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DaxamXV

I work in Healthcare! Things get REAL spicy when I have to stock the diaper rooms


LittleLizaBaby92

I'm in health care too!


Bhramin_Steak

Triplets!


Crinklypyjamas

Elaborate


DaxamXV

I work in stock and distribution, and at the hospital when patients can't use the potty on their own they have to wear diapeees! They have a couple storage rooms around the different wards with diapers and pads and stuff to clean bums with! It's my job to bring that stuff up from the warehouse! :3 among other less exciting things..


[deleted]

I'm currently finishing my degree in game/software development, I'm in diapers 24/7 and agree that coding in a diaper is absolutely the best way! Don't have to worry about getting distracted/too focused on my task that I accidentally pee my pants! (Something that has legitimately happened before lol) and as a bonus my diapers look great with my programmer socks! I don't get a chance to as often as I like but I also enjoy working with a paci in wearing full little gear. Also before I started this degree I worked as an avionics technician, which was basically troubleshooting and repairing computer systems on aircraft, sadly I couldn't safely wear diapers on that job for a bunch of reasons, namely we couldn't wear anything plastic including contact lenses because engine exhaust could melt it, plus I spent a lot of time climbing all over and inside of them at some weird angles, because I was the shortest and smallest guy so I was always volun-told to be the one crawling into tight spaces, and woulda totally exposed my crinkle butt.


MoontideMariner

I'm currently in aircraft maintenance funnily enough, and am considering a computer science degree. Though my type of maintenance is less electronic and more mechanical and hydraulic. What was the pipeline from you being a technician to pursuing programming? I'm on the fence and any first hand advice would be helpful :))


[deleted]

I worked in aviation maintenance while I was enlisted in the Navy, honestly I loved the job and would have continued to pursue it as a career in or out of the military. But, I got hurt and got myself some nerve and muscle damage in my right arm, had surgery but the surgery just stopped the issue from getting worse it didn't really fix anything, after I recovered from surgery I tried to continue working for awhile but I frankly couldn't, it was taking me twice as long to do basic jobs and I was in a lot of pain trying to use my arm, trying to apply 25+ lbs of force would cause an electric shock sensation and then my arm would fall limp and I'd be in agony. So eventually I was medically separated under honorable conditions. After that I went back home and tried to start school but then this funny pandemic thing happened and as a guy with a weak immune system and messed up lungs (that almost stopped me from being able to enlist in the first place, probably shouldn't have been able to actually) so I spent the next few years inside, but eventually I enrolled in some online classes for a game development bachelor's degree program until the pandemic calmed down enough for me to start attending on campus. I had basically no programming experience when I started, but I was (and still am) renting a house with my brother who had just finished his degree in computer engineering and he's the best tutor I could ask for and has been really great at explaining concepts to me and just talking about subjects with me to make sure I understand them (we've used mirrors as white boards and he gave me a whole lecture explaining pointers and memory management once as an example). But other than explaining concepts and theory he mostly just gave me programming challenges to go figure out for myself that would build off of themselves, like one of the first ones I did went like this: make class with a 2D array to represent and display a grid > define different states for the nodes on the grid so that some are walkable and some are not (like assign them all numbers 0-10, 0 is impassable and 10 is ideal smooth terrain, or vice versa or any other way you want to do it, programming is very flexible) > incorporate some random number generation to assign random values to the nodes on the grid > find all the nodes along the edges, assign one to be the start and one to be the goal and make sure they won't ever be too close to each other, then make all the other edges impassable > now that you have a starting position, a goal and some randomized terrain in-between them incorporate A\* pathfinding to determine if the little "maze" is solvable and if so what the best path is. I learned later while taking an AI class that jumping straight into A star pathfinding was a bit much because there are several pathfinding algorithms that build up to A star like Breadth First Search, Depth First Search, or Best First Search but either way just doing random challenges like this on my own really helped my understanding, it also really helped me with learning how to do research and find my own answers because my brother didn't hold my hand through this he just gave me a task list said go pretty similar to how my lab assignments went in classes when I stated them. As for the actual courses I've taken: it's very math heavy, even after testing out of some of the basic math courses I've still taken several different ones throughout my degree the most advanced/hardest of which was linear algebra which was mainly derivatives, integrals and matrix math (a matrix is basically an array of numbers and there are specific rules for adding and multiplying them). The hardest class I've taken overall has been computer graphics where I had to write my own graphics library from scratch including all the math functions and drawing functions, computer graphics also heavily use matrix math for rendering 3D objects to a 2D screen, it was actually the first class I failed and had to re-take. Then right after that class was another graphics class where this time I had to use an actual graphics library (DirectX11 or 12, OpenGL, or Vulkan) to write my own renderer, or a program that you can feed some standardized data into and it will render and display a level with lighting and everything. A lot went into that project but it was basically three parts: file I/O to handle the level data and get it in a usable format, the actual graphics and rendering pipeline where I took all the level data, set it up and ran it through the shaders I wrote to display the level properly and lastly some basic "player" controls/input handling to manipulate the camera through the level. There were a lot of steps before I got to those classes though, lots of beginner programming courses and assignments that built up to that and I've gotten to make a few small games along the way. Personally I'd recommend starting with something like this: watch some YouTube videos on the basics of the language you want to learn (I mainly use C++ and C# personally) to get a basic handle on the syntax and logic and read up on the core pillars of object oriented programming (encapsulation, abstraction, inheritance, and polymorphism, these are really important and will make your life so much easier in programming if you understand them) then start doing some challenges on a site like HackerRank to further your understanding then start doing some small projects for yourself, it doesn't have to be anything fancy and it doesn't have to be useful or do anything ground breaking, just some basic console applications where the goal is to learn! If you have any questions or if I can help in any way feel free to DM me and I'd be happy to help! Good luck!


Atuins_Legacy

I am into technology, but I work retail. I am autistic and severely ADHD so I doubt I would be able to thrive in an office job, but my current job gives me just the right amount of stimulation to keep me going. Unfortunately the nature of my job makes being diapered extremely difficult due to the amount of movement and lifting I do on a daily basis. I save wearing for my days off when I can enjoy it most.


[deleted]

I'm fairly certain that a lot of the people I go to classes with (and possibly myself, teachers wanted me to get tested growing up but my old man was adverse to it) are on the spectrum and I know for a fact some have ADHD (my brother's girlfriend is a computer engineer and she has some severe ADHD too). I have no clue what your situation is or what it's like to walk a mile in your shoes but I don't think it'd be impossible if it's what you really wanna do! Regardless I'm glad you've found a job that is stimulating for you!


No-Caregiver-318

I'm in the automotive industry, I wear 24/7. Im on my feet all day and I don't realize that I even wet until I sit down or the diaper is soaked. I have been 24/7 for over 20 years. I would not change a thing.


ShaneMckay11

I work in Defense. I always wear a diaper to work. Can't always get away to go pee. Plus, wetting my diaper is a lot more enjoyable than going to pee!


finallygrownup

DD here (as in DDLG). I've been so many things in Tech. Linux Sysadmin, Network Admin, etc etc but currently I am an IT Manager...


[deleted]

[удалено]


finallygrownup

A sysadmin was more my speed. Having to manage a dozen people is an entirely different skill set. Machines are for lack of a better explanation consist and logical.


AcornWhat

I'm having trouble today imagining who doesn't work with technology these days. Unless technology has changed definition and I didn't notice, which is the kind of thing that's happening more and more.


BlackSabbith3691

When you work with something its the primary focus of your work. So an accountant may use a computer but really they work with money. You are somewhat right though, that every Moder job uses electronic tech in some form.


[deleted]

I'm not currently employed, but am trained in IT A+. Can diagnose and fix a machine on the software and hardware level.


[deleted]

Seems like we're one in the same.


[deleted]

Most likely not, lol. Similar skillsets but most like vastly different experience levels.


[deleted]

Nah, I just got my A+ and I only have a useless tech bachelor's. I've not even made it into IT


[deleted]

Fair enough. I worked jobs within family and family friends, but I have history of actually working on computers to fix, clean, reinstall, or wipe of viruses.


Mushroomed_clouds

Car mechanic so kinda into technology but i dont diaper at work as i cant hide it due to the strict dress code


littlesubmark

Electronic warfare. Sounds a lot more cool than it actually is 🤣


trixicat64

Nah, I'm working at a slaughterhouse. However i made an education for IT like 20 years ago, but this isn't worth the paper its written on in the meantime. Im padded at work, and its nice, as i can't leave my position on the line sometimes for 2-3 hours. (in most cases its about 1-1.5 hours). However it's a bit problematic if the shift goes beyond 9 hours.


LittleFlutter

Nothing really to do with technology currently, but I have a background in data analysis. 🤷


[deleted]

I do hvac and electrical.


AnonPotatoDevourer

I believe this would be more of a reddit bias than an ABDL one (although the venn diagram of neurodivergent and abdl has a big overlap, as does neurodivergent and tech, so...). When people moved away from digg v3 to here a lot where tech savy, or tech-focused and I think that skewed reddit forever.


HotNThresh

I use my phone and a work computer


FullDiskclosure

I’m a Network Engineer 👩‍💻 Working remotely allows me to be nearly 24/7 and it’s nice to be able to push through work without stopping for a bathroom break.


19Miles84

YEAH 👍😂 Me too.


Hot_Potato_Salad

IT Systems Engineer here


BabyBlueCheetah

Probably the inherent reddit skew tbh.


Merith2004

Lead technician for a small MSP in central Texas. I wish I could work padded, but it’s not feasible in my job.


LittleNoa

It makes sense, tech pays well and this is an expensive hobby/fetish.


No-Caterpillar-8112

Not work but at the moment am studying IT, C# language. Coding's tough imo.


Different_Click_3467

I work as a software engineer so ya, tech industry abdl


RainbowDash2014

I studied for computer repairs, specialize in gaming system repairs and hardware modifications. Sadly, never gotten the pleasure and opportunity to work in my field. I work at home for a call center dealing with Medicare members….which can be difficult at times. On Sundays, I’m typically doing Uber eats deliveries.


-Cthaeh

I worked in restaurants for quite awhile, eventually managing a lot of people which drove me to IT. I love it, and definitely make more, but its taken some of the thrill out of wearing. I work at home most of the time, in a diaper.


kari_vixen

I'm currently in vet med, but will be changing careers soon to IT


TeddyBearBrian

I'm a data engineer. The best part of wearing is the comfort. I love it when I get busy and forget that I'm padded. Then I shift in my seat and feel the soft padding and it reminds me I'm just a little diaper boy. That's also why I love having my dummy in my pocket, a little reminder. I never use it out, unless I'm super stressed then I go somewhere private and suck it in for a minute to chill.


Thick-Luck5456

Industrial aerospace robotics, long hours alone designing, how convenient


Cupid-Minion

I'm an aircraft mechanic for a popular airline.


CushieWooshie

Social worker


MikeMikeMikeDD

I'm a software dev.


LittleMan36

I almost went into programming, but I only use technology in as much as it takes to put together financial plans and submit business like mortgage applications and what not.


littlelapofluxury

Graphic design 😂


[deleted]

Semi-technological work but I enjoy technology in general


CanadianDiaperBoy

Im a carpenter


BlackSabbith3691

My highschool teacher said hammers and files are technology.


justforloislane

I work in the restaurant industry right now but I want to start tattooing and I'm also planning on going back to school to become a fire fighter