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Are you bitching at VS, nHibernate or Nuget, 2 of which are rather nasty. Does MS own nHibernate now?
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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With the millennial generation (arguably) not really learning any new life skills outside of Facebook and "I has kittens" pictures and with the Internet helping us as people expect things now and for free as we grow up on Nintendo and not leaving the house. One can't help but wonder what the products and offerings and services of the future will be like. In particular the products or services of the future that people will pay for since now we expect so much for free in an ever-changing world of more, more, more. I'm sure robots will be doing the menial work (I mean before we have robot rights and free them from robot slavery but I digress) so what we consider blue collar products or services today will go out the window for most people.
Every industry on the planet, the longer it exists without real novelty, the cheaper the offerings of said industry become. Things get easier to make. Supply increases. Familiarity increases. Demand goes down. This will never change. For instance, now with web development... 20 years ago a CMS was a big deal. Nowadays, it's not only free but its expected. Same goes with entertainment. Used to be you have to pay for online streaming video content, nowadays you don't (e.g., go90.com*) or its dirt cheap. I mean even porn is easily accessible for free, so much that now Playboy had to change its lineup due to tatas in a magazine no longer able to easily make millions.
Personally, I think over the next few decades, people will pay for VR type entertainment as it becomes more widespread and the tech gets better. Mainly because it's new, and as we spend more and more time at home as a whole we need an escape that much more. But what about web development I wonder. What's going to make us valuable in like 20 years? With Web 3.0 and 4.0 concepts, the idea of social sharing and "intelligent Internet" will only increase more and more... so I do know AI study will pretty much become a requirement in the future. But, as we try and get more and more people "able to code" at a younger age we in essence dilute ourselves in the marketplace - tech wise.
Most things online people expect to get for free nowadays and as such our skill set seems less and less special to the layman with every passing day. So, I'd wager it would help to also learn some non tech things, as developers, as we evolve alongside the changing industry. The question is, to what? In my early 30s I decided to read a ton of self-help books and ebooks on dating to try and help with A: girls duh and B: people skills in general as a way to set me apart from every other developer out there. As development becomes more mainstream and understood by the populous, we have to interact with more people now. However, while I think everyone should do that, I don't believe that in and of itself is enough to help developers shine in the next few decades as we come out of the closet so to speak resulting from tech being in the spotlight more and more.
I hope this post doesn't sound doom and gloom. Every industry changes. This is life. Change or fall behind. What I'm curious to know is what are some of the changes some of the folks here are doing to help stay relevant in the future that don't involve technology directly? What are some of the crafty ideas going on here to help augment our coding skill set? I know there was a news story on CP the other day about resumes dying so learning to market ourselves differently seems to be a valuable skill to help us stand out, but outside of that are there any other changes coders are doing to stay valuable? Inquiring minds wanna know.
* May not be SFW depending on what you watch.
Jeremy Falcon
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It's a long one, so I'll check it out this evening... seems interesting though.
Jeremy Falcon
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I read it many years ago as a boy, and many years later my youngest son did the same, unbeknown to me. One day he suddenly stated talking about it, which was rather weird in a way.
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Kinda cool in a way... it's a small world after all ya know.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: In particular the products or services of the future that people will pay for since now we expect so much for free in an ever-changing world of more, more, more.
Like Code Project?
Jeremy Falcon wrote: What are some of the crafty ideas going on here to help augment our coding skill set?
Well, I've written about a few.
Reading your post, I got to thinking, again, about the issues of psychology, education, mental health and mental illness, and so on. Certainly recent events have momentarily brought the issue of mental illness yet again into the forefront, but in general, simply observing my own thoughts/feelings/behaviors, I pretty much conclude that Homo Sapiens is an over-populous collection of the mentally ill. Like, everyone, dude. It's just that some (maybe most) of us fit into the category of "the functionally mentally ill."
That said, somewhere, somehow, there will have to be major changes in education, and I'm not talking about teaching coding at the age of 5, but real skills -- communication, coping, caring, etc -- that elevate us out of the cesspool of current societal norms.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: In my early 30s I decided to read a ton of self-help books
There you go -- we ALL need to do that, but somehow, we also need to get past our racist, prejudiced, nationalistic, egoistic thinking, but these are things that need to be taught to kids, so eventually, the so-called leaders of the so-called free world can be replaced with actual compassionate, empathetic, taking-the-long-view leadership. Maybe that's where genetic engineering can best help.
Anyways, I'll have to move this to the SB if I keep going.
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Marc Clifton wrote: Reading your post, I got to thinking, again, about the issues of psychology, education, mental health and mental illness, and so on. Certainly recent events have momentarily brought the issue of mental illness yet again into the forefront, but in general, simply observing my own thoughts/feelings/behaviors, I pretty much conclude that Homo Sapiens is an over-populous collection of the mentally ill. Like, everyone, dude. It's just that some (maybe most) of us fit into the category of "the functionally mentally ill."
I see it as society being delusional. And it's a result of doing less and sitting at home more as the entertainment values of being inside are starting to far outweigh the entertainment value of being outside to most. More so than ever in history. We're over compensating with pretend lives and pretend crap on TV and play video games and never walk outside where we're forced to interact with people, see more of the world, and grow.
I'm sure there are other reasons that contribute to this as well. But you're right, most people simply are full of sh*t and delusional about basic core things... they're easy to spot at least once you see the light. But just go talk to your average person about money and watch how they'll pretend to know everything despite the fact most people don't even have 1K in savings because they're that broke. Delusions.
Marc Clifton wrote: There you go -- we ALL need to do that, but somehow, we also need to get past our racist, prejudiced, nationalistic, egoistic thinking, but these are things that need to be taught to kids, so eventually, the so-called leaders of the so-called free world can be replaced with actual compassionate, empathetic, taking-the-long-view leadership. Maybe that's where genetic engineering can best help.
Marc, you're smart. Please man, don't get your information from TV. Once you see TV being made you get a better sense of how fake it all is. Politics is a game for uneducated fools who do not study history, economics, psychology, body language, etc... left or right. It's entertainment for the ill-educated that enjoy spending their time arguing rather than doing something useful with their lives. I too get caught up in the hoopla at times, and every time I do I feel dumber for it.
Marc Clifton wrote: Anyways, I'll have to move this to the SB if I keep going.
Somebody needs a hug again.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: Marc, you're smart. … Politics is a game for uneducated fools… It's entertainment for the ill-educated… . I too get caught up in the hoopla at times… I feel dumber for it. Jeremy, consider your own words in regards to your chastisement of Marc’s viewpoint.
I agree with you that finding balanced reporting to be a rare gem, it can be difficult to weed through what is presented as news by any outlet, although sometimes too easy, especially those that cater to a very specific audience. The outlets that offer no sources I tend to stay away from, those that do, I check them. As a result I end up smack dab in the middle politically. As I tell my hard-line friends, I am a staunch moderate.
It was broke, so I fixed it.
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S Houghtelin wrote: Jeremy, consider your own words in regards to your chastisement of Marc’s viewpoint.
Oh yeah I know. Marc and I go way back though. So, he has to like me. And he knows I don't think he's uneducated. I'm talking about the general folks that really get into it.
S Houghtelin wrote: As I tell my hard-line friends, I am a staunch moderate.
Exactly. Extremes are bad. In fact, I think if you talk to most people in real life the the majority would agree with us. However, TV caters to extremes... like click bait. Politics as far as TV is concerned is more like Jerry Springer here than anything else, and anyone who has seen Jerry Springer being filmed knows part of it is scripted.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: And it's a result of doing less and sitting at home more as the entertainment values of being inside are starting to far outweigh the entertainment value of being outside to most. More so than ever in history. We're over compensating with pretend lives and pretend crap on TV and play video games and never walk outside where we're forced to interact with people, see more of the world, and grow.
You mean back in the good ol' days when you sent the kids out to play so they could find some hapless animal to torture and then later on entertain themselves by watching the neighbor kid get beaten in the yard with a father's belt, then that night to see the police politely bring home the drunken council man, so drunk that the police have to help them walk, and the police helpfully show up the following morning to drive that same person back to the car that they were driving when the police pulled them over.
Not to mention the locally bully boys putting on their sh*t kickers and heading out for some friday night drinking followed up by cruising 'those' neighborhoods to find some gay guys to beat the hell out of.
Those days?
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Please man, don't get your information from TV. Once you see TV being made you get a better sense of how fake it all is. Politics is a game for uneducated fools who do not study history, economics, psychology, body language, etc.
Yep, good ol' days before TV when newspapers published actual fiction as news such as made up explorers finding imaginary beasts not to mention actual libelous stories written solely to promote the political goals of the publisher if not actually winning political campaigns for those same publishers. Not even that long ago when newspapers would not publish anything that might 'shock' the readers regardless of how relevant it was.
Not to mention of course actual vote buying was all the rage way back when.
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You used a period again.
Jeremy Falcon
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Dude, let's be real for a minute. Ever since I "e-met" you online, all you ever did was argue with me. I'm not sure if it's how you treat everyone or just me. This post is a classic straw man tactic. Fake news has nothing to do with beating gay guys. How many friends you actually have bro? No, don't answer that. I'm sure it'll be another online argument if you do.
Jeremy Falcon
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Your post was implicitly suggesting some imaginary time when things were 'better' without defining specifically how they were better, why that was better nor even when the imaginary time was.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: all you ever did was argue with me
You are not special.
Even in this regard, many people here have posted that past times were better, while completely ignoring the reality of the past.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: How many friends you actually have bro?
That question of course has nothing to do with anything.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Fake news has nothing to do with beating gay guys
No idea what you are suggesting.
However, in the past beating up gay guys was something that the police and law enforcement either specifically ignored and sometimes even participated in. And the newspapers did not report on it.
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jschell wrote: That question of course has nothing to do with anything. Answer = 0, or else you'd get it.
jschell wrote: No idea what you are suggesting. Clearly
Go get some people skills man. Bye.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: Answer = 0, or else you'd get it.
You are incorrect. And it still has nothing to do with this.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: Go get some people skills man.
Denigration is what people resort to when they can no longer address the actual points.
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Feel free to express yourself as you wish with the knowledge that responses that ignore the actual points reflect on you and not me.
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No. It means you need a life. And I have better things to do than argue with an overgrown child online.
Anyone that actually spends time around people in real life can see through the childish veil of yours online. Now be an adult and go away.
If you’re so childish to need the last word. You can have it. Be the online king. I’ll prefer a real life. So enjoy your Internet victory that grown ups don’t care about.
Now go away.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: And I have better things to do than argue with an overgrown child online.
Yet your emotional needs still require that you denigrate others with your spare time.
Jeremy Falcon wrote: If you’re so childish to need the last word.
I feel the need to point out your need to denigrate rather than respond. Other than that my emotional outlook is one of enjoyment.
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I think I figured it out. You're secretly in love with me. It all makes sense now.
Jeremy Falcon
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Jeremy Falcon wrote: o what we consider blue collar products or services today will go out the window for most people.
Well, careful about the 'blue collar going away',
when I was young (read: long time ago)
- computer people were in high demand, paid well (even the white coat guys changing the loading the tapes), and enjoyed nice quite weekends, and bosses were careful because they were hard to find, many even got a company car
- blue collar workers, plumbers, builders, sparkeys (tradies) drove 10 year and older beat-up trucks/vans, started at the crack of dawn and got home late, and often worked weekends, when you called them they came as soon as possible because they wanted to make money
Today it's pretty much the opposite,
- many computer guys drive beat up old heaps or catch the bus, maybe not start so early but certainly often finish late many work weekends too (I'm talking the help-desk/service dept/programming drones etc)
- blue collar tradies often decide to not even bother coming if you call them, knock off early almost every day, drive brand new trucks/vans that they change every couple of years, in the weekends they park their truck, hook up the boat/jet-ski trailer to their also brand new BMW and go to the beach/sea/fishing...
sure AI will fix your spreadsheet and order beer for your fridge when it's low, but I can't see it building a fence or even changing a blown light bulb (it'll tell you, but not do it.
My second job, a support role, I'd regularly drive say 5 miles to a customer site to plug the RS232 or/and power cable back into the VDU, or reset the modem. (Loved it - got out of the office and they paid mileage.)
I wouldn't go pure software, perhaps some physical skill development could help - installing the home entertainment centre - not just the software on it.
And you've already identified where the money is: People are getting lazier.... I'll take that mega sized TV, does it come with free delivery and installation? Oh, extra $100, sure, put it on the bill, $150 if I want it tonight? - done. The guys bring it inside, unpack it, hang it up, plug it in, and the total sum of programming: press the auto-tune button.
5 minutes and a free can of coke later - all done.
Easiest $100 ever made (even if it cost $50 for expenses gas/parking it's still $50 for 5 minutes work) - and in the UK alone that happens thousands of times per day.
(Something I reckon Dire Straights got wrong - know hard hard it is to get on to MTV?.)
Installing Signature...
Do not switch off your computer.
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Lopatir wrote: And you've already identified where the money is: People are getting lazier.... I'll take that mega sized TV, does it come with free delivery and installation? Oh, extra $100, sure, put it on the bill, $150 if I want it tonight? - done. The guys bring it inside, unpack it, hang it up, plug it in, and the total sum of programming: press the auto-tune button.
5 minutes and a free can of coke later - all done.
Easiest $100 ever made (even if it cost $50 for expenses gas/parking it's still $50 for 5 minutes work) - and in the UK alone that happens thousands of times per day.
I'm the guy who will hook up his own home theater system, but you couldn't pay me enough to do that for someone else, every day, for a living. Your "5 minutes of work" doesn't include the time to sit in traffic to get to the customer's home, get everything out of the truck, in bad weather, over some stairs, dealing with a-holes, etc.
If that's all the type of work that will remain for us humans - jobs that no amount of automation will be able to replace - then that's a sad prospect indeed.
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Oh I totally agree with you there man. People are getting lazier. What I'm getting at with that though is what we consider manual labor will change. Eventually, it'll be done by robots. Blue color work will exist in the future, but what exactly it entails will change.
Jeremy Falcon
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While it is clear that most (some) of us will be irrelevant as the content of the industry shifts to new things... However it is completely wrong that today software development understood better by the average people...
There is a new way the big ones force you to use a technology - they jump over you and advertise the new technology as the ever best solution to your customer's problem (or any problem for that matter), so you are locked in, but that does not make the customer someone who better understands technology...
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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