The level of productivity we have gained during this ‘digital revolution’ is amazing and has delivered vast improvements in the areas of health care, communication, transport and entertainment, to name just a few. Everything has a computer chip in it these days, your car, your washing machine, your oven, your phone, your TV etc. and all these chips are effectively tiny machines running computer programs which have been written by us ‘Coders’.
I think the future looks even brighter as the next phase of the digital revolution is just around the corner – Quantum computing, Artificial intelligence and Nuclear Fusion have the potential to again revolutionise health care, transport and climate protection in the near future. All of these technologies rely heavily on ‘code’ and ‘Coders’ like us building their tiny digital machines 🙂
A. A computer programmer (or Coder) takes a task or process which might currently be done manually by humans, or by a complex physical mechanism and converts that process into a set of instructions that a computer chip can understand. This allows computers to do our laborious and complex, even dangerous tasks and free us, humans, up to do more interesting things.
A. I started coding when I was about 12 years old on the BBC Micro Computer. There was a lunchtime computer club at my school and when I was walking past the classroom one day, I spotted kids using the computers and went inside out of curiosity. I wrote my first ‘Hello World’ program in BBC basic that day and got hooked on coding for the next 40 years!
A. After learning how to create simple programs and draw pretty patterns on the screen, I persuaded my parents to get me a Commodore 64 so that I could continue learning to code at home. Of course, like many kids of the time, I actually spent most of my time playing games on it rather than programming it, but I did create a text-based adventure game with a friend of mine which was fun.
I used to get computer coding magazines and sometimes copy reams and reams of example code from them in order to get some simple wireframe driving game to run, but those examples never seemed to work. This was probably because large parts of them were in what’s called ‘machine code’ for performance reasons, which is just basically lots of numbers. Looking back on it, It was probably a bit much to expect a 12-year-old to copy thousands of lines of text and numbers from the pages of a paper magazine without making a few typos, and of course, a few typos are all it takes to stop a computer programming from working.
Still, it obviously didn’t put me off because I went on to study Computing at University.
A. Some people think coding is a bit ‘geeky’ and it was considered to be an activity for ‘weirdy beardy’ blokes who wear socks and sandals and never go outside, never play sport and who have zero social skills. Well, some of us are a bit like that, but most of us these days are a bit more ‘normal’ and Hollywood has done a lot to make coding seem pretty cool these days since in many movies there’s often some nerdy computer guy or gal that saves the day by hacking into the baddies (or aliens) computer system.
Many of the most successful companies on the planet are tech companies which were often started by computer geeks when they were still students or school drop-outs and these guys are now fabulously wealthy…. that makes the profession a lot more attractive and seem ‘cooler’ than it used to be.
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