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Negligent?
Message
De
22/10/2013 09:45:40
Mike Yearwood
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
 
 
À
22/10/2013 00:23:08
Al Doman (En ligne)
M3 Enterprises Inc.
North Vancouver, Colombie Britannique, Canada
Information générale
Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Catégorie:
Contrats & ententes
Titre:
Versions des environnements
Visual FoxPro:
VFP 9 SP2
OS:
Windows Server 2012
Network:
Windows 2008 Server
Database:
MS SQL Server
Application:
Web
Divers
Thread ID:
01585954
Message ID:
01586061
Vues:
52
>>>>Are we not supposed to be professionals?
>>>
>>>http://it.slashdot.org/story/13/10/21/1652257/most-it-workers-dont-have-stem-science-tech-engineering-math-degrees
>>
>>That's interesting, Al.
>>In fact, none of the best programmers that I've worked with had math, computer science, or other technical degrees.
>>By definition, the people who made the breakthroughs in this business could not have had much training since they were defining what the rest of us had to learn.
>>That was certainly true of the people who trained me.
>>The best programmer I ever hired was a 19 year old high school dropout auto mechanic who fooled around with an Atari and decided to change careers while taking some courses at night.
>>I spent some time in the motor pool in the service, so in the interview I asked him to tell me how he'd trace a short in a lighting system. His answer was right on the money.
>>I hired him and gave him a VFP manual and a couple of days training before starting him on small projects.
>>Then he took off on his own and in a few months became one of the best VFP programmers I've ever seen.
>>One of our clients paid us a nice fee in return for letting them hire him and he's now the lead programmer for one of the largest companies on Long Island.
>>I don't think he ever did get that degree, though.
>
>There are lots of anecdotes like that in this business. That's what makes defining a so-called "professional" difficult.
>
>I find it annoying when people use the term as a bludgeon e.g. person A writes code one way, person B thinks it's better to do it a different way and calls person A "unprofessional". On a public forum like this it's tantamount to defamation. Most, if not all regulated professions have strict rules about criticizing fellow professionals.

Then we obviously are not a group of professionals. Some are professionals and others are simply hacks. I direct you to the recent tv program Canada's Worst Driver Ever. One of them is a "professional" delivery man. Without criticism no profession will advance.
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