I'm considering making a career change. I enjoy computer science research and I want to contribute to science, but due to the publish-or-perish pressures of industry and academia I would prefer to pursue research as a side activity rather than as a job. My dream is to work on topics related to my intellectual interests, such as programming languages and operating systems. However, pursuing research as a side hobby instead of as a job means I need to come up with another way of making a living, one that provides enough time for me to pursue my research on the side. I considered becoming a non-tenure track lecturer at a California State University campus, but I discovered that the pay is based on how many courses one teaches per semester, and there is no guarantee of the university offering its lecturers a full-time teaching load (4 classes per semester), which runs the risk of dealing with very low income in a very high cost of living area. Another idea that I'm considering is starting my own software business. It won't be a VC-funded startup; rather, it would be either a consultancy or it will offer software. However, I have been struggling to come up with business ideas.
I'm curious to hear about other people's opinions. I'm an active Hacker News reader but I'm posting on a throwaway account to preserve my anonymity.
Stop caring about promo cycles and treat your job as a paycheck. There is always another rung on the never ending ladder and your surroundings will always pressure you to push and climb to the next rung. But you don't have to accept this ladder and can disconnect from it.
The pressure if artificial, the worst thing that can happen is you get fired in which case you find something else. It's ok, that doesn't seem that bad.
You have a steady paycheck which allows you to pay your rent and work on cool things. You lose that when you start a business. While you gain freedom and flexibility, you face the real pressures of making payroll and rent.
I'm around to chat more if you want. My whatapp in in my profile.
The big advantage of academia I general is in how much free time you have. Classes are more-or-less only 6 months of the year, and there's very little prep work from year 2. Even 4 classes a day is only like half the day.
In the business world you're looking at min of 40 hours a week (much, much more if you're scrabbling for income), maybe a couple weeks vacation a year (in which, trust me, the last thing you'll want yo do is research.)
Sounds to me like you're already in a perfect gig for doing what you want to do, you just need to figure out how to make it work for you.
Or switch to the next best thing, research + teaching.
What has helped me is moving away to my parents’ house to save money, and pursuing my online startup for a while..:)
Good luck.
My email is in my HN profile. Shoot me an email, I’m happy to share my worksheet in exchange for feedback.