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no, it's not whinning, it's market evaluation. ;-) I see that too, and have
the same thoughts in my head. as software developer one can make pretty big
money comparing to {numerous other professions}, but well - it's not a
luxury living, not at all! it concerns not only suits, but houses, cars,
even rents...
so - may be companies need to treat developers better way, or developers
should grow (but in which direction?), gain additional education and get so
wanted level of life.
I guess, my question is wider: being an employee vs. a businessman. Any
employee (regardless of the trade) has a cap in his/her income, but their
life is more or less stable. On the other hand, businessmen take a risk by
trying to work independently and hiring other people... most of them file
bankruptcy, but some of them succeed and can afford the luxury items like a
$5K suit and the like.
And, of course, there is a number of people who can't afford buying these
suits, but the buy them anyway by taking a second mortgage.
To business or to business that's the question. You know that software is
one of the best pay jobs in america but that CEOs earne more than x45 times
what average workers do. Risk vs. money, we choose deterministic the
choose heuristic.
Well, $55-60K seems like a lot to young people... After paying school
loans, some credit cards, and a some unemployment period(from layoffs),plus
married later and having 2 kids, it's sucidal to think that you can retired
or even sent kids to college 10-20 years from now.
Even $100+ salary don't seems much these days.
I read from a local newspaper that farm boy went to a state college(not Ivy
League or even CA public universities) and found out he was the poorest
since all kids in his economic class came from famililies where their total
parent combined income are about $150-$300K annually.
That's just a state college!.
My take is that software developers are the "brick layers" of the 21st
century....