← Back to context

Comment by zeroonetwothree

3 years ago

As I’ve gotten older it’s harder for me to learn an entirely new area (like say going from web dev to mobile or ML). But it’s actually easier to learn a new variation of something (like the latest JS framework) because it’s usually pretty similar to one of the things I already know. I guess this leads to increasing specialisation, but it also means studies that merely count “new skills” will be misleading if they don’t differentiate in which way the skills are new.

I'm the complete opposite. Hand me a new JS framework that does the same thing I've done a million times but have to learn it's opinionated abstraction set that's somehow better and I just turn off. I simply do not care, at all. You need to simply explain to me the improvement you're proposing or it might as well be trash to me.

Now give me a new theoretical concept where I can expand my knowledge or integrate into my knowledge map and view of the world and I'm excited, there aren't enough hours in the day. Tell me about this all new concept I wasn't familiar with--I'll start thinking of ways I can use it, how I can leverage it, or how it may connect with other ideas and concepts I have.

Now give me a tight deadline which most business environments create and I agree with you, give me the boring stuff I can pump out, get my paycheck and go home to enjoy the rest of my day.