| ▲ | throw0101c 14 hours ago | |||||||
> They are failing because of political scheming and bunch of people wanting to have a finger in the pie - "trillions spent" - I guess no one would mind earning couple millions. Not (necessarily) wrong, but if you start small, Important People may not want to bother with something that is Unimportant and may leave things alone so something useful and working can get going. If you starting with an Important project then Important People will start circling it right away. | ||||||||
| ▲ | munificent 12 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Even starting small isn't a surefire way to avoid that problem. They'll just show up once the thing gets big enough. Witness how the web was once a funny little collection of nerds sharing stuff with each other. But once it got big enough that you could start making money off it, the important people showed up and started taking over. The web still has those odd little corners, but it's largely the domain of a small number of giant powerful corporations. I don't think there is a silver bullet for dealing with egomaniacs who want infinite power. They seem to be a part of the human condition and dealing with them is part of the ticket price for having a society. | ||||||||
| ||||||||
| ▲ | ozim 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I guess for me important point is that it is not technical issue and we already have all technical tools/processes to do really big software projects. Even if people dislike scrum, find Git complicated and don’t want to open up JIRA - these tools are not the problem, these tools help building loads of working software. We as software engineers with devops can deliver great and complex projects and build great systems. Lots of businesses people don’t even understand how much in control we can be of the environments and code. Yet developers/IT is there to be blamed. Like we should be ashamed, Uncle Bob will give lectures “how developers should be more professional”. Yet I always find business people who are like children in the corn field. With small difference business/sales guys are pushy and walk over engineering guys and engineers bend over and take the blame and business guys can always say “those IT kids playing with toys instead of doing real job”. | ||||||||