Chip's Quips
A tiny spark of wit for a highly flammable world

Chipping the web: December 16th

December 16th, 2008 6:00:11 pm pst by Sterling Camden

Chipping the web

Posted in Share the Love | 20 Comments » RSS 2.0

20 Responses to “Chipping the web: December 16th”

  1. apotheon says:

    Actually, I usually say “FreeBSD”.

  2. Regarding your first item: Working in engineering I find the same inability to learn lessons from the past – new generations of engineers and designers are constantly trying to reinvent the wheel and in the process they ignore the tried and true methods developed since the industrial revolution.

    • So true — it’s a common antipattern for which some form of automated detection is needed.

      I was fortunate to learn that lesson early on. When I was 14, I had a fascination with inventing new technologies for automobiles. My initial impetus was the desire to create a method of propulsion that didn’t rely on oil (this was during the oil crisis of the early 70s — will we EVER learn?). Unfortunately, I didn’t have the engineering background to avoid making some very naive mistakes (discovering entropy was a real eye-opener). My father told me that he believed I would someday invent great things, but he advised me to study how other people had attempted the same problem so I wouldn’t have to re-learn what they had already discovered. “It’s OK to invent new ways of doing things, but first look at the old ways and ask yourself why they did it that way.”

  3. Unfortunately the advent of the computer age has been a double edged sword for engineering since it arrived along with the advent of management.
    So while it is true that much of the menial work has been simplified by CAD and data-base engineering, we are now plagued with ‘value-for-money-operators’ who can use the equipment but have no basic concept of ‘good practice’/'procedure’ – that which allows us to avoid those ‘past solved’ problems.

    • Yes — the myth still circulates that technology will eliminate the need for brains. The reality is that technology simply enables brains to work at a higher level while spending less time concerned with repetitive details.

      We can no more expect any specific language or IDE to enable brainless lackeys to create great software than we can expect all the technology in the world to enable a monkey to compete at Lemans.

  4. At the risk of sounding like a dewey-eyed old man:
    We’re all doomed ;]

  5. [...] a comment at his own Weblog (Chip’s Quips), my friend Sterling had this to [...]

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