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Avoiding Mistakes Can Be a Huge Mistake

theodp writes "No doubt many will nod knowingly as they read Paul Graham's The Other Half of 'Artists Ship', which delves into the downside of procedures developed by Big Companies to protect themselves against mistakes. Because every check you put on your programmers has a cost, Graham warns: 'And just as the greatest danger of being hard to sell to is not that you overpay but that the best suppliers won't even sell to you, the greatest danger of applying too many checks to your programmers is not that you'll make them unproductive, but that good programmers won't even want to work for you.' Sound familiar, anyone?"

8 of 268 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Perhaps by YourExperiment · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do programmers also loose karma for being fast and lose with their spelling?

  2. Re:Perhaps by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do programmers also loose karma for being fast and lose with their spelling?

    /irony

  3. Re:Perhaps by ChromeAeonium · · Score: 5, Funny

    Do programmers also loose karma for being fast and lose with their spelling?

    /irony

    They can be docked karma that way, but when they're not sure about something, they can cover their asses and submit anonymously. That way, if something totally whooshes over their heads, they're in the clear. They can later correct their own dumbass mistakes unanonymously and whore karma instead of losing it. What a perfect system!

  4. Re:Perhaps by sammyF70 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Google is evil incarnated, Apple is style-over-function overpriced junk, and "The Year of The Linux Desktop" ain't coming soon.

    Microsoft, on the other hand, has some really funny employees (and Reversi).

    /em ducks

    --
    "DRM is like the Ford Pinto: it's a smooth ride, right up the point at which it explodes and ruins your day."-C.Doctorow
  5. Re:Perhaps by ScrewMaster · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do programmers also loose karma for being fast and lose with their spelling?

    /irony

    They can be docked karma that way, but when they're not sure about something, they can cover their asses and submit anonymously. That way, if something totally whooshes over their heads, they're in the clear. They can later correct their own dumbass mistakes unanonymously and whore karma instead of losing it. What a perfect system!

    Huh. Too bad Slashdot doesn't have a system like that.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  6. Re:Perhaps by kbrasee · · Score: 5, Funny

    /irony

    /woosh

    /irony

    Error: Cyclic Dependency

  7. Re:I have mixed feelings. by russotto · · Score: 4, Funny

    At the big company I worked at, someone added some features to code that I wrote. It broke my code. I wanted to go in and fix it. Why not? I knew how it worked. I couldn't without a defect written by a tester.

    Annoying, but easy to handle. Testers love to find bugs, whether it be for the joy of crushing a young programmer's spirit, or for the look of fear in the eyes of the product manager as the release date approaches. Point a tester towards the bug, and he'll go right ahead and write a defect, possibly cackling evilly as he does so.

  8. Re:Perhaps by networkBoy · · Score: 4, Funny

    wow, a Beowulf cluster of /irony

    --
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