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#programmers

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Types of #Programmers in #CS and #IT:

• Theorist—seek new discoveries in computability theory, complexity theory, and type theory (Church, Turning, Kleene, Cook, etc.)
• Inventor—design, analyse, prove, and publish an original algorithm (Knuth, Dijkstra, Karp, Tarjan, etc.)
• Engineer—devise a correct, efficient implementation of a published algorithm (implementers of DSP, DIP, etc.)
• Translator—convert an algorithm's mathematical description directly into a programme (CS undergraduates)
• Cobbler—cobble together APIs into a programme that might, or might not, work (senior IT practitioners)
• Cutter—cut and paste existing bits of code into a programme that just might do something unexpected (mid-level IT practitioners)
• Cleaner—clean up senior team members' messy, buggy code, while leaving the existing bugs intact and adding a few new ones (junior IT practitioners)
• Generator—ask AI to write direct-to-production code that no IT practitioner in the team could be bothered to read (senior IT managers)

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A human being should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.

— Robert A. Heinlein

A répondu dans un fil de discussion

@baldur “The only issue I am facing as a professional #art director in games is that I just want them to leave me and my art teams alone so we can make cool art. There is *no problem to be solved here*”.

I don’t think the Art director is looking at this from a business angle. The problem being solved is to reduce the high cost #WhiteCollar workforce and still make a profit.

This has been happening since 2022 when #ChristopherHohn decided SE/SWE cost to much for #Alphabet (#google) and all the SW companies followed.

Why?

Later that year #OpenAI released #ChatGPT.

Here is that article: #programmers / #tech / #software / #AI <forbes.com/sites/jonathanponci>

Forbes · Billionaire Hedge Fund Investor Urges Alphabet To Cut Costs: ‘No Justification’ For Salaries That Are ‘Too High’Par Jonathan Ponciano

Yes, it is true! 😏
🎙️💻 It's Webinar Time!

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💡 Secure Coding = Developer Power: How To Convince Your Boss To Invest In You An ITSPmagazine Webinar With Manicode Security 🗓️ April 16, 2025

We’re honored to welcome two brilliant minds joining Sean Martin, CISSP — yes, of course, he’s pretty sharp too 😬 — for this one:

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Why does #securecoding still feel like an afterthought? This session tackles that question head-on—covering why most companies don’t invest in secure coding training, how developers can advocate for themselves, and how this skillset can seriously boost your career. We’ll even get into some live code reviews and automation demos you won’t want to miss.

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Be sure to share this with your fellow #developers, coworkers, and anyone who cares about building safer software and smarter teams. This is your chance to invest in yourself—and help your company do the same.

LET'S go, we can do this!!! 🤘😬✨

#webinar, #securecoding, #developerlife, #cybersecurity, #infosec, #softwaresecurity, #devsecops, #itspmagazine #infosecurity #tech #technology #software #programmers

#German #programmers: if you are writing a #Java program with variable names in German, do you capitalize the first letter (even though that goes against convention)? z.B.

double Gewicht; // oder
double gewicht;

[Edit: a bit later, having downloaded a set of solutions for a Java programming book (grundkurs-java.de/index.php), it appears they follow convention and use lower case for first letter of variables and upper case for names of Java classes.]

www.grundkurs-java.deDas Buch

I turned off #Apple #Intelligence because not only did it write things resembling "My grandfather fell out of one of those things and died when he was a baby," they made it so that if you press the space bar twice (which used to insert a period) now will insert that frequently used phrase or sentence ending instead. If you're typing and not reading what you're typing, chances are you're gonna say some very strange things.

I could probably go up on a rant on this, but when did people decide that #writing ought to be dumbed down to what everybody else is saying, rather than using your brain to come up with something eloquent to move your audience? Are we really that lazy?

Yeah, I see the root causes: Greedy corporations wanting to jump onto the next big thing, Gullible #programmers racing to #code the killer feature and bonuses rather than judging the worthiness of the feature. It's a little bit like radium and watch dials, which I brought back for one of my stories with a twist. Madam Curie died because science didn't understand something essential about radioactivity, yet, and who knows how many cases of lung cancer resulted from the glow in the dark watches.

The problem with #AI and ethics is training, the source. A good writer takes training, and that includes willing teachers, reading, experience writing, and feedback. A good AI requires the same thing, they call the feedback "curation." That's "educating" it what is crap and what is gold. Moreover, the training ought be done on the writing of the person using the AI, or by willing and well paid teachers, and I really don't get why Apple didn't take this tack and create something truly useful to that writer.

My best guess why not? The psychology of their perceived user: The need for instant gratification. If we train each AI the way we train each human student, where's the ability to cut out the labor and mass produce writers?

I want the personally trained #AI that can fill in the missing word that's at the tip of my tongue, that can reliably flag my recurring grammar errors, that can complete my sentences with the accuracy of my spouse of decades. As an SF writer or as an essayist, it should recognize my idiosyncratic vocabulary and not autocorrect it, to the point of accepting new words or phrases. It astounds me that AI contribution isn't color-coded in a ADA safe way during composition to show where the writer might want to verify the generated contributions. That all auto correct auto complete doesn't do this is a serious set back to the technology.

Okay, I ranted.

A big thank you to @vextaur for the discussion I sourced this from.