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Software changes fast, and developers will need to vigilantly reskill their workers to maintain competence in the highly competitive arena. It's true: resources need to be killed.
Or is he talking about reservations? I hate making those before going to restaurants anyway.
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Oh, seriously!
Am I really going to open an article whose title has the words "reskilling" and "new software landscape" in it?
I don't carry my buzzword-bingo card with me, so it will have to wait.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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I thought that title would be a hit
TTFN - Kent
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But does this paper take into account blue sky thinking and proactive synergy between different developer generations?!
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needs more "paradigm"
TTFN - Kent
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Restaurant Killing developers are the worse.
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The tool takes a natural image of a specific category, e.g. churches or kitchen, and allows modifications with brushes that do not just draw simple strokes, but actually draw semantically meaningful units – such as trees, brick-texture, or domes. Their uncanny valley, your art skills
I couldn't get anything looking even remotely better than a bad cut/paste job. Maybe you'll have more luck?
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from the site: we address these issues by adapt- ing OK, so these guys want me to trust them with highly sophisticated, pixel-depth image merging and transformation, but they can't even handle copying and pasting text into an HTML file from a word-processor that has hyphenation functions active?
Sure. Gonna happen.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Man, you need a vacation! You're sounding more and more like a Piss-Boy!
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Man, this "natural intelligence thing" is not what it used to be, can't even simple text transformation challenge!
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Wow, nice one!
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The cloud is shaking up the database market, with Amazon gaining ground on Oracle and Microsoft. When is Gartner going to be "legacy"?
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Lordy, Lordy.
This is just like the "76% of Internet usage is through mobile phones" BS, that had everyone jumping around like idiots to make stuff suitable for the mobile market (yes, ms, I'm looking at you!)
What the knee-jerkers failed to take into account was that 99.99% of that 76% was ads downloading, apps updating, and things like Poke Mongo, which has a constant stream of data sent from millions of handsets -- not to mention the billions of GB of personal data that google sucks up.
I.e. not something to base plans for your company's future on.
It's the same with aws databases: IT'S ALL TRIVIAL CR@P, GUYS!
No company with an ounce of sense stores its critical databases on aws servers. It's all databases for web-sites made with "You can make a web-site in 20 minutes!" shells, and game cr@p.
If you're in charge of a business-critical database or two, don't even think of moving them to the cloud -- especially aws.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Mark_Wallace wrote: If you're in charge of a business-critical database or two, don't even think of moving them to the cloud Actually, I would.
The cloud is so massive it can take security measures you'd never have on-premises.
Of course I wouldn't be hosting them in America or China, but north or west Europe is fine.
The only reason to host on-prem is speed, but that's not an issue if your applications are in the cloud too.
On my last job we developed a cloud-only application, all data, critical and sensitive or not, was stored in the cloud.
I still come across companies who don't want to go to the cloud, but it's always policy made by people who haven't the slightest clue about technology, like legal, compliance and the director.
And in those cases it always frustrated IT.
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What will drive the would back to on-site or data centre isn't a techie thing either.
It will be an accountant's decision - cloud COSTS and it costs more and more as time goes by.
It's all being done on a Ryanair kind of model - you can have a ticket for next to nothing but you'll pay a fortune for extras like baggage and oxygen.
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. - Mark Twain
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Having on-premises servers costs money too.
Having frustrated programmers costs money too.
One team lead I talked to told me they were modernizing their applications, rewriting old VB desktop apps to modern web apps, even using containers, but not in the cloud.
That right there costs a lot and adding cloud to it wouldn't increase costs significantly.
They even bought a whole new server park to host all these applications, so money really isn't the issue.
I am able to help customers save money by going to the cloud.
That all depends on how much of it you use though.
So these decisions really aren't cost based.
And even if it was, it would be insane to have an accountant decide over the IT landscape.
You'd get stuff like "We're not using SQL Server because Mongo DB is cheaper (I read that on a forum)".
Although that is what's happening now, we're not moving to the cloud because management "feels" it's not secure or whatever reason they have.
Maybe if all your developers and IT managers are calling cloud you should move to the cloud
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Equally, all your sales people might want to drive a Bugatti and would argue that a happy sales person is a good sales person and that they'd get out to customers more quickly. The FD would probably be more inclined towards a V.W., though.
Yes, there are things where cloud is an obvious advantage, and could be argued as a a necessity but for most in-house systems the advantages become a lot less defined and I think it's often a case of people doing it because cloud is the "new thing" not for any solid practical reasons.
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect. - Mark Twain
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The Bugatti/V.W. is something different, a Bugatti doesn't solve a problem that other brands have, except that it has more status and luxury.
The cloud solves actual problems and costs may even be one of them.
In one case the solid practical reason was that the on-premises servers were running out of available space.
They had everything on-premises, including VM workstations that got less and less memory because the servers couldn't keep up.
They were talking about giving everyone a laptop to solve that problem, then bought a new mega server instead.
Everyone, including the sys admins, were advocating the cloud for certain solutions.
Their issue also wasn't the money, it was security, because somehow the cloud is less secure (according to management and compliance).
Another still had a "developer develops, passes code over to system admin who deploys to production" kind of setup, and the practical reason there was that the system admins couldn't keep up with development.
That could be solved by going more DevOps and practicing CI/CD and isn't necessarily solved by the cloud, although it does make it somewhat easier.
However, they had a lot of servers doing nothing most of the time and peaking once or twice per week, which is another scenario the cloud handles a lot better.
And they could get rid of their data centers, which costs lots, including storage of the physical servers.
Well, they probably have to write them off first, which could take a while because they just bought a new one...
I don't think teams, on average, want to get with "the new thing".
Lots of people don't like change, especially if that means learning new things which makes their jobs harder.
My experience is that one person wants the latest greatest and alerts the rest of the team.
By the time the entire team or even multiple teams want this technology as well it's no longer latest greatest and they're convinced it solves a problem they're having.
So, if the people you pay for their technical knowledge tell you to go in a certain technical direction then why would you overrule them because of an uninformed "gut feeling"?
That's just bad management...
In the end it may even be a matter of keeping up because you can't get new hires otherwise.
Last month, I turned down two jobs because they didn't do cloud (which would be a total waste of my two new Azure certificates).
No (good) developer wants to work for a company that doesn't use new technologies once in a while.
I'm turning into somewhat of a cloud advocate though
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Mark_Wallace wrote: No company with an ounce of sense stores its critical databases on aws servers. You would be surprised
So far not critical databases, but they (the IT of the big company I work for) are thinking to move the complete email traffic and servers to Office 365 Cloud
And then... we are not allowed to navigate GitHub because is not secure
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Nelek wrote: You would be surprised Ah, but I very carefully worded my statement to exclude companies that don't have an ounce of sense.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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Actually, most do move their databases to the cloud. Why, you ask? Because you have to pay network ingress and egress fees for accessing an external resource. Cheaper and more cost-effective to have the DB in the cloud. And also more resilient and reliable, to boot.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Soon people will start using those "desk top" computers.
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Researchers used deep reinforcement learning to teach these strange robots how to move Great news for those branches yearning to walk about
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OK, so my buying a house in a forest was maybe not the best idea I ever had.
I, for one, welcome our carbon-based mechanical masters.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
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