My former co-workers used to buy some expensive stuff that doesn't serve a larger purpose, like they'd buy a piece of furniture, instrument or something. I would've thought being that programmers on average make a little more(or so the legend goes), we would invest in something or make something out of for instance a year's worth of surplus money.
Good for them. I paid mine back too, saved a good amount so I could go back to studying. No idea what to do with it otherwise.
@GhostofBillGates Depends on where they live. If they live on their own in the Bay Area making an entry level developer salary at Google, there is nothing left after rent.
That's why Google feeds their employees, because they need to eat.
I am exaggerating a little bit. But not by much. Say you make 100k working at a tech company in the Bay Area. And the apartment you live in isn't a complete shit-hole. you'll be paying around 3k/month in rent. 100k after taxes is probably like 60k. You pay out 36k to rent and that goes up every year. So you have around 24k left for everything else.
Admittedly, 100k is a bit on the low-end. But you get the idea.
@Mystical Yes, my situation was a bit like that too. There are lots of people in Gothenburg, Sweden, and the surrounding area, who go across the border to Norway to work because the wages are a good bit higher in just about every field, but they live in Sweden and buy their food there because rent and food is cheaper in Sweden.
@GhostofBillGates A lot of my coworkers at Google lived across the bay where it's a lot cheaper. But the commute is upwards of an 90 minutes every day. I was fortunate in that I grew up in the area so my parents were there and they let me stay at home.
@JerryCoffin Worse. 92 across the San Mateo bridge. Then onto 101 either north to San Bruno or south to Mountain View.
The 92/101 intersection is a shit hole. You can literally put the car in park, open the door, take a shit, get back, and the guy behind you wouldn't honk because nobody has moved.
@Mysticial Yeah--I remember how backed up the line to get onto the bridge always got. Of course, I don't have it a whole lot better now--it'd be around an hour each way except that I usually leave for work around 7AM, and head home around 7 PM.
But north-bound to San Bruno in the morning is much better than south-bound to Silicon Valley.
@StackedCrooked Yeah, people do it.
Traffic in downtown Chicago is at the point where you simply don't drive, period. But at least there's a functional transit system. Unlike in the Bay Area that goes nowhere other than on strike every other week.
@JerryCoffin 280 is better if you need to travel longer distances. Like down to Cupertino. Otherwise, getting to 280 means sitting on the 92 shit-hole for a lot longer.
@Mysticial Well, of course they go on strike constantly. I mean, a guy with a GED working for BART is making only 10% more (well, okay, maybe 20%, but not much more than that) than a guy at Google with a master's degree. That's obviously unfair to him.
@Morwenn A lot of the people I know who can't find a job or a sufficiently paying job are kinda forced to do that. Unless they're lucky enough to have a domestic partner who makes enough to live independently.
@Mysticial That helps a lot going south. Doesn't help so much for SF (at least IME). I finally decided the only reasonable choice for SF was to park at the very edge of town, and just walk from there. Probably could have taken a bus or something, but as far as I could tell, it wasn't going to save much time (and besides: I definitely needed the exercise).
@Mysticial It did last a lot longer than originally scheduled. The original schedule said 60 days IIRC, but it actually lasted from April (or so) through the beginning of October, if memory serves.
They had to extend the schedule because they didn't provide all the software we needed to inspect from the beginning. Well, I guess technically they did supply it, but only as an export of an SVN repository, but no copy of SVN to read from it (and we weren't allowed to install anything on the machines ourselves...)
@Mysticial There was apparently a point at which an attorney was trying to claim that you could get meaningful results by grepping a 100+ MB tarball. Even the judge apparently had enough technical background to laugh at that.
@Mysticial I dunno. They decided to delay the case for some reason (I heard why, but can't remember). That was probably at least a year delay, and by soonest it could restart, I'd started working here in SD, so if it restarted at all, I no longer had anything to do with it.
TBH, I doubt he ever thought it would really fly--I'm pretty sure their entire game hinged on the other delay that was eventually imposed, and they were just doing their best to stall until that happened.
@Mysticial It was. Worse, the people I was working for turned out to be pretty much assholes. On the other hand, there are some really decent restaurants in in San Carlos, which was a long walk/short drive from the hotel where I was staying.
Where you on the persecution or defendant side? Based on what you've told me, I'm gonna guess that you were on the persecution side with some sort of patent troll?
Oh, and if I remembered his name (and was masochistic enough to work at EA) I'd have a good reference at EA. Overheard a conversation during lunch, and felt obliged to...correct a little misunderstanding they were having about C++.
@Mysticial Yeah, pretty much. Technically, I guess they're not a pure patent troll, but a tiny step short of it. A pure patent troll owns patents, but doesn't actually build anything. When they hired me, they claimed it was on behalf of a software company, but it turns out that was mostly a sham. The inventor had at one time written some software and still owned a company that said "software" in the name, but he hadn't written any code in years (and had no ambition to do so).
In fairness, some of that's supposition--I never met or talked with the inventor/owner himself at all, only the attorneys (but I'm pretty sure it's reasonably accurate anyway).
@Mysticial Me too. They really were jerks. Fortunately, the lead attorney wasn't very careful, so I overheard a phone conversation where he made it pretty clear that they routinely failed to pay any bills from contractors after they got what they wanted. They didn't pay my last bill either, but I made sure it was only for a couple hours of work, but the last thing I sent still contained a few important details that they wouldn't get until they paid the previous bills.
@ThePhD Finally got around to actually watching the talk, well done. Couple tips: More explanation around the chained lookup table implementation, that was kinda messy. Also, less 'uh's :P
static string literals don't have any distinguishing features w.r.t. type, so function parameters can't distinguish them by type, which is all they can use.