If you liked that show, you'll probably like the book that likely inspired it. Fewer cool pictures but more rigorous detail.
The Jurassic Programmer story is a very familiar one. One thing I learned the hard way is once you are a maintenance programmer, they'll never let you build the new system. Sadly, the failures described are legion as the people with the actual domain knowledge are ignored as the inexperienced with flashy buzzwords get to build "my first system".---- ウセーバラケダ
... slight 5 year pause in order to spend tens of millions...
So, how long will it take to expose our UI through C again?- Metus amatores matrum compescit, non clementia.[ Parent ]
Though our UIs are non-standard. ---- ウセーバラケダ[ Parent ]
Nicholas Cage is a terrible actor.
Hope everything goes well with your old man. Keep us posted.
--------It's political correctness gone mad!
I hit worries on page one about piecemeal, small scale evaluation.
Gun control has a a small scale, with nutters shotting dozens, and a large scale with governments going bad and massacring their citizens in there millions. Evaluation had better not drop the latter issue on the floor.
Page 2 is also scary. It is traditional in education to evaluate a new teaching method, find it works, deploy it widely, and be surprised when it fails. This tradition is based on the originators of new methods being charimatic individuals who can teach really well. What works with average teachers in average class rooms across the land is a different matter.
Worse, incentives matter. One tries hard and makes it work to get through the evaluation. Then one slacks of and rots sets in. Methods that were originally deployed with sensitivity to their goals degenerate into mere formalism and stop working.
The world depicted on page 2 is a ruined world in which things don't work and cannot be fixed because they worked in the evaluation so that's all right then.
The domestic violence anecdote on page 3 and 4 sucked. My maternal grandmother had to put up with my grandfathers violent temper. If he had been prosecuted and convicted he would no longer have been of good character and would have lost the army pension on which the family finances depended. Well that is the story I've been told, though I have my doubts.
The wider point is that getting repeat call out rates down is a rotten measure. When the cops arrest the perp, how is that understood? One possible understanding is that the cops will make trouble for the perp so that he loses his job and their is no money to buy food for the children. The woman takes the hint and doesn't bother the cops again.
The anecdote wasn't about this kind of problem, but naively accepted that if the police were not called violence had not re-occurred.
Probably will not read the rest till tomorrow afternoon.