However there seem to be a few niches where I could be productive until I’m ready to retire and there might be an opportunity to join a team working on a system they’re trying to get off of. My quick evaluation is that there’s 3 or 4 solid years doing that in a backwater where AI is going to struggle.
In this situation would you do it? I frankly don’t care about being on top of tech any more but I’m keen to use my years of experience being productive.
Thank you!
I run an 11/780 emulated system on my phone on days I feel nostalgic.
I can telnet in to the virtual VAX from my other PCs.
One caution, updating Termux removes all your data. I lost a VAX that way once. 8(
Preach it, brother! :-D
> In this situation would you do it?
FWIW, if it would keep me productive and keep a roof over my head, i'd not at all be averse to working on VMS or a similarly obscure system, provided they didn't require me to know anything about it going in (which would rule me out).
At some point in our lives we have to accept practicality over bling. Let the young'uns fight out the LLM Wars, then walk in (if necessary) once that dust has settled.
But even if it's not your last gig... I think it's going to take three or four years for AI to become something stable. (Right now it's supposed to write all the code; I'm not sure that that's the actual end state, but we'll see.) But if you can skip all the crazy and come back after it's resolved, that's not a bad move either.
(Can you come back after it's all resolved? You won't know AI. Still, I think that 36 years of experience will be worth something, even then. And you can train someone with 36 years how to use AI easier than you can train someone who knows AI on 36 years of experience.)
In 3-4 years, nothing anyone is doing today will matter. It is rapidly evolving, and I'd rather sit back, do what I know, and let it all fall out one way or other other, then learn what I need to if I haven't retired by then.
For younger people, being on the bleeding edge of new things matters, but it really doesn't for us old folk. We know how to learn. We'll learn it when it matters. So long as we have work until then, I am not going to waste my energy re-skilling every 6 months to use a tech that is nowhere near stable with an entirely unclear future.