| ▲ | traceroute66 4 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> any ideas and practices presented Unless its your job to architect stuff, in a financial firm you don't go looking around for ideas and practices. You comply with your employer's practices end of story. If you like looking up ideas and other people's practices then a heavily regulated environment is probably not the place for you. > how does one get there without having a conversation "having a conversation" about new ideas/practices in a regulated firm will involve lawyers and the compliance department. More than likely that "conversation" will be above most people's pay grade. So you're better off just not wasting your time and adhering to your employer's existing practices. And for everyone else, its an expensive and high-friction conversation to have if you want to change existing practices. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | lxgr 4 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
"Not thinking, just complying" isn't the panacea for good outcomes you make it out to be. You definitely want to limit the amount of excitement, but I've seen many issues caused by legacy formats and practices as well. > You comply with your employer's practices end of story. What if you're the employer ("first engineer" etc.), and there are no practices yet? Fintech almost by definition sometimes includes doing things from scratch because some existing solution or incumbent organization isn't working that well anymore. > Unless its your job to architect stuff Which seems to be the target audience/scenario for TFA. | |||||||||||||||||
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