On Tue, 23 Jan 2007 00:09:52 -0700, Josh Coffman wrote: > Hi, > > I'm a programmer, and i'd like to know where old programmers go. I'm > wondering because I don't see a lot of 55+ programmers and I want to be > prepared for the future. > Some might say I'm still young (30's), but now is probably the time to > plan for the next 20-30 years of my career. > [snip] My less than humble opinion is to know at least two disciplines. You apparently have programming, but knowing very well an application field that needs programming for solutions is a good move. Sure, there are careers strictly within computerdum, SCM has been mentioned and certainly compiler writing are examples, but knowing your user's field is very valuable. I too came to the valley in 1971 while just short of age 30 and continued to work for a computer manufacturer as a technical rep. Some six years later I had the opportunity to use my college education, namely Physics with an emphasis in Electronics, by working for an electric utility in their real-time operations control center as a engineer/programmer. It required both disciplines and they encouraged me to study for the Electricial Professional Engineer Exam, which I passed. After 21 years there, I was offered a similiar job with the Dept. of Energy where I used my knowledge and contacts from before to build one of the four data hubs that allow over a hundred inter-connected electric utilities in the Western US, Canada and Mexico to exchange real-time data to keep the lights on (aka, system reliability). Nine of those utilities connect to the backbone at that hub. That involved networking and working with electricial engineering quantities. I took the Cisco classes at South Mountain CC to get the expertise needed there, and passed the CCNA exam. Perhaps you've caught a theame here. That is, Life-Long Education. Since retiring the second time (for good, I think), I took Java and XML classes at Phoenix College in order to upgrade how I manage money & expenses for my rental homes. Yes, I invested that way too, including my own sweat painting, plumbing repair, electricial work, and so on. I also deigned and, with the help of friends, built buzz-in systems for Science Bowl competitions in AZ that use a really cool micro-controller. I strongly reccomend using an investment manager long before you plan to retire. The expertise they bring to the effort is so far beyond what I could have amased while working. And it is worth many times the fees and commissions. I can reccomend one group offline if you're interested. Typical "Day Traders" (aka, gamblers) drop $50k before getting the hang of it, if they get the hang of it. Gene --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss