I read every word. Thank you.
I was 10 when you turned 30, and my mother campaigned to buy me a Vic-20. It set me on a course to a career that has been mostly exciting and profitable. Like you, I have had a fair share of good timing and luck. I watched the Internet be born, and while I did not make the BEST bets, I did ok.
Keep inspiring kids with your story. It is important.
Same here. Entire family managed to scrounge up the price tag of a Tandy Color Computer Model 1 with 16K of RAM for Christmas in the early 80s, and I credit that Christmas the beginning of most of my livelihood.
The rest of the upgrades and accessories over the years after that were mostly on me. Since I couldn't afford the pre-built nice stuff, I had to build the stuff myself from scrounged parts. Soldered in the RAM for a whopping 64K. Hadn't soldered a thing in my life up until that point. Just had to be done.
Second big thing that happened was stumbling into a company that built products that had to integrate telecom and computers completely, and had a mix of old Bell System heads and early computer nerds. Learned a ton in a short time.
Mixing all of that, there is little I can't figure out how to make work in those disciplines. Heavy emphasis on the basics early in those early endeavors and having to build the stuff from parts, makes the modern stuff feel intensely easy. I can "see" the history of how the complex thing I'm looking at today came to be.
And troubleshooting really became second nature. Seriously.
They brought in some consulting company once to teach our entire product support engineering department at one employer, how to troubleshoot.
The lady teaching the classes had some pre made scenario and started around the room, asking what the scene was -- with only one piece of information -- and with each wrong answer the person could ask a question.
I was third. I told her what her scenario was.
She was kinda unprepared for it.
She said, "Well that's right, but we were supposed to go at least around the room a couple of times to get there! How did you figure that out?"
As I started to mumble something, my boss who I'd worked with for many years on and off at multiple companies interrupts and jokes, "He's really good at that. We didn't hire him for his stellar personality!"
I love troubleshooting entire systems. It's just plain fun for me. I get loud and ****y about it sometimes, and can invoke dad's training of how to cuss like a sailor during the process, but that's just noise when a branch of the troubleshooting tree in my head is blocked and I know there's no way to short-circuit a quick test to get around a nasty test.
It's why I loathe ADS-B. It's junk engineering from the late 90s, and doesn't accomplish any of the things used to market it and justify the price tag running in the billions. Really easy to see. Boondoggle. Seen a number of them.