I see the author annoyed that companies don't want to to be their patron to just pay them to work on random things that they have fun working on
and attempting to leverage this issue to try to draw attention to this "injustice"
as someone with a full time software job: I wish I could only work on things that interest me...
rather than spending 80% of my time working on boring things and dealing with customers who set deadlines and expect to receive a specific product that they're paying for
I see the author annoyed that companies don't want to to be their patron to just pay them to work on random things that they have fun working on
and attempting to leverage this issue to try to draw attention to this "injustice"
as someone with a full time software job: I wish I could only work on things that interest me...
rather than spending 80% of my time working on boring things and dealing with customers who set deadlines and expect to receive a specific product that they're paying for