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The 40-year Takeaway

Looking forward by looking back.

The future is coming.
(Image: canva.com)
Feeling reflective, I look back on my career path to see what we might learn from it that could apply to today's youth.

I was feeling rather reflective the other day, which lead to a discussion with a visiting friend about what their young son could expect over the course of his lifetime.

I started by looking back in order to look forward. It turns out I have a lot to look back on.

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TL;DR:

40+ years leads to this

The one constant in my career has been change. Now more than ever, change is happening to more people in more ways.  Those who’ll benefit the most are those who constant adapting to it, learning new skills along the way. We simply cannot predict what the world our children will live in will look like, but we can prepare them by teaching them the skill of learning how to learn.

Over 40 years, so far1

I first encountered a computer in 1976, and as I’ve discussed elsewhere, it was love at first sight. That this could be a career thrilled me.

The intervening years have seen me:

  • Program that first computer using punch cards.
  • Buy my first computer (an Apple ][).
  • Fail my first job interview miserably because I couldn’t do hexadecimal math in my head.
  • Work on a family of 8-bit-processor-based data entry terminals (writing and supporting everything from communications programs to programming languages to operating systems).
  • Move to a small2 company in Redmond called Microsoft to work on some of the very first PCs.
  • Play with an assortment of technologies over the next 18 years, ranging from programming languages to applications for one of the world’s most popular internet sites.
  • Leave a very large3 company in Redmond called Microsoft to retire at age 44 and have a little more time of my own.
  • Start my own internet entrepreneurial effort, now known as “Ask Leo!”
  • Continue to play with an assortment of technologies in order to write, program web apps, design websites, create video and audio content, and of course, answer questions.

It’s a long list, and I glossed over more than a few things to make it as short as it is.

Hidden in that list is something I believe is incredibly important.

The 40-year takeaway

There’s nothing at the bottom of the list that could have been reliably predicted by what’s at the top or what came before.

Put another way, there’s absolutely no way I could have known in 1976 what my work in 2021 would entail, other than the very vague terms computers and technology. Things are moving too quickly in directions we simply can’t guess in order to make long-term predictions, much less long-term commitments.

Here’s another implied takeaway: it’s not going to stop.

The ramifications of change

In past eras, we could train for a job, skill, or career at a young age, do that job for the majority of our working lives, and retire.

One job, one skill, was all you needed for your entire life. As long as you were good at it, it was something you could count on to keep you active, feed your family, and meet your needs.

That is no longer true.

More importantly, perhaps, it’s no longer true for the majority of careers, not just the technology-related ones. You see it all around you: as things change, the underlying infrastructure changes as well. The clearest example might be coal mining. As energy production moves to cleaner and more efficient sources, the need to dig black rock out of the ground is declining. If they want to remain productive, individuals involved need to discover new skills and new careers.

You can no longer count on being able to do the same job until you die.

The ramifications of the ramifications

To bring this back to my friend’s young child, it means this: exactly what skills you learn in school is less important now than it ever was because you can be certain that skills needed to remain useful will change significantly over your lifetime. And the implications of such a change can be dramatic.

What if your doctor is offering advice that has been rendered obsolete since they finished medical school?
– Shane Parrish, Half Life: The Decay of Knowledge and What to Do About It

Knowledge changes. What were once accepted facts are continually updated, refined, or replaced as new information, technologies, and tools become available. This is how science works.

It’s no longer enough to go to school and get a job.

You need to stay in school for the rest of your life.

You can never stop learning.

The most important skill for my friend’s young child

“The faster the pace of knowledge changes, the more valuable the skill of learning becomes.”
– Shane Parrish, Half Life: The Decay of Knowledge and What to Do About It

My friends were pushing their child to become a doctor.

My position? Besides “don’t push” (let the child decide for himself what his calling should be), my advice is to focus those energies elsewhere. Focus instead on learning how to learn, learning how to question, and learning how to fail and benefit from the experience.

I won’t say that what someone chooses to focus on today is irrelevant; it’s not. My first encounter with punch cards in 1976 set a chain of events in motion that led me to my current situation. But the chain of events is more important than the choice of punch-card technology.

At each step along the way, I had to learn something new. I had to learn how to solve problems I’d never encountered before, problems that didn’t even exist before. I had to learn how to question and re-evaluate previously accepted wisdom. I had to learn how to fail, and I had to learn how to take away important lessons from each failure.

All of that led to something completely unpredictable: today.

My 40-year takeaway?

Teach your children how to learn, so they can be ready for a future you can’t even begin to imagine.

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Footnotes & References

1: More like 44 years, as of the most recent update. Smile

2: Small meaning around 360 people.

3: Large meaning over 55,000 people.

45 comments on “The 40-year Takeaway”

  1. Leo –
    Right on – who knew what the future would hold? My first job in the computer industry was with a small start-up called Control Data Corporation, and their computers (1604, 3600, etc) were big enough to stand in. Today my cell phone has more technology in it. What’s next?
    I enjoy your column – always something of interest for an old guy like me.

    Reply
  2. Leo,
    You said it! I joined the USAF after high school in 1960. After ten years, I got out and started computer work using the punch card, as well. I went back to school to learn computer technology. Before I received my Associates Degree in Technology I got a job with DataPoint Corporation. DataPoint was the originator of the desktop computer: the DataPoint 2200. It had a cassette-based operating system, a whopping 16K of internal RAM and each unit sold for over $30,000. And look where we are now. I have gone on to get both my Bachelors and Masters degrees in computer technology. I have always said: “Education is a journey; not a destination.” I’m 76 now and still learning. Keep up the good work and keep those messages coming.

    Reply
    • Bill I started my IT career in 1982 in South Africa at a manufacturing company that had a Datapoint. The first language I learned was Databus… I cannot remember where the word Arc fit in but it rings a huge bell. Thanks for the memories!

      Reply
  3. I had to learn how to fail, and I had to learn how to take away important lessons from each failure.

    Imagine how different your life would have been if you were better at hexadecimal math and got that job. I rarely used hexadecimal math. I bought a Casio hexadecimal capable calculator instead :-) .

    Reply
  4. “Teach your children how to learn, so they can be ready for a future you can’t even begin to imagine.” – Aye. Who’d have thunk that people would be able to make a living, and a very good living in some case, by live-streaming themselves playing video games? Or creating YouTube videos? Or search-optimizing websites? Or flying drones? Or……

    We don’t know what the future job market will look like, but we do know some of the skills that will be needed: entrepreneurship, adaptability, problem solving, communication, the ability to negotiate and collaborate, curiosity and imagination. And the development of these skills is something our education systems should be placing more emphasis on developing.

    Reply
  5. Thanks Leo,
    I am 82 y.o psychiatrist and still working (part time), learning every day. Your ideas about continuous learning and questions about the future i sent to my many friends and colleagues.

    Reply
  6. As a fellow dinosaur (also started on punch cards and paper tape), I would like to offer some more general advice. Don’t waste the best years of your life waiting for the best years of your life.

    Reply
  7. Learn to learn. Really good advice. I see so many now that learning seemed to revolve on test taking, thus not really learning how to survive. I did 4 navy years (sonar tech) after high school then went to U. Temple CC and got my AAS in Electronic Engineering, ending up at Bell Labs in research. I spent 35 years there, constantly learning new technologies. I didn’t actually further my degree, but took many courses over the years, including a number of masters level versions. The environment required that to survive. I retired in 2001 as a Member of Technical Staff and over those years worked with some of the brightest people. Today I still try to keep up with what is happening, though it gets harder each year. But I try to learn something new as often as I can.

    My advice to young people – learn something new every day.

    Reply
  8. My first computer ran CP/M software and was used as a bulletin board while a bearded Bill Gates (who in their right mind would give this hippy money?) was trying to formulate DOS as an operating system. The BBS had a massive 64 bytes of memory and had “doors”. Those who are under 70 need not bother to even read this message. Self taught and still learning but having trouble “keeping up.” Once had a dictionary sized book with all the DOS commands, and it was years before I would convert to “Windows.” I am a dinosaur in a modern world.

    Reply
    • Our first computer was an IBM Model 30 286 running IBM DOS 4.0 with DOSShell. It had a 20 MB hard drive, a 16-bit 10-MHz 286 CPU, 512 KB of RAM and cost $3617 in December 1988 including sales tax. My first computer book was the outstanding “Running MS-DOS” by Van Wolverton. One of the first programs we bought was Quicken, an updated version of which I still run today.

      Reply
  9. Thanks for the wisdom, Leo. Too few people take the trouble of imparting wisdom on the current generation built up and aggregated from many years of (sometimes painful) leaning’s. To take the trouble, time and effort to do this speaks volumes about your kindness and care as a human being.

    Many thanks, always,
    Dorian

    Reply
  10. Learn to learn and to think. Words to live by for sure. Sadly, more and more a lost skill.

    But I can’t believe how young you all are. I first learned programming on an RPC9000 made by the Royal Typewriter Corp. That was around 1959-60.

    Reply
  11. In January 1964 I began programming on an NCR315 computer which had 10k of memory. You entered programs on punched cards which were fed into a system that changed the input to output cards that could then be fed into the computer and executed (one program at a time). The next USAF assignment was a 5 year stint at the Military Personnel center. We created a program that controlled all military personnel activities at base level throughout the world. Next was a 3 year stint at Hq Pacific Command in Hawaii. Next was military retirement followed by a 20 year stint as a programmer for a military contractor. Next was retirement with Social Security but I still write an occasional program using Visual Basic.

    Reply
  12. And here’s another implied take-away: it’s not going to stop.

    But… it could! All it would take is a series of EMP’s world wide and we’d be essentially back in the dark ages. And then what would all the snowflakes be able to do then?

    Unlikely? Yes. Improbable… unfortunately no.

    Reply
  13. You are right on. I started working in 1966 on the Univac 1004 and Univac 1108. The 1004 was a card reader and printer that was used to feed programs to the 1108. I went to school on the 1004 for 3 months and on the 1108 for 6 months. I went from there to a Xerox Sigma 7. 2 months school for it. From there I worked on the VAX 11/780. 3 weeks school for it. The saying that I like is” The ONLY constant in the pursuit of PERFECTION is CHANGE. I am 88 yrs old and still learning

    Reply
  14. I started on an IBM 1401 writing Autocoder programs. I was fortunate enough to work on the second IBM360/30. Many Assembler programs followed. DOS system software some came calling and was in the OS side forever. Applications were not to be understood but merely tolerated. My first OS sysgen in 1969 on an IBM360/75 was all in punched cards and occupied 5 trays as I recalled. It took over 4 hours to complete. I managed system software support groups at various and sundry in the early 70s. Began playing with Microsoft based PCs that you had to assemble from a Heath kit in 1980. Most of my groups did both mainframe and PC software in those days. Finally began concentrating on Windows in 1993. Wound up in 2001 leaving the management dodge and learned SQL Server and spent the rest of my career as a DBA (the best years of my career). Finally hung ‘em up in 2014 after 50 years.

    I still dabble a little in the Windows installation and maintenance areas. I have been a Microsoft Insider for a couple of years and look forward to the new builds (of course I am in the fast track).

    Reply
  15. Most schools have been wrong in their teaching. I had one teacher that taught the way to learn is to teach how to learn, to search, to interpret. Schools teach from a book, learn the book and go on to the next book. It’s already outdated. Imagine learning to milk a goat from a book. Your Computer starts, mine was a Z1000 Sinclare. Well it was portable and did Amateur radio stuff so back in the 80’s, it was under $100 and available. Electronics as a whole has advanced so fast that you need a book to keep up. But the book is already outdated.
    JR,

    Reply
  16. The one most valuable lesson I ever learnt, came from my father in 1955 when I was starting Secondary school at the age of 11. He said, “You do not go to school to learn that 2 + 2 = 4, you go to school to learn how to learn.” Now at the age of 74, I am still learning.

    Reply
  17. I’m not sure we can instill a desire to keep learning. Some of us are born with limited “vision,” and will never understand that life can be different no matter what we tell them.

    Then again, I think of myself in the 1980s, in my forties, certain that personal computers are useless, good only for collecting recipes or playing silly games. That changed in one day in 1989 when, in my first day at a new assignment, I was informed one of the most important parts of my job was to produce a weekly report for the battalion commander. (Printed on five sheets of fanfold paper on a dot matrix printer, horizontally, end to end.) Those minutes changed my life. It was sink (get kicked out of the Army) or swim (learn DOS to produce the report).

    I was lucky to have an office mate, the Signal Officer, ie, not his job to help me, who got me through the first few weeks. Meanwhile, I was studying pirated computer books bought in Seoul book shops and practicing at night on the office computer, bringing it back to life a few times with also-pirated Norton Utilities.

    I came to love computers, leading me later to teach basic courses, and after my Army career to work as a deskside tech in dangerous areas that required high security clearances. Now I’m working on my memoir, a probably futile attempt to pass on some wisdom to my grandchildren, and possible only thanks to MS Word, which organizes my Table of Contents, sequentially numbers my footnotes and, most important, lets me add graphics scanned from my photo albums or
    inserted from Google Images. Being able to leave the memoir behind has given me much peace of mind.

    My life’s only regret may be my lost decade, when I stubbornly resisted the coming of this new technology, unable to see its promise.

    Reply
  18. 40 years in one job is starting to seem like a rare thing these days.
    I’ve spent 43 years, (and counting), in the one full-time job rewinding and redesigning electric motors, generators/alternators and transformers, changing from a time, (1975), when everything from the tiniest fan motor or coil would be rewound, to the ‘modern era’ when it’s not financially viable to rewind a standard 200 H.P. motor. Aside from service jobs, the only motors that tend to get rewound these days are ‘specials’ or the bigger motors, generators and transformers. Luckily enough, Tasmania has a fairly large mining and industrial base to keep the work coming in for the foreseeable future at least.
    Like Tom Hunn, I’m still learning, and that’s a good thing.
    As for computers. My first was a ‘Spectravideo 128’ that came with a 28.8 Kb modem that had me fascinated watching a jpeg(?) materialize line by line as it slowly downloaded. The good old days.

    Reply
  19. Well put Leo. I was lucky in having one teacher who, on his first day with our class, declared that ” if it is the last thing I ever do, I will teach you (Expletive deleted) lot how to learn and make you think.” He did, sometimes the hard way! While we are reminiscing my “first Computer” use was a 1962 ICT 1300. Thanks for many years of info & tips with !”Ask Leo” & get well soon. I had pneumonia and learned that you must take is easy & rest, Regards

    Reply
  20. We have generations (grandparents, parents and “children”) that all worked in computers, now. Retirees sitting on the porch in rocking chairs is a thing of the past. I started in 1969 on an IBM 360/30 with 32k memory and a dozen big cabinets with peripheral devices and control units. Learning operations, programming and systems design was an empowering and thrilling experiences I ever had. I’m still using computers (and Leo’s Tips) and don’t ever expect to stop.

    Reply
  21. You wrote:
    “…Work[ed] on a family of 8-bit-processor-based data entry terminals…”

    My own first computer system was the 8-bit, 1Mhz, Commodore-64 (which later became a Commodore-128). I still have &use it!

    Reply
    • Wish I still had my Commodore-64! Also my first; my mom threw it out when we moved (and also my record player :( ). I can sure relate to Steve, above: I was good on that thing – I wish I had realized where the industry was headed – I would have stuck with it! Still learning now, though!

      Reply
  22. First experience was with a Radio Shack TRS-80 with a cassette tape drive and the optional ‘memory chip upgrade’ expanding it to something like 60k. ‘Programming’ was done by copying off sheets of printed data, by hand, into it’s memory. Of course, one typo anywhere in the process screwed the whole thing up. Viewed as a toy? OK. Viewed as a career? Nope.

    Reply
  23. Thanks for all the comments. Let’s discuss what the learning methodology should be that you teach to kids. I got a PhD in artificial intelligence in 1971. In doing that, I certainly learned how to learn, but it took a while. My curriculum through college was always well advanced- I wrote my own degree requirements at each step. The reason I bring this up is that I was well into my MS in Biophysics when I took a course in Probability Theory- I got a “D”. Subsequently I took a course in decision theory. The light went on! From that point on, I didn’t really have to study, even though I took the most difficult courses in science and technology offered at a large university…. The discovery: other than applying decision theory, I began using mind mapping in my head, without forcing what I learned into English. The closest formal concept that mimics this is UML plus mental Petri Net models. I really do think and learn that way.

    By the way, I have described this as “visual” modelling. If someone isn’t “visual”, then there is a way, through a kind of musical visualization on the auditory cortex to get the same effect. I learned that later in life, when I started singing Black Gospel instructed by a person from a Gullah background. There is no written music, either the music or the words. So we learned the music by repetition. We sang the words, but we didn’t really memorize words. I couldn’t tell you any of the words to any song. But start the music, and the words just come.

    All this to say I am teaching this way to learn to my grandkids. And I encourage all grandpas and mas out there to teach your grand children to learn, and the way to learn can be found in the key concepts of artificial intelligence.

    The kids are 9. They are in a Chinese immersion school. Their verbal and head languages haven’t been “locked in” yet. So this way of thinking is just another language to them. It is kind of a language of unlanguage.

    Some principles: Learning is a conscious effort, but it is not work. Be confident of it- don’t force it into any verbal language. Build yourself a conceptual structure and start hanging concepts and methods on that structure AND, most important, start building relationships between them. Be comfortable with and recognize uncertainty. Remember the uncertainty and add it to your conceptual model. Pay attention to the preconditions: think in Bayesian. No matter how much you “know”, you will have difficulty applying that knowledge without “people skills.” Very few people will get your way of thinking. You will need to learn to translate to their way of thinking and be a teacher in their world. Learn these skills early.

    Reply
  24. The first computer I was involved with was the Illiac 1 (programming) and the Illiac 2 (technician) at the University of Illinois in 1959/1960. The Illiac 1 made use of the Williamson Memory (look that up) made from CRT tubes (1024 bits per tube). The Illiac 1 was constructed using 6SN7 vacuum tubes and discrete components. The Illiac 2 was constructed of those new fangled Transistors. Both of these computers took up half or so of a medium sized building, and the power supplies were in the basement.

    Reply
    • Wow, 6SN7. That brings back memories. I remember we had to replace that same tube several times on our old Admiral black and white TV in the 50s. I can’t believe I remembered that number when you mentioned it. I guess it’s because we changed it so often.

      Reply
  25. On my first job interview at Texas Instruments, I was asked a simple question, “What are the 4 sections of a COBOL program.” I didn’t know the answer. I told the interviewer I didn’t know because I kept a template with all the stuff that’s in every COBOL program and filled in the sections without memorizing the names. He was satisfied and I got the job. And seriously, who does Hex arithmetic in their heads?

    Reply
      • That’s one nice feature in Windows. It comes with a built-in programmers’ calculator with hex, decimal, octal, and binary. One computer I worked with used octal, the Wang MVP. That was one crazy machine. It only ran BASIC, and the system commands were all in basic and it didn’t support compilers. It had 256 K RAM and could support up to 12 terminals, but 6-8 was a more feasible number. That BASIC limitation turned out to be a blessing in disguise. While we were doing systems for the Wang, the first PCs came out and I could easily port all my programs to BASIC on the DOS machined with a little adaptation to account for differences in the language on each computer. It was also a good learning experience for the interns as they did the adaptation along with the transcription.

        Reply
  26. Your video should be shown to every high school student. While most will be focused on their immediate lives, some will be smart enough to understand. BTW, my first job was as an electronic technician at GE aligning and troubleshooting radar and missile guidance systems. That was from 1959-64. Back then, the rate of change was so slow that I didn’t have to upgrade my skills set!

    While now things are changing aw warp speed, I see the positive aspects of that. It forces me to be adaptable and to learn quickly — rare capabilities for anyone in their eighties!

    Reply
  27. Your advocacy for teaching “the skill of learning how to learn” is spot on. Honing this skill was the most important part of my education in mathematics at a university almost 50 years ago. Helping people to learn how to learn has been one of the most rewarding parts of working through changes in hardware platforms, evolving languages and programming techniques, finding solutions, and understanding how to solve problems. Getting yourself into the attitude of always willing to be fascinated fuels the excitement and enjoyment of everything you encounter, whether in tech, art, society, or nature. Thank you, Leo, for enriching our lives.

    Reply

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