Your argument, as I understand it, is thus: you are indebted to those who helped you along the way, and so you should not be vain. Sexiness is vanity, therefore by thinking that your job is sexy, you are being insufficiently humble to those who helped you get where you are, and you will be the worse for it.<p>Three points: firstly, how is this at all specific to 'makers'? Absolutely everyone has been helped along the way to get to where they are. Thus by your argument, <i>nobody</i> has a sexy job.<p>Secondly, I don't buy that sexiness implies vanity. My present job is certainly not sexy, but I have had jobs in the past that would be considered sexy by many, and I don't think that made me (or any of my co-workers) vain, I just think it made me enjoy my job.<p>Thirdly, being a 'maker', if we understand the same things by that term, certainly IS sexy, in the literal sense of the term. Being able to create interesting, useful and fun things is a very attractive trait. Lots of girls are attracted to guys who can build stuff, and personally I find very few things hotter than hacker ladies. Can't speak for the gay view on that, but I don't see how it would be any different.<p>I would say the opposite. Be sexy. Revel in it. Go create.
I'm a maker and I don't agree with the moral judgment against sexiness, ambition, and creating freely without guilt.<p>I've met very few "entitled" or "narcissistic" people, but I've heard the term thrown around a lot, usually to refer to people who live a little too boldly for the comfort of onlookers, lacking the guilt complexes and constipated style of self-expression many of us inherited.
So did anyone else think of Right Said Fred's song when they read this?<p>Not often but it happens that I disagree with the question itself. What is 'sexy' anyway? I don't want to mate with my job, I don't think anyone does, but I enjoy my job immensely. I enjoy it because it challenges me in a dozen different ways and I'm constantly provided opportunities to learn new stuff or explore new systems. My job is fun and rewarding. Nothing in my job involves sex, the sex trade (well I suppose we work on keeping porn results out of regular searches), or my mating instinct.<p>Fundamentally operations is like plumbing, you find problems you fix them, you clean up the mess. But that is like saying being an aircraft pilot is just driving from point A to point B.<p>If you have to ask "Is this a sexy job?" then you are asking the wrong question, you should be saying "Is there anything else I'd rather be doing?" And if <i>that</i> answer is yes then I encourage you to go do that other thing and be even happier than you are right now.
<i>We are not self-made.</i><p>Nobody is; anyone who thinks they are self-made most likely got the idea from someone else and didn't question it because it stroked their ego, giving us a perfect example of irony.<p>This is not to say that hard work and self-investment are worthless. But I do think the article hits on some very important points in the direction of not forgetting the past and how much we owe to those who came before us (at worst, to be able to learn from their mistakes).<p>One last thing though: sexy is relative. <i>You</i> may not think my job is sexy, but as we are all well aware, there is a fetish for everything.
I am a maker, I am self-made, I am not indebted, and my job is damn sexy. The fact that I stand in the shoulders of giants does not mean that I am not self-made. We all make our choices given the opportunities available, some of us choose some things, some of us choose others. Given that we make our choices and everybody around us is free to make their own choices, we are not indebted to anybody. We might be generous out of good will, but I refuse to accept any unearned guilt for my success, or any debt or duty that I did not incur. I love my job and I think it is damn sexy. If I didn't, I would do something else.
Not being from the bay area can anyone on that side of the planet who survived the first bubble (2000) to today give an honest assessment on if attitudes really have changed[0]?<p>Around here (midwest) not much has seemed to change. I don't see nearly as many rockstars/brogrammers as articles I read seem to suggest.<p>[0] <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/the-yuppie-is-dead--long-live-the-yettie-723526.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.independent.co.uk/news/people/profiles/the-yuppie...</a>
Not unless you are a data scientist, apparently: <a href="http://hbr.org/2012/10/data-scientist-the-sexiest-job-of-the-21st-century/" rel="nofollow">http://hbr.org/2012/10/data-scientist-the-sexiest-job-of-the...</a>
What I take from this post is that the author is seeing a growing ego problem, with makers using too much time and energy broadcasting their accomplishments instead of letting their work stand for itself.<p>However this ego problem has always existed in all industries, not just from makers. From finance types to the over-important auditor, the marketing intern and even in the service industry, ego's are abound.<p>What maybe the difference is that tech makers have never in history had easier more accessible methods to express their thoughts to a larger audience.
"We dig in the dirt so that out of the muck we can construct something we ourselves can find worthwhile, all the time knowing in our true hearts that we’re likely to be the only ones to ever find it beautiful" ... That's one of the reasons why being a maker is sexy. Plenty of startups have probably started this way...out of the muck, against all odds, against disbelief from the rest of the world, you can take something and make it work. Makers are pursued by a lot of companies. That's sexy...
>We are indebted.<p>I'm not sure how I feel about this statement; it(the article) almost has a communist vibe. It seems like a negative way to state that in order for the advancement of technology, we need to pass our skills and knowledge to others. Yea, I agree with the overall message of helping/being helped, but not the tone that it's being described.
Pick up a copy of Popular Mechanics from the 1960s. Makers were alive and well back then, and there was a lot of marketing effort put into making it sexy.<p>Do we need a dose of humility? Certainly. But we absolutely can, and should enjoy making great stuff.
op forgets the most important point:<p>assumption is the mother of all fuckups. and the fuckup is what i just read.<p>protip: define "we" before you start wasting other peoples time