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bobosolayesterday at 5:56 PM2 repliesview on HN

I jumped the other way round aged 40 from non-tech into tech. I went from being a UK merchant ship captain to working as a software developer. I did it over a couple of years by increasing my knowledge in my spare time as a hobbyist until I felt I was at least good enough to be employed in a dev role. I should mention that this was back around the millennium, when web dev was still a wide-open and rapidly changing field.

The obvious big issue is maintaining roughly the same salary level, but you’d be surprised how much you can tighten your belt if a making a big jump down. A non-obvious negative is getting used to loss of status. That hurt a bit initially, but I soon found that the novelty of re-inventing myself in a new domain was massively invigorating, plus I was suddenly working with very different (and much younger) colleagues. So I decided to shut up about the old job from day one and never mentioned it unless asked (no-one cared anyway).

But be aware of turning a hobby into a job though. I got into dev as just a hobby initially. Then it became a paying part-time gig when on leave, which eventually lead to a job offer via someone I knew in the business. You’ll soon find that doing your hobby for a living cools your enthusiasm for your hobby, especially when dealing with difficult customers, bosses, or ridiculous deadlines. That said, I’m really pleased I made the jump and don’t ever have to wonder “what if?”.


Replies

yodsanklaiyesterday at 7:06 PM

Great story!

> You’ll soon find that doing your hobby for a living cools your enthusiasm for your hobby

I think a lot of software developers are in that situations. I suspect for a lot of us, programming started as a hobby.

> A non-obvious negative is getting used to loss of status

I can imagine. I never had a great status, it can sound very vain but I sometimes I wish I had one :) Ironically, working in a big tech company can send you to the very top of the salary range but nobody knows, you're just a "programmer" which isn't super prestigious.

Dracophoenixyesterday at 6:15 PM

> I went from being a UK merchant ship captain to working as a software developer.

That's one hell of a story. How did you end up in the trade to begin with? How long it take for you get promoted to captain? What kind of cargo did you typically carry? How big was your crew? What was the largest ship you captained? What are farthest points you've sailed to in all cardinal directions? Were you still you still operating with paper maps and sextants by the time of your captaincy or was GPS common on ships by that point?

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