| ▲ | heresie-dabord 2 hours ago | |
Further to this point, it's quite common to favour a candidate with a strong STEM degree who has learned to code as an adjacency. | ||
| ▲ | aleph_minus_one an hour ago | parent [-] | |
> Further to this point, it's quite common to favour a candidate with a strong STEM degree who has learned to code as an adjacency. ... because they know less about programming, and thus think much less deeply how a novel abstraction could look like which solves the problem much more elegantly. In other words: these applicants more obediently do their work instead of regularly questioning whether there could be a better way and thus rocking the boat too much. :-( | ||