Peopleware
Mistakes You Apparently Just Have to Make Yourself 3 minutes read.
Which mistakes you believe are unavoidable in our profession as IC or managers? Dan McKinley shares a few of his - I love the good old "This code is too bad. We have to rewrite it from scratch." I can think of "Org structure will solve everything" and "Org structure solves nothing."
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Dear Software Engineer: It's Time to Reclaim Your Role 6 minutes read.
"So dear software engineer, please take heed. If you’re not a "product engineer" and have specialised in writing code, AI may indeed take your job. But this isn’t just a warning - it’s an opportunity. It’s time to reclaim your role and return to what software engineering was always meant to be: a craft that combines technical expertise with problem-solving, user empathy, and business acumen. The future belongs to those with curiosity who can see beyond the code." -- I cannot agree more with Annie Vella. The notions of CHOP and BATON mentioned in the post are interesting to remember and consider when adopting new tools. The jury is still out on where and how software development will land. This is exciting to be part of it, and explore the field.
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Think Slow 7 minutes read.
Thinking slow can help in any business where decisions are costly and can cost you money or time to market. Scott Galloway captures it well: "Our efficiency comes at the cost of accuracy: Many instinctual decisions will be poorly calibrated (i.e., wrong). To facilitate the requisite speed, our brain buttresses our decisions with artificial confidence. Kahneman’s body of work demonstrates that we are often wrong but frequently confident. These shortcuts and mistakes are present in the structure of our brains, and impossible to avoid, but recognizing them helps us discern between trivial and important decisions and invest the appropriate intellectual capital. Put another way, take a beat and you increase the likelihood of making a better decision."
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