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2:33 AM
Hello guys! I'm new to Rust, I started learning it a few days ago. It is a very nice feeling to be a part of this chat room.
 
 
4 hours later…
6:13 AM
welcome
 
7:02 AM
Hi! o/
 
7:49 AM
Programmers aged 55, 60, 65, 70, 75 in this thread: reddit.com/r/programming/comments/nytzaz/…
I'm a kid ^^
 
8:21 AM
@DenysSéguret This quite honestly makes me sad. I mean, it is one thing that you love coding and you do it on a regular basis for fun, as a hobby, until you die, but still working at 60+? I would've retired by then if I were them. I mean most jobs do not allow you to put enough money aside, but working as a software engineer definitely does. Then again, maybe for some, these kinds of work is the ultimate goal or main purpose of one's life vOv
 
Morn
 
^ Well, it is sad, but I wouldn't go that far XP
 
 
2 hours later…
10:33 AM
@AndyK Morning! :-)
 
@Jason morning Sir.
 
 
6 hours later…
5:03 PM
pollens.fr => send help thanks
I asked the tree to stop they don't listen to me
 
@AndyK I think that's the closest I'll get to being knighted :-)
 
@PeterVaro I disadvice to "stop working" at +60, working make one life longer, but of course, working is general, do what you live and want, but do something
 
5:47 PM
@Stargateur I have not said one should stop doing something. I think it really depends on the person, but I'm always full of ideas I wish to work on, since I was a little kid. So I'm never bored and I'm always educating myself. In my experience though out of the three pillars one can only choose two when it comes to work: 1. you have to enjoy it, 2. you have to be good at it, 3. someone must be willing to pay for it. So tons of my ideas are "saved for later".. which may or may not happen.
So when I'm thinking about retiring, I meant to be able to focus on things, which you were not able to otherwise, because you had to earn money and do things which you may not have done otherwise.
 
that remind me, according to neo classic economies theories, the one most politic think it's true and use it today, said people don't need job to live.
 
I didn't much open-source those recent days but I had much more fun writing closed source AI for a game :)
 
You're very special in this sense @DenysSéguret. I really don't know how you find time to do your 9-to-5, raise two kids, and work on plenty of smaller projects.
2
I don't have kids, yet I'm so knackered by the end of the day, that just the thought of building anything complex in my free-time frightens me.
 
I'm not sure I do find time. I'm tired.
 
That was not always the case, but nowadays it is.
 
5:55 PM
I have a trick. I'm always afraid of not having time because I'm getting older. So I have a huge incentive to dive into tasks without waiting
Seeing your kids getting older too helps: imagine you have an idea for a machine in lego. You can either do it now or wait. And if you wait your kids may not see it in time.
 
@DenysSéguret That's interesting, the carpe diem approach. The truth is my thoughts and take on working on software side-projects have shifted very much in the last few years. I find it very much pointless in a way. Platforms, dependencies, etc. are changing so fast, if you build something you have to support it, either for yourself or for others, to keep it relevant. That for me is the definition of a sisyphean task.
I'm happy to do that as my job, because I got paid for it, that's my livelihood, and at the same time I do enjoy doing it. But why would I want to do that in my spare time?
@DenysSéguret That is a good motivational factor, but actually, the bonding experience in that task outweighs the nerdy needs IMO.
 
Speaking of game, I'm organizing in october the seventh world cup of Tribo, on Miaou. There's still enough time to come and train before the competition
 
 
3 hours later…
8:39 PM
 

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