Well, why are you taking with them instead of the people paying them?
Because they are the ones writing crap, and they are capable of doing better if they applied themselves a little. When people don't try, that is entirely on them. There are plenty of books they can read or even partially free ones to get better. They can go home and watch Netflix if they want but then it's all on them.
If the stupidity doesn't catch you, the inexperience will. A smart person who hasn't spent a lot of time hacking will not cover their tracks the first several times they try. Think Dread Pirate Roberts, one little mistake at the beginning of his career doomed him. Or think of Aaron Schwarz, smart kid, didn't have a full understanding of the system.
If someone cares enough to investigate, crime is not easy.
Mel's code made his customers really happy. It was elegance from a different era, but you can be sure that if he were programming today, his code would look different than Slashcode.
Yeah, I can already imagine how bad your software is. If you aren't considering what can go wrong when you write code, you better not put it on the internet either, because it's not going to be secure. Somone will hack you.
It is very difficult to acquire all of that for what would qualify as "full stack."
It's really n ot that hard. You learned Java and a few other languages in college. You can learn SQL pretty quick. Javascript + CSS is a pain because it keeps changing, but if you know Swing and some design patterns like MVC or messenger, then learning frameworks like React or Angular isn't going to take all of a semester. It will build on principles you already know. Node is just another web server, and MongoDB is designed to b be easy to learn, and it is.
Learning all the full stacks is hard. Learning one of them is not.
Well there aren't many 'professional' programmers who understand cache levels. That's already advanced stuff, you'll need to hire an optimization expert. For most people it's just gluing together APIs.
The soviet Republics could have been kept down if Gorbachev had more of a taste for violence, but I've talked to protesters who were there, and although the Soviet system was comfortable, they wanted freedom.
There was a study about a year ago wherr Microsoft found that using typescript reduced bugs by 15 percent over Javascript. Besides that, IDE tricks like autocomplete are kind of nice. YMMV.
In the end, the thing that brought the Soviet Union down was the desire of the people for freedok. They didn't want totalitarianism anymore. "We pretend to work and they pretend to pay us" is funny hyperbole.
Well, why are you taking with them instead of the people paying them?
Because they are the ones writing crap, and they are capable of doing better if they applied themselves a little. When people don't try, that is entirely on them. There are plenty of books they can read or even partially free ones to get better. They can go home and watch Netflix if they want but then it's all on them.
If the stupidity doesn't catch you, the inexperience will. A smart person who hasn't spent a lot of time hacking will not cover their tracks the first several times they try. Think Dread Pirate Roberts, one little mistake at the beginning of his career doomed him. Or think of Aaron Schwarz, smart kid, didn't have a full understanding of the system.
If someone cares enough to investigate, crime is not easy.
Google pays a lot for people like him. You can be sure he is well compensated.
I'm not upset that they write code, I'm upset that they write barely working crap.
It's better.
The lucidity of your vocabulary, its sheer magnitude astounds me.
Mel's code made his customers really happy. It was elegance from a different era, but you can be sure that if he were programming today, his code would look different than Slashcode.
After they learn alliteration we'll work on their data collection skills.
Ok, so which planner made Hong Kong into an ultra rich city? Singapore?
I don't know about Hong Kong, but in Singapore it was Lee Kuan Yew.
Yeah, I can already imagine how bad your software is. If you aren't considering what can go wrong when you write code, you better not put it on the internet either, because it's not going to be secure. Somone will hack you.
Yeah, that's why I still use XML.
It is very difficult to acquire all of that for what would qualify as "full stack."
It's really n ot that hard. You learned Java and a few other languages in college. You can learn SQL pretty quick. Javascript + CSS is a pain because it keeps changing, but if you know Swing and some design patterns like MVC or messenger, then learning frameworks like React or Angular isn't going to take all of a semester. It will build on principles you already know. Node is just another web server, and MongoDB is designed to b be easy to learn, and it is.
Learning all the full stacks is hard. Learning one of them is not.
That's enough to double their stock price!
Oh yeah?
Yeah that's true.
Well there aren't many 'professional' programmers who understand cache levels. That's already advanced stuff, you'll need to hire an optimization expert. For most people it's just gluing together APIs.
I prefer to improve their conversation skill, then I have interesting people to talk to.
The soviet Republics could have been kept down if Gorbachev had more of a taste for violence, but I've talked to protesters who were there, and although the Soviet system was comfortable, they wanted freedom.
What do you normally use?
No, it is the "Venezuela provably has the wrong leader" argument and if you can't see the difference, you are bullshit.
There was a study about a year ago wherr Microsoft found that using typescript reduced bugs by 15 percent over Javascript. Besides that, IDE tricks like autocomplete are kind of nice. YMMV.
In the end, the thing that brought the Soviet Union down was the desire of the people for freedok. They didn't want totalitarianism anymore. "We pretend to work and they pretend to pay us" is funny hyperbole.
Are you bitter?
Cool, thx
I think he's wrong about a lot of his facts. At least, all the CS professors I've met can program.