No one in the financial industry seriously considers crypto except for the fact that they can use it to siphon money from the unfortunately disillusioned and the idiotic.
As a financier and a programmer, I'm happy people keep pouring money into it because I can win more games. As a human, it's really sad to witness.
I'm mostly asking to see how I can adjust my workflow with juniors because I sometimes find myself drowning trying to maintain a decent codebase - not trying to be accusatory.
I generally use MRs as an opportunity to give feedback like how you'd get feedback on a set of math problem statements. I inferred from "rarely do I ever really leave commentary" that you're not using MRs as a training tool. How else do you train junior engineers?
For context, I work in the financial industry where mistakes are costly and users are hostile so the "accept & merge" workflow may not be for me.
Are the junior programmers that you hire that good that you don't need training or commentary? I find I spend a lot of time reviewing MRs and leaving commentary. For instance, this past week, I had a junior apply the same business logic across classes instead of creating a class/service and injecting it as a dependency.
This, improper handling of exceptions, missed testing cases or no tests at all, incomplete types, a misunderstanding of a nuanced business case, etc. An automatic approval would leave the codebase in such a dire state.
I find these statements to be extremely doubtful. Why would a CS program cover statistics? Wouldn't that be the math department? If there any required courses, it's most likely Calc 1/2, Linear Algebra, and Discrete Math.
Also, out of the hundreds of programmers I've met, I don't know any that has done graphics programming. I consider that super niche.
Oh wow, I had the exact opposite reaction. Very close to a childhoold in poverty - lost my family when I was 5, adopted, homeless, etc. - but when I graduated college, my apartment rent was $2000 in DC, I was vacationing in Norway, and eating and drinking at the most expensive restaurants. I made a bet that I was going to make decent amount of money in salary, and that bet has paid off. Debt-free from university, sizeable retirement accounts and savings, etc. Now, I wasn't able to afford to buy a home or condo at 25 like my peers, but I thought I was okay given I was starting over.
I realized I lived through a peculiar hell when I was young, so I definitely made up for it buy working hard, playin' hard.
At least, these were previously American values to hate these people.