Why does everyone suddenly learns how to program? I mean, there's obviously huge competition. Just look at Google Play...

Why does everyone suddenly learns how to program? I mean, there's obviously huge competition. Just look at Google Play, almost nothing there pays to make if judging by the number of paying users.

It is always good to learn new things.

tech jobs are the last middle class jobs of the west. 30 years ago, putting bolts on a car might have made a livable wage but now you need technical skills to be marketable.

Still there is a huge demand for C# and Java devs.

Don't be a drama queen.

Companies hire only competent BSc, not guys who learned on Sup Forums how to program.

>competent BSc
Don't be delusional.

People think you can make a quick buck effortless. Joke is on them.

this to be honest
I can count the competent programmers at my university using one hand.

mechanics earn very good money, brah

wATSTHA BUILDING?

he probably should have specified "white collar"

there's a lot of people that want decent money but also don't want dirty physical work, and tech is seen as the best on-ramp to that

>everyone suddenly learns

>comic books and movies about a plumber apprentice called werner pop up since the late 70s
>nobody wants to become a plumber anymore because of how crappy the job is portrayed
>plumbing companies have to close because they can't find new blood
>suddenly, the companies left became monopolists and started to demand galactic prices
>but you will pay anyway because else you can't poop and your house is ruined
>plumbers make mad dosh now

well played

They're not the last middle class jobs, but they are the last middle class jobs *without explicit credentialing systems* for most of the market.

Realistically a lot of doctor, lawyer, engineer, etc. jobs are middle class or upper-middle if you're good at your job, but all of those require entry to a competitive university, funding to go there, time to finish, and professional licensing issues thereafter.

Without the software sector, unemployment among skills-mis-matched (eg. people who got useless degrees or got a degree for a market that collapsed) would be at least double what it is now. The tech sector has soaked up so many skilled and semi-skilled workers in the last two decades that it's quite literally the only thing between the neoliberal economic sytem and a garunteed return to traditional feudalism, which would be the necessary result of having only guild/licensed middle class jobs and everything below that would be quasi-worthless wage labor bid down to well below subsistence wage.

Depends on the mechanic desu. There's a heap of cash to be made in diesel, particularly heavy equipment in the mining and oil industry, but the average guy working on your prius or pickup is only doing OK.

I used to work for a Toyota dealership in CA, now I work for a contractors that fly me out to job sites for heavy d. The hours and travel are horrendous (3am flights to Alaska, for example) but I'm making close to six figures for the first time in my life which ain't half bad for a guy who failed out of university and got a two year mechanical cert at a community college.

no they don't, most of them are fucking idiots
50% of the random fags on this board that I see arguing about code are better than 90% of the people I've ever seen at lockheed & cisco, and it's fucking hilarious.

Huge demand.

Also it is quite easy to learn high level languages and you have tons of ways to learn any of them.

if you are such a prophet why are only 1 to 2 percent of american workers on minimum wage?

Is that exactly minimum wage or within a threshold?

programming is like writing
most people can write, but not many can write something worth reading.

>this
Pretty much, most of the guys I work with at Princeton make 75k/80k non-union while union makes 80/85k, its not that bad user, you can also do a shit ton of a sidejobs because people have no idea who to work with pipes.
Or even clean their pipes when shit clogs

Engineer here, happy to say, no. There are a lot of middle class engineers, but I do agree it's more of a upper-middle class/upper class field.

it's only upper-middle class for a two-income family or, occassionaly, for a single person. rarely will an engineer be pulling in 200k

That's a bit O.

Most jobs in the future may require some level of coding.

They don't, they are learning to code

Coding is not programming

>Why does everyone suddenly learns how to program?
this is why software is complete fuck shit now

Of course. Programming is what your programmer does after you've compiled your code and want to push your new binary onto chip. Why make the distinction though? It's a little autistic if you ask me.

that's a sick ass building

programming is basic skill like cooking. you don't have to be a chef to cook some food