• @ttmrichter@lemmy.ml
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    23 years ago

    Interesting that users aren’t mentioned in that list at all.

    The software industry is the single worst I’ve experienced for having utter contempt for its customer base.

  • @0x90@lemmy.ml
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    13 years ago

    I still don’t get this meme I swear. WTF is that supposed to mean? I have never heard of this association before and it makes no sense to me and everyone I know.

  • Katie Ampersand
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    13 years ago

    The way to be nice that is presented here seems so passive-aggressive to me. Better than being outright mean, but still

  • @N0b3d@lemmy.ml
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    03 years ago

    I’m quite startled that anybody uses the term “programmer” (rather than “software developer” or similar) any more. Maybe that’s the root of the author’s problem.

    • @ttmrichter@lemmy.ml
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      -23 years ago

      Maybe it’s time for people to drop the pretentious words like “developer” or “architect” or “engineer” (with or without pre-pended “software”) and just get back to what they actually do: programming.

        • @ttmrichter@lemmy.ml
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          03 years ago

          I was wondering when the pretentious voices would start to raise.

          “Programmer” implies I do everything related to programming. Which includes designing the program in the first place. “Coder” would imply that all I do is write code. See how that works?

          “Architect” and “developer” and all that other nonsense is what people who got fooled by the title game cling to so they can make themselves feel superior mere “programmers”. And yet…

          You’re not a “developer” when your job is churning out yet another CRUD-backed web site just like every other CRUD-backed web site with slightly different CSS. You’re not an “engineer” when you snap together a few lego-like bricks of code with a vanishingly small amount of your own code gluing it together (usually badly). You’re not an “architect” when you fire up npm to download bits and pieces (like left-pad) of other people’s code to plunk down in a predecided architecture (it’s called a “reactor”), shove it out the door, and call it complete.

          You’re programmers.