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fisensee

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Sorry Scrum, the Game Might Be over for You

medium.com
19 points·by fisensee·5 jaar geleden·8 comments

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fisensee
·3 jaar geleden·discuss
SPF Consulting | Senior Full-Stack Software Engineer | Switzerland | Remote + Onsite in Bern/Switzerland | CHF 110k – 140k

About Us:

SPF Consulting is a well-established consulting firm in Switzerland, with a team of around 30. We provide consulting and training services in agile methodologies, business analysis, requirements engineering, and testing, as well as develop products to enhance software quality. Our collaboration is remote, with occasional meetings at the Co-Working Space Zentroom Bern.

Responsibilities:

As a Senior Full-Stack Software Engineer in the 'SPF Solutions' department, you will undertake development work on our own products as well as for our clients. You will actively contribute your knowledge of data structures and software architecture, demonstrating a knack for well-structured and easily readable code.

What you should bring:

  - At least 5 years of experience as a Full-Stack Software Engineer

  - Proficient in Java, and either JavaScript or TypeScript

  - Capable of leading React-based projects to success

  - Comfortable in an agile project management environment

  - Strong communication and moderation skills

  - Fluent in both German and English

  - Experience with clients in the finance and insurance sector
What we offer:

  - Attractive employment conditions (110k – 140k CHF)

  - 5 weeks of vacation initially, plus an additional day per year of service (up to 30 days)

  - Choice of working tools with financial support and mobile phone contract covered

  - Public transportation costs covered

  - Flexible working options (annual work-time model, part-time employment)

  - Challenging and independent work with SPF clients across various industries within Switzerland

  - Relocation support if you're currently residing outside of Switzerland but within Europe

  - Generous financial support for personal, technical, and professional development and training

  - Frequent employee events for team building
Apply here: https://www.spf-consulting.com/karriere/full-stack-developer...
fisensee
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
I agree, taking these quotes out of its time context is a bit silly but then again this is the implied intention of posting this here, right? Most people reading this and posting a comment will not be talking about the state of software in 1995 but today, using the article to show that the things described in it are still true/got worse. My comment itself was more of a quick reaction to the general sentiment in the comment section than a serious critic of the article itself.

Since I'm a huge fan of tiling windows managers and spend a lot of my time in terminal emulators as a power user I believe to understand his vision about computer usage and have a lot of admiration for what he and his colleagues were working on. But for the general population I believe he did not have the "right" idea (easy to say with almost 30 years of hindsight).
fisensee
·5 jaar geleden·discuss
I've found the part where the author talks about "arbitrarily overlapping windows" and "fancy icons" as "cute but not essential" pretty telling. Find me someone on the street and ask them if these things are "cute but not essential". Sometimes I feel like software engineers forget what world we live in. In the virtual world all these things are obviously not needed and wasting precious computing power on them is a disgrace to the "craftsmanship". In the real world most applications are made for flawed humans with needs and preferences which stem not from logic and reasoning but from emotions and experience. This doesn't excuse shoddy engineering in any way (everybody has some horror story of somebody not understanding runtime complexity or something, so there certainly is a lot of it). But especially with the examples the author brings up like text editors and operating systems I find these critic/plea severly lacking. Are the core features of ed and visual studio code the same? Absolutely, you edit text. Are the extra ressources used for visual studio code compared to ed a waste? For some people here probably, but I would bet quite a lot that for most the answer would be no. In the end I often find that discussions about optimatization are often more for people to show off and prove that they are a "real engineer" than any real concern about performance.
fisensee
·6 jaar geleden·discuss
While I understand and recognize the frustration with programming today, I wonder if comments like these have any sort of factual basis to them. What exactly is over-complicated for no useful reason? And what are the ways to fix this? I haven't looked at every "coding for non-coders" app, but all I've seen fail in offering the same functionality as coding in itself does. How would the ideal way to programm look like where you have the same freedoms you have with todays languages, tools, frameworks, etc. while still being easy and intuitive to use?
fisensee
·6 jaar geleden·discuss
While I agree with you mostly on the censorship from private companies on public discourse, I have difficulties to see how amazon is censoring anybody really. With the media platforms and social networks I am also very concerned with every action they take in regards to deleting content and banning users, since they basically operate as a monopoly for public discourse. But infrastructure services such as aws or google are only offering a completely optional service in regards to hosting a webpage/forum/etc. Everybody can buy a server and give others their ip address. By not offering their services to certain parties they're not silencing anyone, they're just not helping them. Parler could just as well buy some racks, like the many other companies that already do. So how is amazon deciding what people on the internet see and what they don't see?