"and, if the budget allows, throwing hardware at the problem."
These days its actually quite the opposite. Having a full database cached in memory does wonders for performance.
One night I woke up with a rat in my room. After thinking about what to do in a cold sweet hiding under my covers for about 2 minutes I realised I should probably just get one of our cats to sort it out.
First cat I found was Bella who we had got from a pet store several years ago, I took her to my room and watched to see how she reacted. She smelt the rat and went closer to investigate. She found where it was hiding she pretty much chased it and clawed at it. I gave her a few minutes but she did a pretty pathetic job and eradicating it.
By this time Dante a cat who came to use after being abandon by its owner and surviving on its own few several weeks had been woken up and came to see what the fuss was. He pretty much took one pounce at it grabbing it around the neck. Problem solved.
I thought the point he made was more along the lines of a good programmer is more likely to experiment with other technologies apart from the ones they need directly related to their job or education. More than likely because they are simply interested in the technology. Which reinforces his main point; good programmers are programmers because they enjoy it and it interests them.
Ive been doing this for years. The point is at a glance it looks like your working.
"and, if the budget allows, throwing hardware at the problem." These days its actually quite the opposite. Having a full database cached in memory does wonders for performance.
I can attest to this.
One night I woke up with a rat in my room. After thinking about what to do in a cold sweet hiding under my covers for about 2 minutes I realised I should probably just get one of our cats to sort it out.
First cat I found was Bella who we had got from a pet store several years ago, I took her to my room and watched to see how she reacted. She smelt the rat and went closer to investigate. She found where it was hiding she pretty much chased it and clawed at it. I gave her a few minutes but she did a pretty pathetic job and eradicating it.
By this time Dante a cat who came to use after being abandon by its owner and surviving on its own few several weeks had been woken up and came to see what the fuss was. He pretty much took one pounce at it grabbing it around the neck. Problem solved.
The problem with this is that anyone who can see your screen can see your password.
I thought the point he made was more along the lines of a good programmer is more likely to experiment with other technologies apart from the ones they need directly related to their job or education. More than likely because they are simply interested in the technology. Which reinforces his main point; good programmers are programmers because they enjoy it and it interests them.