Dear author, you're one of those people who are capable of more and need to take an unfortunate step back.
Given there are so many people who flocked and are still flocking to IT based programming jobs because of the promise that "one day you will be the next <insert-billionaire-here>" level push.
I've met people who burn themselves out trying to write hundreds of lines of good code in a day. I've had new colleagues come in, publically slate my code, only to have to retract their comments in private several months later once they actually understood what it's doing.
The author is probably one of the types, that left as seniour architect could have build something better with people around him adding polish and other "perceived value" to a customer. (Perceived value in this case being everything from corporate branding to translations to internal tooling).
Most "complex" problems from the non-IT world don't need a full stack all singing all dancing latest npm, all the RAM in the world and a full Oracle site lisence. Most could be solved by some talented coders (3 or 4 max) doing the grunt of the work with others around them adding perceived value to allow the company to add a zero to the net value of the product, and it could be deployed in-house on a 2nd hand server with redundancy built for <$30k for it's whole lifetime. And that's assuming it's not just an app to sell that requires no hosting.
Given there are so many people who flocked and are still flocking to IT based programming jobs because of the promise that "one day you will be the next <insert-billionaire-here>" level push.
I've met people who burn themselves out trying to write hundreds of lines of good code in a day. I've had new colleagues come in, publically slate my code, only to have to retract their comments in private several months later once they actually understood what it's doing.
The author is probably one of the types, that left as seniour architect could have build something better with people around him adding polish and other "perceived value" to a customer. (Perceived value in this case being everything from corporate branding to translations to internal tooling).
Most "complex" problems from the non-IT world don't need a full stack all singing all dancing latest npm, all the RAM in the world and a full Oracle site lisence. Most could be solved by some talented coders (3 or 4 max) doing the grunt of the work with others around them adding perceived value to allow the company to add a zero to the net value of the product, and it could be deployed in-house on a 2nd hand server with redundancy built for <$30k for it's whole lifetime. And that's assuming it's not just an app to sell that requires no hosting.