A long blogpost made by some neurodivergent guy who has spent 2 decades in the tech industry (including positions at STRAGMAN companies) and has gotten nowhere and about to get evicted
The whole thing is written like someone who posts on 4chan in an overly sarcastic and memey style. Its best summarized by the last paragraph:
The worst feeling is comparison. Comparison is the death of happiness, as they say. I look at my own place in the world compared to people who just started at Apple or Microsoft 20 years ago then never left, and now they have made eight figures just over the past 4 years while my life path has lead me to… practically nothing. Then the tech inequality continues to compound. Imagine joining a company where the teenage interns have already made a couple million off their passive stock grants and other employees have been making $2MM to $6MM per year over the past 5 years there, while you're starting over with nothing again for the 5th company in a row so what's the point in even trying6. Though, did you know paying rent on a credit card still qualifies for points? Made $60 this month paying rent with credit card point rebates7. whoops.
Well, at least the author is fricking hot for someone in their 40's, and isn't some IT blob. I'd tap that blonde bussy!
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I think this guy might actually be when it comes to finances. I initially took his comments where he was saying average established companies were paying employees $5k-$10k a day as hyperbole. Flipping through a few other posts, I think this guy legitimately believes the starting salary for neophyte devops should be around $500k a year, and should grow from there. Stereotypical delusions of grandeur, backed up by the grossly exaggerated stories of how he single-handedly has fixed awe-inspiring problem at numerous companies without a hitch, or how his ideas (if he could get funding) represent trillions of dollars in potential.
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hes probably thinking about all the tech jobs where you begin at a startup and you get stock options and stuff which can end up growing greatly in value
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Those startup lottery stories make tech look sexy but what they don't tell you is nine times out of ten you didn't join the one that became the next billion-dollar unicorn and the potty paper shares you took in lieu of a higher salary are worthless.
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