Slashdot Mirror


Hardware Is Cheap, Programmers Are Expensive

Sportsqs points out a story at Coding Horror which begins: "Given the rapid advance of Moore's Law, when does it make sense to throw hardware at a programming problem? As a general rule, I'd say almost always. Consider the average programmer salary here in the US. You probably have several of these programmer guys or gals on staff. I can't speak to how much your servers may cost, or how many of them you may need. Or, maybe you don't need any — perhaps all your code executes on your users' hardware, which is an entirely different scenario. Obviously, situations vary. But even the most rudimentary math will tell you that it'd take a massive hardware outlay to equal the yearly costs of even a modest five person programming team."

4 of 465 comments (clear)

  1. Original Article here... by Ckwop · · Score: 4, Informative

    http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/archives/001198.html

    Give the person who actually wrote the article the ad revenue rather than this bottom feeding scum.

  2. Re:Timing is everything by diskofish · · Score: 5, Informative

    I think there will be more developers looking for work in the future, but I don't think the price is going to drop THAT much. I just think you'll be able to find qualified developers more easily.

    As for the article, it makes a lot of sense when you're running in a controlled environment. It's really a no brainier in consulting work. Upgrading hardware or optimizing software will both meet the customers needs only the hardware upgrade is $2,000 and the software optimization costs $20,000.

    Of course, if you're releasing software into the wild and it needs run on many different machines you better make sure it performs well especially if it's a retail product. So spend the extra money and make it really good.

  3. Re:Another u.s. specific problem. cost of living by jcnnghm · · Score: 3, Informative

    Are you high? Granted, I haven't been to Europe (France, Germany, Netherlands) since 2006, but I can't name a single thing that was less expensive, and I live in one of the most expensive cities in the US ($9 Beer Night).

    I specifically went looking for cheap Lacoste stuff in France, and there was essentially dollar to euro parity, while the exchange rate was about 1.5:1. In other words, while I would pay $70 (just got a couple for $30 each on sale) for a shirt in the US, in France the same shirt was going for 70 euros. Food and drink prices seemed to be roughly comparable as well. Consumer Electronics, however, were considerably more expensive than in the US, as was gas. The metro was no less expensive than the DC subway, and the trains weren't cheaper than Amtrak, though 1000% better. I'd have to assume the reason that you believe it's actually cheaper is because you enjoy being banged out for taxes all the time.

    --
    You don't make the poor richer by making the rich poorer. - Winston Churchill
  4. Re:Frist? by John+Meacham · · Score: 4, Informative

    A handy note for those that don't know, Under X11 in addition to the rgb and bgr subpixel orderings, you can chose vrgb and vgbr vertical orientations to allow subpixel rendering (ClearType) for odd or rotated lcd screens.

    --
    http://notanumber.net/