So it looks like you are not suited to be a hired worker.
That's a bit flawed logic, isn't it?
I'm a hired worker, I've been coding professionally for a couple of years. I've never had anyone sitting behind my shoulder watching me coding at work (unless we agreed on pair programming).
Based on that it seems that I am able to provide certain value to my employer without having to let people sit next to me and watch me write code.
So why the ability to code with someone sitting behind my shoulder should determine whether I am suited to be a hired worker?
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That's a bit flawed logic, isn't it?
I'm a hired worker, I've been coding professionally for a couple of years. I've never had anyone sitting behind my shoulder watching me coding at work (unless we agreed on pair programming).
Based on that it seems that I am able to provide certain value to my employer without having to let people sit next to me and watch me write code.
So why the ability to code with someone sitting behind my shoulder should determine whether I am suited to be a hired worker?