thehighroad
A more cynical quip I like to use is that the corollary to "you're never the smartest guy in the world" is "you're never the dumbest guy in the world".
The more advanced you get in your field, the more you understand how little you really know. I feel like this every day. It's easy to forget that to a ton of people you're still a guy/gal who works magical wonders with computers.
I write code for a living, and even though no one has ever told me they weren't happy with my performance, the constant influx of new techniques, languages, algorithms, and systems in the programming world have always made me feel like an inferior developer. I constantly feel like there's so much to learn, that I can't possibly be good, as if the only worthy developers in the world are the top 500 geniuses that work for Google and Facebook and are somehow capable of magically knowing everything.
Knowing that this isn't the case, and that companies like Twilio are finding value in employees with skill sets much narrower than mine, is a good feeling. It's also really nice to know that they're open minded to the point that they respect this guy's talents as a developer just as much as they did as a customer service rep. #thehighroad