Well, my official title is Senior Systems Programmer, but I seem to be better known as a nerd. Basically, I've paid my dues and don't deal with end users any more, except around here - you folks aren't too bad...
My job consists of keeping the systems running you don't see, except when they break. For those of you who know a little about this, I primarily manage a network of about 30 Linux and Novell servers for about 2000 users, and numerous applications and services that run on them. I also do a fair amount of Oracle and web application development.
Thought I would end up being a Civil Engineer like my dad and brother, but was in school when the first IBM PC's came out. Started programming for engineering and physics projects in Turbo Pascal, and finally noticed I liked the computer side of things far better than the engineering problems I was trying to solve. When PC networks first hit the street, nobody was teaching it in schools - I dropped out of college, and took up a position with a local PC networking firm. Bogus pay but lots of experience, which set me up for the great job I've had for the last 14 years. Dropping out of college is one of my few regrets, but I really had no choice; had there been the very cool computer science programs of today being offered, I'd have been in hog heaven, gladly studying and soaking my parents pocket book for a few more years.
Translation - any of you aspiring nerd kids reading this, don't think you can do what I did - ain't possible any more, there's way too much competition. Stay in school and enjoy it.
As it turns out, I ended up at a local
water utility, working in part with a bunch of engineers. Almost to a one of them, they'd rather be computer guys. Oh, the irony...
Liked the environment and place I worked at so much, that I took my talented wife under my wing, and started training her to be a nerd instead of a clerk. She started as a Help Desk tech, then within a couple years, was managing the section, much to the chagrin of the many folks she passed up so quickly. Client Services Supervisor is her fancy title. We commute together, eat lunch together, and will probably retire together - hopefully in about 10 years, settling in WA somewhere.
Next?