Yes, and developers agree with that sentiment. PHP has inertia behind it: tons of cheap webhosts and lots of libraries and existing codebases. As a programming language, there are definitely better out there: Python, Ruby, etc.
You forgot Chris.
They suck, their work is lower quality, they don't solve problems well.
Chris takes a lower load of projects and they have bugs....But your job as a manager is to get enough out of Chris to turn a clusterfuck into a nuclear bomb.
Much of project management seems to be for the Chrises of our industry. The Chrises can vaguely remember how to write a for loop if they use Eclipse's auto-complete; they'll introduce at least as many bugs as they fix; and, as they grope around blindly inside the codebase, eventually, with enough management oversight and testing, they can get something approximating the specifications implemented, sort of. Yes, more than anyone, they are the cause of code rot; if there was any consistent design in the application before, it'll be gone; unit-test coverage will be near nil or covering things like getters and setters. Generic types are "too hard" to understand.
Businesses, though, usually rather hire an army of mediocre developers than a handful of good ones who can deliver better, faster.
During and after the French Revolution, there was a Left and Right in France; actually, France is where the terms originated. During the Revolutionary War in America, the terms Left and Right had not yet been popularized; people used terms like Tories and Whigs or Loyalists and Patriots. An argument has been made that the American Revolutionary War was a "conservative revolution" insofar as the Founders sometimes made reference to ancient English rights and freedoms. Right and Left develop within polities (with international crossover), not from without. During the American Revolution, the "Right" would have been the Loyalists to the Crown, and the revolutionaries would have been the Left. Immediately after the Constitution went into effect in 1789, it's hard to call either party left or right definitively; Federalists and Democratic-Republicans were both children of the Revolution. Some Federalists did have an interest in styling the President like a king, so they may be thought more Right at least on that front.
By "market fundamentalism," I am referring to a particular ideology rather than macroeconomics or capitalism in general; you might know it as laissez-faire or libertarianism. Market fundamentalism oversimplifies problems, reducing everything to market forces and suggesting a handful of solutions to any and every problem. In some cases, the result is "privatization" -- a bastardization where public funds are placed in private hands to provide a public service for private profit. This includes voucherizing Medicare, privatizing Social Security (turning it into something more like a 401(k) or mutual fund), Obama's Affordable Care Act, etc. Sometimes public goods are provisioned by the government because they are not feasible in the market (unless a bastardized "privatization" arrangement is created). Between the laissez-faire capitalism of Ayn Rand and Ludwig von Mises and the totalitarian Marxism-Leninism of the USSR, there's a happy medium of more or less free markets with the government stepping in to make sure people aren't being poisoned by their food or dying in the street from poverty/illness.
Sorry, but I'm going to have to respectfully disagree. Genghis Khan or Attila the Hun would not make a good commander-in-chief in a civilized, modern democracy. I want the high-ranking politicians and military commanders to be well aware of the human cost of their decisions and to really wrack their brain over it. I want them to feel some doubt and pain over loss over the decision, no matter what they come to. What I definitely don't want is a president gleefully galloping ahead as he drags the nation into war. Psychopaths, by the way, are heavily biased towards the rewards and thus are less likely to thoroughly review the negative consequences of their conduct, both for others and themselves.
Sociopathy is bad, by definition. Sociopathy is a personality disorder where the affected individual is inclined towards behavior that is socially pathological (thus the name). If the person merely feels little for others but does not actively harm them, the individual is not a sociopath. Lack of empathy or emotion more generally is either a diagnostic sign or associated feature of several other psychiatric conditions, including narcissistic personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder (these people are basically just extremely introverted), and psychopathy. Psychopaths have an in-born lack of empathy and also a lack of fear and other inhibiting emotions.
The distinction between the psychopath and the sociopath is theoretical: The psychopath is thought to be born with a temperamental endowment towards callous-unemotional behavior and a generalized fearless and impulsive way of approaching things. The sociopath is thought to have grown up under poverty, trauma, etc. A person could be theoretically born with the temperamental traits thought to underlie psychopathy without partaking in criminal or antisocial behavior or only to a lessened degree.
Socialism is a broad term, but socialism often includes both economic and political elements. For example, Soviet-style socialism included a political system of local soviets that were represented inside larger state units until the Supreme Soviet, the highest governmental body in the USSR, was reached. Originally, this was meant to be bottom-up, but under the totalitarian system that developed, decision-making was largely top-down, especially under Stalin. Contemporary European social democracy takes part in the "bourgeois democracy" (in Marxist terms) of the parties' respective governments. Other forms of socialism place the organs of government directly in the hands of workers; factories and offices are freestanding entities, and people participate "democratically" via their employment.
Likewise, Italian Fascism and German Nazism included political and economic components.
Burkean conservatism is only one flavor of right-wing idealogy, and many right-wing ideologies are more utopian (or dystopian, if you prefer) than pragmatic. Christian Dominionism is, for example, right wing and quite radical as is the Islamic radicalism of the Middle East (theocratic, authoritarian regimes can generally be thought "right wing"). Market fundamentalism is another purist ideology that can come in quite extreme forms such as found in Ayn Rand's or some other liberarians' works. Other forms of right-wing ideology rely on concepts like divine mandate, birthright of the nobility, or a sense of national destiny. Generally, right-wing ideology seeks to justify social inequality as useful and necessary or simply unavoidable; more extreme forms of right-wing ideology seek to actually increase this inequality.
Left-wing ideologies, in contrast, work on increasing social equality or fairness, decreasing disparities in wealth and power. Classical liberalism sought to unseat the prerogatives of the king/queen, nobility, and clergy, giving everyone the same set of rights before the law, using empiricism and reason to create objective rules that could be applied, in theory, universally. Shortly after the industrial revolution, socialism and communism in the Marxist tradition sought to unseat the wealth and power disparity that the capital/industrialist/bourgeois class held over the working class/proletariat with various schemes that would ideally lead to worker/popular control; in practice, Marxism-Leninism and its descendents led to a new elite (the nomenklatura and Party leaders) with a disenfranchised majority. Even Christianity, which is today usually thought of as mostly reactionary, was at its start a radical break from Roman society and relatively egalitarian (socialism and Christianity are two examples of how selfless ideologies can become used for selfish advantage).
It's usually thought of in the reverse. The liberal wants to change how society works, and then conservatives form an alliance and a cohesive worldview that defends the status quo; reactionaries are more conservative than conservative, wanting an idealized status quo ante. Today, though, I would consider Democrats to be overall more conservative than Republicans, especially the so-called conservative Republicans. Today's U.S. conservative movement is nothing if not radical. The duel thread of Christian fundamentalism and anti-government, free-market economics is a sharp break from the status quo that is as utopian (or dystopian, in my opinion) as anything from Karl Marx. Democrats have worked mostly towards incremental reform (the Affordable Care Act, for example, works on top of the existing system rather than fundamentally reforming it).
Basically, liberals, once proposing grand reforms, had made much progress in the 20th century, and since the days of Reagan, they have been on the defensive against grand solutions coming from the Right instead of the Left.
Conservatives want tax cuts, a strong national defense, and a reduced budget. What they want is to defund entitlements--things like unemployment benefits and disability.
Suspension of civil liberties; an aggressive, militaristic ideology; concern with racial/national purity; and preference for a social Darwinist worldview pretty much put Nazism on the far right--not the libertarian right but the authoritarian right. Left-wing concerns are more humanitarian: remove concentrations of power (large corporations being considered a power against employees, consumers, and the environment that can be counterweighted by government regulation), increase individuals' well-being (end hunger, disease, poverty; help people live more rewarding, self-actualizing lives), peace (oppose wars, gun violence, genocide, violence against women), etc. Marxism-Leninism, Stalinism, and Maoism represent the authoritarian left, which shares the authoritarian traits of the authoritarian right but instead pursues vaguely "left-wing" goals. To the authoritarian left, the problem isn't so much concentrations of power but power belonging to the wrong class (the bourgeoisie) instead of the proletariat. The authoritarian left would happily put total power in the "vanguard of the proletariat" (i.e., a Communist party).
Fox News = far right
CNN = center
MSNBC = center-left
The nature of the for-profit corporation is antithetical to anything "pretty far left" since the far left is opposed to capitalism.
That's actually a horrible idea. If Social Security is completely privatized, we'll see retirement funding entirely at the mercy of the market. If you are set to retire when the market enters a deep recession, well, you're kinda screwed. Not an expert at managing stocks and other investments (and as the recession has shown, hiring a financial expert may not help)? Then you're screwed. The beauty of Social Security is that it provides a guarantee. It's not exactly stopping you from investing more of your money in the stock market if you wish.
Let's take just one example: gay marriage. Progressives support it, but many conservatives oppose it, arguing something about the "sanctity of marriage." Of course, you can't talk about religious values without alienating everyone who doesn't share your religious views, so you've already started out on a regressive note if you're talking about sanctity. Conservatives devalue the civil rights of gay couples who wish to marry under the same laws that give heterosexual couples the right to marry. Conservatives tend to value "freedom" when it conforms to their ideal of how a person should live. They really have trouble understanding that a traditional, conservative lifestyle doesn't work for everyone.
The novelty-seeking trait is actually associated with substance abuse and addiction among other less positive behavioral tendencies (anger and impulse control issues, recklessness, etc.).
There is a larger difference between intellectual knowledge that a few people in the world are cruel, brutal, and sadistic and then the visceral experience of seeing the fruits of their evilness. There is a world of a difference between seeing violence in a movie, where we know it's fake, and seeing video of an actual murder. We know the person is really suffering, and we are quite distraught by this. It's our normal human reaction of empathy. It's wrenching.
This kind of stuff sounds like, especially in the doses these workers are seeing it at, would be tough to stomach even for people who aren't hypersensitive. On the other hand, disturbing and violent images of the kind these people see all day everyday will result in emotional issues in probably a majority of people. A sociopath has a callousness of temperament that makes them, in addition to being able to stomach the most extreme imagery, also able to engage in the more directly harmful activity that leads us to call them sociopaths in the first: namely violent crime, robbery, etc. The sociopath, in addition to being "tough," is emotionally lacking where it's needed: the social emotions (empathy, guilt, remorse, shame, compassion, etc.) and the ability to form bonds with others, including family and sexual partners.
For us, Information Technology is a division led by a CIO with further subdivisions for Application Development, Networking and Infrastructure, and User Support. Within in these subdivisions can be further subdivisions (e.g., applications supporting a specific type of business need). Within these are individual departments. Within these departments are semi-formal teams. Application Development, for example, includes departments that actively develop the applications, departments of graphic designers, and departments of Quality Assurance. Yeah, there's a lot of hierarchy where I work.
You've already mentioned the social-networking sites and affiliated social media that are big in the United States: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and MySpace. If someone's going to be on social networking, it's going to be on at least one of them. There is no benefit to belonging to a social network that may be technologically superb and ideologically correct if no one you know or want to connect with uses it. And good luck winning all your friends over to it and then their friends too!
I get the impression the OP meant coarse, uncivil people for sociopath and mentally deranged for psychopath (where OP should have said psychotic or just mentally ill). In psychiatry, sociopathy and psychopathy refer to more or less the same thing, and psychopathy is quite distinct from disorders like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
I agree. Where I work, we're a JDK 1.4.2_08 shop, and it just feels like a modern-day COBOL. There's been anticipation off and on about moving towards version 1.5.x of the JDK, but it keeps getting pushed back.
Magical thinking is a term from psychology to refer to a kind of illogical but symbolic thinking where interaction with symbols is taken to be equivalent to the real thing.
Yes, and developers agree with that sentiment. PHP has inertia behind it: tons of cheap webhosts and lots of libraries and existing codebases. As a programming language, there are definitely better out there: Python, Ruby, etc.
Much of project management seems to be for the Chrises of our industry. The Chrises can vaguely remember how to write a for loop if they use Eclipse's auto-complete; they'll introduce at least as many bugs as they fix; and, as they grope around blindly inside the codebase, eventually, with enough management oversight and testing, they can get something approximating the specifications implemented, sort of. Yes, more than anyone, they are the cause of code rot; if there was any consistent design in the application before, it'll be gone; unit-test coverage will be near nil or covering things like getters and setters. Generic types are "too hard" to understand.
Businesses, though, usually rather hire an army of mediocre developers than a handful of good ones who can deliver better, faster.
During and after the French Revolution, there was a Left and Right in France; actually, France is where the terms originated. During the Revolutionary War in America, the terms Left and Right had not yet been popularized; people used terms like Tories and Whigs or Loyalists and Patriots. An argument has been made that the American Revolutionary War was a "conservative revolution" insofar as the Founders sometimes made reference to ancient English rights and freedoms. Right and Left develop within polities (with international crossover), not from without. During the American Revolution, the "Right" would have been the Loyalists to the Crown, and the revolutionaries would have been the Left. Immediately after the Constitution went into effect in 1789, it's hard to call either party left or right definitively; Federalists and Democratic-Republicans were both children of the Revolution. Some Federalists did have an interest in styling the President like a king, so they may be thought more Right at least on that front.
By "market fundamentalism," I am referring to a particular ideology rather than macroeconomics or capitalism in general; you might know it as laissez-faire or libertarianism. Market fundamentalism oversimplifies problems, reducing everything to market forces and suggesting a handful of solutions to any and every problem. In some cases, the result is "privatization" -- a bastardization where public funds are placed in private hands to provide a public service for private profit. This includes voucherizing Medicare, privatizing Social Security (turning it into something more like a 401(k) or mutual fund), Obama's Affordable Care Act, etc. Sometimes public goods are provisioned by the government because they are not feasible in the market (unless a bastardized "privatization" arrangement is created). Between the laissez-faire capitalism of Ayn Rand and Ludwig von Mises and the totalitarian Marxism-Leninism of the USSR, there's a happy medium of more or less free markets with the government stepping in to make sure people aren't being poisoned by their food or dying in the street from poverty/illness.
Sorry, but I'm going to have to respectfully disagree. Genghis Khan or Attila the Hun would not make a good commander-in-chief in a civilized, modern democracy. I want the high-ranking politicians and military commanders to be well aware of the human cost of their decisions and to really wrack their brain over it. I want them to feel some doubt and pain over loss over the decision, no matter what they come to. What I definitely don't want is a president gleefully galloping ahead as he drags the nation into war. Psychopaths, by the way, are heavily biased towards the rewards and thus are less likely to thoroughly review the negative consequences of their conduct, both for others and themselves.
Sociopathy is bad, by definition. Sociopathy is a personality disorder where the affected individual is inclined towards behavior that is socially pathological (thus the name). If the person merely feels little for others but does not actively harm them, the individual is not a sociopath. Lack of empathy or emotion more generally is either a diagnostic sign or associated feature of several other psychiatric conditions, including narcissistic personality disorder, schizoid personality disorder (these people are basically just extremely introverted), and psychopathy. Psychopaths have an in-born lack of empathy and also a lack of fear and other inhibiting emotions.
The distinction between the psychopath and the sociopath is theoretical: The psychopath is thought to be born with a temperamental endowment towards callous-unemotional behavior and a generalized fearless and impulsive way of approaching things. The sociopath is thought to have grown up under poverty, trauma, etc. A person could be theoretically born with the temperamental traits thought to underlie psychopathy without partaking in criminal or antisocial behavior or only to a lessened degree.
Isn't Warren Buffet considered to be a liberal?
Socialism is a broad term, but socialism often includes both economic and political elements. For example, Soviet-style socialism included a political system of local soviets that were represented inside larger state units until the Supreme Soviet, the highest governmental body in the USSR, was reached. Originally, this was meant to be bottom-up, but under the totalitarian system that developed, decision-making was largely top-down, especially under Stalin. Contemporary European social democracy takes part in the "bourgeois democracy" (in Marxist terms) of the parties' respective governments. Other forms of socialism place the organs of government directly in the hands of workers; factories and offices are freestanding entities, and people participate "democratically" via their employment.
Likewise, Italian Fascism and German Nazism included political and economic components.
Burkean conservatism is only one flavor of right-wing idealogy, and many right-wing ideologies are more utopian (or dystopian, if you prefer) than pragmatic. Christian Dominionism is, for example, right wing and quite radical as is the Islamic radicalism of the Middle East (theocratic, authoritarian regimes can generally be thought "right wing"). Market fundamentalism is another purist ideology that can come in quite extreme forms such as found in Ayn Rand's or some other liberarians' works. Other forms of right-wing ideology rely on concepts like divine mandate, birthright of the nobility, or a sense of national destiny. Generally, right-wing ideology seeks to justify social inequality as useful and necessary or simply unavoidable; more extreme forms of right-wing ideology seek to actually increase this inequality.
Left-wing ideologies, in contrast, work on increasing social equality or fairness, decreasing disparities in wealth and power. Classical liberalism sought to unseat the prerogatives of the king/queen, nobility, and clergy, giving everyone the same set of rights before the law, using empiricism and reason to create objective rules that could be applied, in theory, universally. Shortly after the industrial revolution, socialism and communism in the Marxist tradition sought to unseat the wealth and power disparity that the capital/industrialist/bourgeois class held over the working class/proletariat with various schemes that would ideally lead to worker/popular control; in practice, Marxism-Leninism and its descendents led to a new elite (the nomenklatura and Party leaders) with a disenfranchised majority. Even Christianity, which is today usually thought of as mostly reactionary, was at its start a radical break from Roman society and relatively egalitarian (socialism and Christianity are two examples of how selfless ideologies can become used for selfish advantage).
It's usually thought of in the reverse. The liberal wants to change how society works, and then conservatives form an alliance and a cohesive worldview that defends the status quo; reactionaries are more conservative than conservative, wanting an idealized status quo ante. Today, though, I would consider Democrats to be overall more conservative than Republicans, especially the so-called conservative Republicans. Today's U.S. conservative movement is nothing if not radical. The duel thread of Christian fundamentalism and anti-government, free-market economics is a sharp break from the status quo that is as utopian (or dystopian, in my opinion) as anything from Karl Marx. Democrats have worked mostly towards incremental reform (the Affordable Care Act, for example, works on top of the existing system rather than fundamentally reforming it). Basically, liberals, once proposing grand reforms, had made much progress in the 20th century, and since the days of Reagan, they have been on the defensive against grand solutions coming from the Right instead of the Left.
Conservatives want tax cuts, a strong national defense, and a reduced budget. What they want is to defund entitlements--things like unemployment benefits and disability.
Suspension of civil liberties; an aggressive, militaristic ideology; concern with racial/national purity; and preference for a social Darwinist worldview pretty much put Nazism on the far right--not the libertarian right but the authoritarian right. Left-wing concerns are more humanitarian: remove concentrations of power (large corporations being considered a power against employees, consumers, and the environment that can be counterweighted by government regulation), increase individuals' well-being (end hunger, disease, poverty; help people live more rewarding, self-actualizing lives), peace (oppose wars, gun violence, genocide, violence against women), etc. Marxism-Leninism, Stalinism, and Maoism represent the authoritarian left, which shares the authoritarian traits of the authoritarian right but instead pursues vaguely "left-wing" goals. To the authoritarian left, the problem isn't so much concentrations of power but power belonging to the wrong class (the bourgeoisie) instead of the proletariat. The authoritarian left would happily put total power in the "vanguard of the proletariat" (i.e., a Communist party).
Fox News = far right CNN = center MSNBC = center-left The nature of the for-profit corporation is antithetical to anything "pretty far left" since the far left is opposed to capitalism.
That's actually a horrible idea. If Social Security is completely privatized, we'll see retirement funding entirely at the mercy of the market. If you are set to retire when the market enters a deep recession, well, you're kinda screwed. Not an expert at managing stocks and other investments (and as the recession has shown, hiring a financial expert may not help)? Then you're screwed. The beauty of Social Security is that it provides a guarantee. It's not exactly stopping you from investing more of your money in the stock market if you wish.
Let's take just one example: gay marriage. Progressives support it, but many conservatives oppose it, arguing something about the "sanctity of marriage." Of course, you can't talk about religious values without alienating everyone who doesn't share your religious views, so you've already started out on a regressive note if you're talking about sanctity. Conservatives devalue the civil rights of gay couples who wish to marry under the same laws that give heterosexual couples the right to marry. Conservatives tend to value "freedom" when it conforms to their ideal of how a person should live. They really have trouble understanding that a traditional, conservative lifestyle doesn't work for everyone.
The novelty-seeking trait is actually associated with substance abuse and addiction among other less positive behavioral tendencies (anger and impulse control issues, recklessness, etc.).
If you drive mail into the "free market," you do realize that rural residences will be among the first casualties. Not profitable, you see.
You're thinking of psychopathy, not Asperger's syndrome.
There is a larger difference between intellectual knowledge that a few people in the world are cruel, brutal, and sadistic and then the visceral experience of seeing the fruits of their evilness. There is a world of a difference between seeing violence in a movie, where we know it's fake, and seeing video of an actual murder. We know the person is really suffering, and we are quite distraught by this. It's our normal human reaction of empathy. It's wrenching.
This kind of stuff sounds like, especially in the doses these workers are seeing it at, would be tough to stomach even for people who aren't hypersensitive. On the other hand, disturbing and violent images of the kind these people see all day everyday will result in emotional issues in probably a majority of people. A sociopath has a callousness of temperament that makes them, in addition to being able to stomach the most extreme imagery, also able to engage in the more directly harmful activity that leads us to call them sociopaths in the first: namely violent crime, robbery, etc. The sociopath, in addition to being "tough," is emotionally lacking where it's needed: the social emotions (empathy, guilt, remorse, shame, compassion, etc.) and the ability to form bonds with others, including family and sexual partners.
For us, Information Technology is a division led by a CIO with further subdivisions for Application Development, Networking and Infrastructure, and User Support. Within in these subdivisions can be further subdivisions (e.g., applications supporting a specific type of business need). Within these are individual departments. Within these departments are semi-formal teams. Application Development, for example, includes departments that actively develop the applications, departments of graphic designers, and departments of Quality Assurance. Yeah, there's a lot of hierarchy where I work.
You've already mentioned the social-networking sites and affiliated social media that are big in the United States: Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter, and MySpace. If someone's going to be on social networking, it's going to be on at least one of them. There is no benefit to belonging to a social network that may be technologically superb and ideologically correct if no one you know or want to connect with uses it. And good luck winning all your friends over to it and then their friends too!
I get the impression the OP meant coarse, uncivil people for sociopath and mentally deranged for psychopath (where OP should have said psychotic or just mentally ill). In psychiatry, sociopathy and psychopathy refer to more or less the same thing, and psychopathy is quite distinct from disorders like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
30-40 hours a day? You do realize there are only 24 hours in a day, right?
I agree. Where I work, we're a JDK 1.4.2_08 shop, and it just feels like a modern-day COBOL. There's been anticipation off and on about moving towards version 1.5.x of the JDK, but it keeps getting pushed back.
Magical thinking is a term from psychology to refer to a kind of illogical but symbolic thinking where interaction with symbols is taken to be equivalent to the real thing.