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I agree with your first sentence, but have just as often observed developers doing just what the opinion piece suggested. Rather than using outdated stuff, I've found they tend to steer toward cutting edge (with managers often being worse than engineers.) This results in projects being worked on by novices (who are often experts in what they abandoned) that stall when they can't hire anyone to take over (or the "new" think turns out to be a turkey.)
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I think - if you translate the buzzword-manager-speak to normal English - his point is is that cross-platform mobile app frameworks like Cordova seem nice, but don't work out in practise. Probably true, but he doesn't explain why.
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There's so many things that are ridiculous about that article, I can only say that he sure nailed it on the head when he prefaced the title with "Opinion".
Marc
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Close on the heels of Marc Andreessen's anti-colonialism comments about India, a second billionaire Silicon Valley VC has exploded his ego all over the internet. 2*b |~ 2*B
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Quote: Khosla is of course a highly intelligent and thoughtful man
In Hungarian there is a word "szakbarbár" (barbaric professional) - means a professional who went so deep into his profession, that had no opportunity to know anything else about the surrounding world...
Skipper: We'll fix it.
Alex: Fix it? How you gonna fix this?
Skipper: Grit, spit and a whole lotta duct tape.
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There's an English word which seems to apply here too: asshat.
If the cap fits.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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Write a poem, write an essay, draw a picture, take a photo. Learn to express ideas, discuss topics, converse with people at a cultural level. Time spent with the arts is never wasted.
"There are two ways of constructing a software design: One way is to make it so simple that there are obviously no deficiencies, and the other way is to make it so complicated that there are no obvious deficiencies. The first method is far more difficult." - C.A.R. Hoare
Home | LinkedIn | Google+ | Twitter
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I think he's absolutely right.
Teaching Shakespeare is a complete waste of a curious mind. Teaching drama or literature and referencing Shakespeare on the other hand is a good use of time.
Similarly teaching coding is a complete waste of a curious mind. Teaching critical thinking and algorithmic experimentation referencing coding is useful.
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Duncan Edwards Jones wrote: Teaching Shakespeare is a complete waste of a curious mind.
Well I presume someone in the 16th century took the effort to teach Shakespeare. By all accounts his mastery of English was quite good by the time he completed his education, and his plays and poems have been quite well received I believe.
More seriously though, just as Shakespeare is taught as part of a literature course for exactly the reasons you give. Programming should be a separate subject in its own right, but remain elective. The idea of forcing all children to sit through it is the kind of idiotic idea I reserve for the likes of Zuckerburg and politicians.
Critical thinking should permeate all education. If a child hasn't learnt that by the time they've finished education, they haven't really been educated.
"If you don't fail at least 90 percent of the time, you're not aiming high enough."
Alan Kay.
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My intended point (though poorly made) was that teaching anything as a facts-based-mental-recall exercise is a waste of time.
Therefore if you sit people down and make them memorise "Out out, damned spot. What will my hands never be clean" they gain nothing. (The books are available on t'internet these days)
But I totally agree - children should not be made to sit through coding classes - especially given what they are coding today will be (hopefully) obsolete before they reach college.
I'd recommend Ken Robinson's talk(s) on education (www.ted.com)
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Khosla's gripe seems to be not with the goals of a liberal arts education, but its implentation and evolution (or lack thereof, according to him). That being said, perhaps more exposure to the liberal arts would have prevented the author from making this typo.
Vinod Kosla wrote: Gladwell famously argued that stories were more important that accuracy or validity without even realizing it. /ravi
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Kent Sharkey wrote: 2*B |~ 2*B→=?
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GPS is an utterly pervasive and wonderful technology, but it’s increasingly not accurate enough for modern demands. Now a team of researchers can make it accurate right down to an inch. You are (exactly) here
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Maybe they re-wrote Einstein's general theory of relativity from scratch, removing the 5-10 feet bugs.
The sh*t I complain about
It's like there ain't a cloud in the sky and it's raining out - Eminem
~! Firewall !~
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Pointless.
Does it make sense to calculate the location of a moving object with such accuracy?
Does it make sense to calculate the location of an object larger than an inch with such accuracy?
Can you tell me, to the inch, the location of the Taj Mahal? The Pentagon? Mount Rushmore?
If you have misplaced your iPhone, do you need more accuracy than "it's in your couch"?
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It's a boon to marketers, though. When you are walking down an aisle at your local supermarket, the marketer will want to send you a text at the exact moment that you are standing in front of their product, which may only be 3-6 inches wide on the shelf. They will certainly want to know if you stopped and turned and looked at their product. Because then they can send a follow up text asking why you didn't actually purchase said product (they'll know that, too because they will correlate your cash register receipt with the phone that was standing in the checkout line at that moment).
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Why would my wife take my phone to the store?
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Ha! you've never tried to decide which is the right exit on a roundabout... have you?
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At speed?
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You know... it is always the same... smoking and noisy tires...
Just joking...
But this is a stupid thing GPS systems make today, if you enter a roundabout while speaking or similar, it's easy to miss the right exit... specially when something has changed since the last map update...
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I think this is awesome, and they are very developer friendly: what3words makes the entire earth addressable down to 3mx3m squares in 3 words.
It's loads easier to say, as a human, "scenes.shed.booth" than either "Just near the north-west corner of the main lake of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney, Australia" or "Lat/long -33.863523, 151.217154"
And it works in uninhabited/unmapped places, too.
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Managing a team of software developers is a tall order. This is doubly true when the line management includes both org chart duties (career development, HR administrivia, etc) and responsibility for the team’s performance when it comes to shipping. A partial list
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The longer you spend in the technology industry, the more you can expect to earn. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
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I am sure there are a lot of 50+ aged tech people that would not agree with the article.
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One can expect whatever one chooses to expect, but that doesn't mean it'll happen.
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