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Subject:Re: A step up, a step down From:Peter <pnewman1 -at- home -dot- com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Fri, 28 Sep 2001 07:42:42 -0400
david -dot- locke -at- amd -dot- com wrote:
>
> I've just run into too much egotism, which seems to be the norm here in
> Austin. It wasn't in Houston.
>
> I've also seen too much disrespect for the other people that work in
> software companies. One company I worked for staffed every position with a
> programmer. The sales reps were programmers. The trainer was a programmer.
> They went out of business quickly after selling only twelve units. They had
> focused on technological differentiation. The products lacked any real
> benefits particularly where the products where shells that still required a
> lot of programming effort to make the product work. They were elegant in
> their code to a fault. It was too complicated for the customer's programmers
> to learn.
>
> I've been to too many interviews and heard the "You're not technical enough"
> excuse that gets used to hire only young people or enforce the methodology
> light, the base-less exclusionary, elegance is everything practices typical
> of programmers coming out of school today. One of the companies where I got
> that excuse was going to ship in two months. Six months later they were
> still looking for a TW. They cared about their code more than they cared
> about their product. The technology was wonderful.
Programmers who don't know when to stop programming are a contributing
cause of the financial woes of many a small company.
OTOH, programmers who stop programming too soon also contribute heavily
to the financial woes of companies.
--
Peter
Mailto:peternew -at- optonline -dot- net
Adapting old programs to fit new machines
usually means adapting new machines to
behave like old ones.
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