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Comment Re:Hello grandpa! (Score 3, Insightful) 215

He's not getting back into coding. He dabbled a bit as a hobby 20 years ago. This mindset that just anybody can pick up and become a programmer is a problem in this industry. Sure, anybody can hack away and make "something" happen, but it takes a whole lot more than that to be a competent software engineer.

If he's looking for a career change, a programmer is not it. A Network Administrator is not it either. Maybe get into hardware repair somehow, ie copier repair.

People going around saying "anybody can do it" do a disservice to those who should not spend the time and resources to attempt to jump this. There's a lot of competition for entry level programmers, a lot of bad competition, but those young kids will always be given the opportunity first. They're cheaper. They'll most likely not be taking sick time (this guy even references his aging body).

Comment Re:Ownership? (Score 3, Informative) 356

It was written by PRIVATE employees, paid for by PRIVATE monies. Obama's campaign did not take PUBLIC money for his re-election.

The code is either owned by the Obama campaign, or the DNC, or perhaps a specific individual. It all depends on who payed and who commissioned the work. Regardless, no government civilian workers had their government paychecks granted to them because they worked on coding the Obama campaign's get out to work widget.

Comment Re:Percona (Score -1, Flamebait) 116

So the developers of MariaDB took all their experience and knowledge that they obtained at Oracle while working on MySQL and created a direct competitor product to their prior company's product? I don't care why they did it, it's underhanded and doesn't speak well to the character of those people.

That "litigousness" you reference should have given them pause before doing this. Oracle just may find enough crossover coding and algorithms to go after those guys. Wouldn't matter if they're innocent or not, just the court costs involved could wipe them out.

Comment Re:This intern may be me... (Score 1) 507

(everyone who's working on it has a PhD, while I'm an undergrad

There's your problem. PhD's don't necessarily know how to write good code. They spent all their time learning and not applying.

They can certainly take very advanced concepts and make a program that does it. It just won't be very pretty or maintainable.

Comment Re:He's probably correct (Score 1) 507

As a general rule, the closer someone is chronologically to having finished college, the more correct and prettier their syntax is and the older programmers simply refuse proper retraining or learning in general really.

This statement is all sorts of wrong. Newer kids write "more correct" code? Or have prettier syntax? If that were true, then every programmer would be out of work by age 35. The truth is that it takes about 5 years of good professional experience to become a decent programmer. Schools just cannot possibly prepare a kid for dealing with a program with a code base of over a million lines of code. Sure they might write some pretty webpage, or some basic database shit, but you're seriously deluded if you think a 24 year old who isn't some type of coding genius is a better programmer than a 10 year professional.

Comment Get rid of him (Score 2) 507

He's an arrogant douche. Get rid of him. Any new kid who has the balls to call existing code terrible to your face is going to be nothing but far more trouble down the line. He already knows everything, and nothing you can say is going to get through to him. It's just not.

Get rid of him if possible, stick him in a little box otherwise. Don't let him work on the good stuff and hopefully he'll leave on his own because he's "awesome". Your bigger fear should be that he won't ever leave...

We have a few of those types in my office, and sadly we don't get rid of them because they have value just being present. It's depressing watching them bounce from project to project because they can't do anything right, and yet think they are god's gift to programming and that we're all just idiots.

Don't take the time to explain jack shit to him. It's been tried here, and they didn't change. People may say I'm too harsh and that everyone deserves a chance. My response is that they don't. People that act like dicks to others like that don't deserve another chance. Their next chance is at another job.

Comment Re:So.... (Score 1) 304

I like this post. HP big corporations are run by bean counters now that only look out for the stock price. Employees are an overhead cost that get in the way of profits, so whenever they can scale back those costs they can.

HP cut 5% this year. How many will be cut next year, or the year after? Those remaining employees know that their workload just goes up and up as more coworkers get cut, and it's guaranteed that corporate management will cut more when they need more profits. The key personnel jumping just means they understand that and don't want to deal with it anymore.

Comment Re:Can you take one or two class during the day? (Score 1) 433

Certain classes are 4 credits each. For instance I remember my Chemistry being 4 credits, while Biology was 3 (not including lab credit). Directly representing the number of hours lecture per week. My various English, history, etc were generally 3 credits. That's gonna put your math off a bit.

I'll even go a bit further and recommend against summer courses. Not because they're harder, but because they pack an entire semester of study into a few weeks. It's a high work load, and coupled with full time employment that is going to burn a guy out. One summer maybe, but make no mistake that course load, and homework/projects coupled with the work hours is going to make the guy really, really want some time off. I did this for 3 years while working full time 2nd/3rd shift. The summer course was most demanding because of the time requirements.

I just wouldn't want to see the guy jump in and start and not fully understand that he's looking at a very, very long process and a ton of work to get his degree. Just throwing out some slightly flawed math and say, yup you can do it in 6 does not fully inform this person that he will in effect be giving up his personal life for the duration of those years.

Comment Re:Can you take one or two class during the day? (Score 1) 433

This is what I was thinking. However I think you're being a little naive about what it will take to get a BS doing part time coursework.

For the submitter:

Getting your Bachelor's with no previous coursework is going to be a Herculean task while working. There's a ton of classwork involved in areas you just might not be interested in. For a Master's, maybe a Ph.D. (I don't have one so I don't know for sure), part time coursework can be done while working. That Bachelor's though, there's just too many credits required to get that degree in a short period. And by short period I am talking 5-6 years.

You're looking at probably 10 years or more to pick up a Bachelor's doing part time class work. Depending on the school policies, you risk some of those credits expiring before you would graduate. Further, you need to realize that 10g is not going to go that far at traditional 4 year schools. 2 classes per semester is realistic.

Look, this isn't impossible. If you want to get that BS before you turn 40, you are going to have to work afternoons and be a full time or close to full time student in the mornings. You're a programmer now, so hopefully your company will work with you on that. If they won't, your dreams of a BS are going to be just that for a long time. On the bright side, for a lot of programmer jobs the job experience is far more powerful than the education. Granted you are locked out of certain companies and industries, but by no means does that mean your career could be any less successful than others.

Comment Re:failure round 2 incoming (Score 1) 375

For home users, yes it's a no go. That price point can get a good android tablet and an ok desktop combined.

I think where Microsoft is headed with the Pro is enterprise. At least I believe that's their plan. Enterprise can deal with the price if the device seamlessly integrates with their networks and supports everything the system administrators require of it. Then there's no need to migrate existing software or make web portals to them. From my experience, the web portals of the software systems I use are all woefully lacking compared to the desktop versions.

You're right though about it being late to the game. If people already have their ipads are love them, they are not going to be happy with a me-too tablet. I'm not saying the Pro is a slam dunk, or will even be moderately successful. Just that it has nice positioning for providing enterprise with a good tablet that could match their existing security requirements. There's a lot of ifs, but it's something that Apple and Google just haven't provided. At least not yet.

Comment Re:failure round 2 incoming (Score 1) 375

They use the iPad for convenience. It has nothing to do with blind Windows hate. A tablet can, surprise, be comfortably used with 2 hands while standing. A laptop, well you gotta carry to a place, put it on a desk and open it up. Or put it on your lap. Then you still have to use that shitty trackpad.

Convenience...tablets are what many people have always wanted in a computer. If the Surface Pro can deliver, then you'd be a fool to think enterprise IT services would be so willing to accomodate iPads. That Surface Pro "should" be a pretty seamless addition to their networks. If Microsoft screwed that up, then it's going to fail badly because the home users certainly aren't going to pay that much for a tablet anything when you can get a kindle fire for $150.

Comment Re:Umm (Score 2) 79

This...wireshark is the most awesome tool for tcp/udp. It even supports custom plugins if you get creative.

As for a real world data usage. Look up the IEEE DIS standard. That standard is used by many military systems for simulating distributed environments. At least then there'd be a real world example that might get the kid even more into it knowing that the army and navy use it. Make your own dummy DIS streamer, or find one online if a free one exists.

Comment Re:Too Expensive (Score 1) 442

Because Windows isn't going away. People can wish it and want it all they want, it's not happening. Surface Pro has the capability of finally giving people the truly portable PC. A laptop was great, but not exactly convenient for laying on the couch or sitting in a car. Yes they "can" do it, but tablets are what people want. iPads and Android tablets are nice. They don't replace anything though.

Surface Pro "could" replace laptops. I stress could. It may not be Surface, but it WILL be a tablet made by someone which can be used as a workstation. If you believe the iPad or any android tablet today could replace a laptop workstation then you would be wrong. Surface Pro at least might be capable of that feat. Either way, I expect laptops to all but disappear in the not so distant future, say 5 years or so replaced by capable tablets.

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