| ▲ | vasco an hour ago |
| Yep this is like comparing master craftsmanship with a production line. You're gonna get good attention to detail and a masterpiece from one, and a limited thing that will break after few years from the other. But for majority of use cases the second one is enough. And pointing out the master craftsmanship is "better" is besides the point. And with one you need to train a guy for 25 years and with the other you need plan mode for a few minutes and then it runs 24/7. |
|
| ▲ | jplusequalt an hour ago | parent [-] |
| Our society needs more experts, not less. |
| |
| ▲ | vasco 34 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Do we? We have many buildings built and very little master masons or whatever nowadays. The amount of craftsmen needed to build a 10 story building is very limited. That's what we should aim for software, much less experts needed for the same outcome so more people can benefit from software. | | |
| ▲ | globalnode 6 minutes ago | parent [-] | | there is a large incentive for computer programmers to build themselves up in importance. higher wages, better love lives, more status. but most software is pretty mundane and straight forward, or at least should be. fancy architectures rarely pay off and the best solutions are sometimes the most obvious. although i could be suffering from that phenomenon that people in maths have where they struggle to understand then once they grasp it they feel dumb like "ofc i should have known that!" |
|
|