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The Programming Mess
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07/05/2013 14:48:51
 
 
À
07/05/2013 09:04:35
John Ryan
Captain-Cooker Appreciation Society
Taumata Whakatangi ..., Nouvelle Zélande
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01572688
Message ID:
01572924
Vues:
88
Speaking of programming messes.. it would be hard to top this one!

http://www.cnbc.com/id/100713593

>>>I've said it before and I say it again. If you are at the top of your technology and you've put in your time, the amount of code you write between different tools/technologies will not vary drastically. The code I wrote with FoxPro on typical business systems at the end of that cycle, didn't look that drastically different than the .NET code I write today for business systems. Similar logic through similar business process/framework logic looks similar no matter which approach you take!
>
>That may be true for many needs if you have a commercial or personal framework encapsulating much of the unwieldy stuff. I assume that's your point. But what about native mobile apps which are the new frontier? We're back to pre-Windows3.0 days waiting for Ashton Tate. Current expectation is that whatever wins the mobile battle will determine what happens on desktop too.
>
>As for servers: depends who wins the battle between the Pricelines and eBays versus the Googles and Microsofts. The first group is committed to local apps; the other wants to rule servers up in the clouds where it all happens. While people are more than capable of putting their heads into the server noose, I vote for the Pricelines and Amazons for a simple reason: they own the customer relationship that matters, where the finger hits the touchscreen.
>
>So IMHO local mobile apps will win and servers increasingly will be repositories. With the current state of mobile development, I agree with Tuvia that it's a mess. But it has been for a while all across IT and the very best practitioners IMHO are the ones who stay calm/minimize change while all around them are frantically learning Visual Flavor of the Hour or rewriting stuff to keep the deck chairs nicely arranged on the Titanic. This process of being alert and ready but not going with the flow was called "masterly inactivity" in a famous medical book called House of God (in which some patients got sicker the more you did for them.) That book also advocated a simple rule: in a crisis, the first thing to do is take your own pulse. ;-)
Anyone who does not go overboard- deserves to.
Malcolm Forbes, Sr.
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