My boyhood dream was to be a computer expert. Having laid a prize-winning academic foundation, proved myself by crafting several commercial software applications, and factoring in the software industry's rate of innovation, I anticipate achieving this goal aged 65 and a quarter!
I vividly remember the day I got bitten by the programming bug. Wild horses were put on standby as I made the decision between writing a quiz program in GEM Basic or attending a family picnic (as I recall, my digestive system went to the picnic, whilst I figured out the best data structure for holding questions and answers).
I get kicks from coding. Creating a clone of Beast (with a rendering routine hand-written in ARM Assembly language) was exciting to my teenage self. But I found that I got more of a thrill from seeing my Dad use the calendaring application that I wrote to help him manage his time as a G.P locum (which application also helped propel my A-Level Computer Science result into the top five in the country – but that’s for another section).
I’ve found the same to be true in my professional life. Whilst a nicely factored, odourless class hierarchy pleases my aesthetic sensibilities, nothing beats the all-round satisfaction of seeing my software getting things done for our customers.