Hacker News new | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submit login

Though I agree that there's a lot of value in what more experienced people have to say and that people my age should seek out knowledge from you, there are a couple things that are also important to remember.

Many of us "20-year-old whizzes" don't do what you describe at all. In fact, as a Systems programmer, it's not incredibly likely that you know 'better than me' what the implications of what you're doing are at an Operating System level. I know 20-year-olds who have contributed source to Linux, Chrome, Firefox, and a number of other Open Source projects. Folks who have worked in industry for 2-4 summers in a row already. 20-year-olds who have gone to Silicon Valley and done the startup thing. (I can go on with this BS forever)

But all that 20-year-old ego stuff aside, it's also important to remember that this is a field that is routinely dominated by disruptive thoughts, ideas, and personalities. All of your experience becomes a hindrance when you start to follow your old steps to the "right solution" every time. For that reason, it's also important that you look to the "20-something whizzes" for insights and ideas that may surprise you and that you actually consider what they say.




Ah, the Dunning-Kruger effect at its finest. :-)

Please ask yourself this: even if you do know 20-year-olds who have done impressive things, why would you think that such talented and/or hard-working people will not be able to achieve still more impressive things at 30, when they have roughly an order of magnitude more useful experience? What about at 40, when they have had time to see through several long-term projects?

Or look at it the other way around: do you really think none of the successful older developers today also contributed to volunteer projects during school, worked summer jobs, or tried a start-up straight out of college?

It is true that disruption of routine is sometimes important for the industry to make progress, but it says a lot that you chose the word "dominated". Our industry isn't "dominated" by disruption at all. On the contrary, it is dominated by people who make useful products, using untrendy but tried-and-tested tools and techniques, that get real work done.

Every now and then, something truly original or a genuinely creative application of an old idea comes along, and that can become a great success. But for every one of those, there are a lot of ideas that stink and go nowhere. And guess what? Many of those ideas come from the young people who are convinced they're on a winner, because they are too inexperienced to know better, where more experienced developers might have seen similar ideas fail before and know an idea was doomed before wasting any time on it. Conversely, despite your rather odd assertion that broader experience somehow implies being set in one's ways, IME those who have been around for a while are much better at spotting opportunities to fill useful niches or change the rules in a significant way, and are much better at making practical, pragmatic decisions to take advantage of those opportunities.

YMMV, but I'd bet a substantial chunk of money that in ten years' time, you'll be on my side of the argument. :-)


I certainly am.

I was a fairly quick riser in my career. I started programming at 12, had a commercial game (value-ware CD) published at 17. Wrote a book at 21. I was a lead architect at 24, with a development team of around 30 folks at a fairly successful company. I was quite sure that I knew it all at that point.

I didn't. I just turned 30 and only 6 years later my level of knowledge and experience is far superior to what it was then. Not just in terms of pure programming knowledge, but also in terms of decision making. I've become far more practical and much more adept at translating requirements into something people can actually use.

30 year old me and 24 year old me wouldn't see eye-to-eye on a lot of things. After leaving that job I've become an entrepreneur. The sum of that experience makes me far more productive and the quality of what I make is simply better.

24 year old me could a learn a thing or two from 30 year old me. Just as I hope 30 year old me will need a good talking to by 40 year old me:)


> Ah, the Dunning-Kruger effect at its finest. :-)

While I find it regrettable that the implication of this remark is that I'm some sort of idiot who doesn't have the faintest idea what he's talking about (making him think he does), I understand how you could see this as a presentation of it. I'm not basing my claims off the fact that some of the guys I've met "know everything," I'm basing my claims off the fact that many of the most experienced developers I know don't know shit in comparison.

Granted, it's not a fair comparison of 20-something to 40-somethings at all; I've met far more mediocre 20-something programmers than I've met 40-something programmers, and I'm at a place where fantastic 20-something programmers tend to aggregate.

That said, it's not fair at all for the claim to be made that 20-year-olds are dumbass Rails coders [1] who need to just shut up and listen, because many of us are comfortable operating in a large variety of languages and large projects and are EAGER to listen to worthwhile advice (I probably average a half a post a day? Maybe less? I assure you that I visit HN far more often than that).

All that said, many of the biggest home runs in the short history of our field have come from 20 year old kids who did their own thing.

[1] Which is not, in any way, to imply that Rails coders are dumbasses. It was just the implication of ggp that the 20 year old rails coders are.


You bring up some interesting points, but I must disagree with what you seem to be implying.

While it is true that there are many 20 year olds with very impressive tech resumes, many more impressive than mine (I went in the Army and did some other things before entering the tech industry, so I came in older than average). But they are the exception, not the rule. When I interview young programmers, most come as the post described with a CS degree and I hope to work 9-5 having done little-to-no programming that was required. At least from what I see in interviews, those are more common than the impressive resumes.

Next is, All of your experience becomes a hindrance when you start to follow your old steps to the "right solution" every time. This can be true in some cases, but again I think those are the exception, not the rule. Remember that most mid-career people, especially the successful ones and especially in technology, can be quite adaptable.

Also, remember that most disruptive thoughts are older ideas that are just now coming into their own. Lisp has been around for a very long time, but it is starting to take off now (at least more so than it was in the past). Thin clients are a very cyclic idea that once were the norm in an extreme with dumb terminals to mainframes, then gave way to desktops, then were talked about without much success, and now are seeing some success in netbooks/smartphones/etc.

Most of the time the more experienced and seasoned person can adapt and then leverage their experience with similar things even in a new, disruptive idea.


You are not talking about the same people as the GP though.

The people who do 9-5 coding are clearly not often the same ones as those who have contributed to the Linux kernel.

What I have found is that, of the people I work with, there are some who are great at what they do. As they gain experience the style of greatness often changes, but the magnitude does not.

(I have even worked with people who become more risk seeking as they progress - they know it can't be done but they don't care as they are confident they can hack around it in time. Cooks especially, but some programmers too.)


So in that case, age really has very little to do with it. Like you said, they'll be even MORE awesome with age. They'd still probably have something to gain from listening to older people, as long as those older people are at least as awesome as they were.


Clearly, we need a better way to judge insights than the age of the person who has them.


I qualified it as "all of the 20-year-old whizzes I know" very carefully. Clearly, I do not know them all. Equally clearly, the stereotype I describe can not be blindly applied. "Whizzes" is not extraneous either. Many 20-year-olds are perfectly competent and may be slower or less experienced but don't suffer from this pattern.

However, as impressed as you may be by people with three years of experience, it's still not ten years of experience. (Or twenty.)

May I also point out that you casually assume the other side of the stereotype: 'All of your experience becomes a hindrance when you start to follow your old steps to the "right solution" every time.' That's total bullshit. If you are getting "real" experience, the "good" experience (which I scarequote mostly because I don't want to go deep into trying to define them but it really ought to be obvious if you think about it), then experience itself tells you when your old experience needs to be augmented.

And what disruption are you talking about? I bet in your head you're thinking app disruption; "old fogies" can't come up with the idea for Facebook or something. In programming terms, the disruption is way slower than it appears. When I was 20, I got into Python. Python is still working on penetrating the mainstream. Now I'm getting into Haskell, and if it ever goes mainstream (probably not, but if...) it'll be another 5 years minimum. Programming "disruption" really doesn't move that fast.

(For all the sound and fury of Clojure and Scala and Python and Perl and Ruby and so on and so on, huge amounts of the cognitive traffic are just "An ORM for X!" "A jpeg library for X!" "A JSON library for X!" Patterned, shall we say. True disruption happens way less often.)

Besides... I'd point out that none of what you cite actually disproves my point. Everything you cite involves situations where they were probably either vetted by other people higher up, or still trading on quality to produce results quickly that are still a net technical value loss, as open source does not intrinsically prevent that. Open source even has some well-known common failure cases on that front, like "preference explosion", using adding preferences to prevent having to make design decisions or telling someone to shove off.

You complain as if I'm personally attacking you. I'm not. I'm attacking the stereotype, which definitely exists. And I personally have gotten to the point that someone introduces somebody as a "whiz", I mentally cringe. (The same cringe I do when somebody says "Wow, X fixes like ten bugs a day every day!" BIG RED FLASHING LIGHTS should be going off, not the good kind.) As much as you may not like it... this metric hasn't failed me yet.


True, but is much more important for "20-year-old-whizzes" to learn than to senior people, at least if you want to accomplish more than those people.

As a 1-year junior with crushed dreams by a proto-startup project and now working in a technology conservative environment I can say there is so much to learn in the first years (from bad or good examples, with or without mentorship) that everyone should review his attitude. Of course always keeping the ambition and with the goal of accomplishing the most.

To have success while young and without experience you must be allowed to fail, and to fail a lot of times. Out of frustation of course, I'm starting to believe it's really hard to have success in the early times. Of course close mentoring as in Y Combinator should help a lot!


I think that senior people and junior people should learn that they can learn from each other. Senior people were once junior know-it-alls who made stupid mistakes, and junior people can learn from that.

At the same time, senior people aren't always right, and it's always a good thing to have the fresh perspective that a more junior developer can bring.


I think it's good to see these kinds of prodigy contributing to high-profiled open source projects.

I've seen one or two of this kinds at Microsoft as interns. Boy they're really geeky. They have the technical chop. They will argue you to death how pointer works to the lowest-level of your hardware.

With. Exact. Details. And. Unmatched. Precisions.

At the end of the day, some of these people would write some crazy stuffs that a simple solution might work. Why is that? because they were already in "expert" mode in such a young age.

I rarely see "Uncle Bob", "Joel Spolsky", "Paul Graham", "Brian Kernighan", "Michael Feathers", "GoFs", "Martin Fowler" kinds from this group of people. In fact... I know none.

I don't mean to discredit this group. They're smart. But sometime I wonder if they would listen to advises...




Consider applying for YC's W25 batch! Applications are open till Nov 12.

Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: