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Joshua Austin
Joshua Austin

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Java It Is! A Q1 Check-In

I was really pumped to cover a lot of developer topics this year. After a month and a half of trying to squeeze everything together, I've come to the realization I simply don't have the time to learn and build everything I want to. And that's OK.

An older friend who retired comfortably from the spoils of the .COM Era shared some simple yet profound bits of advice this week when I asked him what was his recipe for success:

Focus on what you know best.

For me, that would definitely be Java.

"How can I make my family's life better?"

So far, for my situation, it's sticking with Java. In my current situation, the majority of the highest-paying jobs are in Java.

Around the same time I encountered DHH's article on investing in things that don't change. Java is definitely still very familiar even if you haven't touched it in 10 years.

That doesn't mean I'll stop exploring other things, like Rust and blockchains and Swift (oh my!), but I need to deliberately spend less time on those other things so I can sharpen the strongest skill I have.

I've started working on my first RIFE2 project, and I've started reading a book on the Java game engine FXGL. These should keep me preoccupied for a while. If I run out of Java-related things to do I expect to revisit JBake and maybe Java for Android.

Top comments (0)

Great read:

Is it Time to go Back to the Monolith?

History repeats itself. Everything old is new again and I’ve been around long enough to see ideas discarded, rediscovered and return triumphantly to overtake the fad. In recent years SQL has made a tremendous comeback from the dead. We love relational databases all over again. I think the Monolith will have its space odyssey moment again. Microservices and serverless are trends pushed by the cloud vendors, designed to sell us more cloud computing resources.

Microservices make very little sense financially for most use cases. Yes, they can ramp down. But when they scale up, they pay the costs in dividends. The increased observability costs alone line the pockets of the “big cloud” vendors.

👋 Kindness is contagious

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