HackerTrans
TopNewTrendsCommentsPastAskShowJobs

theoldgit

no profile record

comments

theoldgit
·hace 2 años·discuss
That was always it's strength. I started programming in 1976, trained in COBOL and ICL PLAN, used punched cards, and mop terminals once we got out of training. 100% of our programs were batch programs. There was a huge bias towards readability, so that anyone of us could read the source code and understand it. That readability was offset somewhat by the necessity to read and understand the core dumps produced when a program failed. At best you would be able to trace a failure to a specific line of code. Thus the habit of dry running programs was hard wired into you. When I left the government institution to move into commercial programming,it was still COBOL and batch programs until the early 80s.I spent 3 years on overnight support and that was when COBOL proved it's worth, you could pick up any previously unseen listing and the core dump and usually fix it pretty quickly, caveat it was always a tactical fix.
theoldgit
·hace 3 años·discuss
Capitalism without competition isn't capitalism; it's exploitation without competition, innovation is slowly strangled if there is no free market, the wealth in the market accretes upwards to those who control the market; i.e. those businesses which do not have competition
theoldgit
·hace 3 años·discuss
I tend to agree. I have been working in IT for 48 years and it is not at all uncommon to come across developers who have a very narrow and niche view of software development. I have had the privilege to work with a wide range of architects and senior engineers over the years and I have found that the ones who tended to be the most creative (solution wise) were the ones who had deep knowledge right from the bottom of the stack all the way to the top - they did not look at a problem through the lens of a specific language (they all knew multiple languages) - when I have hired for senior positions, unless its been for a very specific skill set, experienced generalists have tended to impress more