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Comment Here's your answer (Score 1) 252

Tell those interviewers that you've intentionally decided not to be a "people manager," because you are an outstanding individual contributor, passionate about the technology.

On the flip side, leadership skills (as opposed to people-management skills) are indeed important to software developers. You have to know how and when to:

- Push back against questionable requirements from a client (tactfully)
- Advocate your point of view
- Not wilt in the face of authority
- Rally the other members of your dev team around an idea
- Speak your mind in the middle of a heated meeting

Comment A story (Re:Don't scan other people's systems) (Score 1) 633

In the late 1980s, I was the sysadmin of a large Unix server at a well-known university, when suddenly the server stopped accepting logins. It seems that the password file (/etc/password) had gotten corrupted. The reason? A well-meaning graduate student had suspected a security flaw and decided to "try it out" to confirm it and then report it. His heart was in the right place, but his judgment was total stupidity: he corrupted a running server used by dozens of scientists "to see if it would work." If he had just stopped by my office and ASKED (we knew each other well), we could have checked for the flaw safely.

So I have a little sympathy for Mr. Al-Khabaz, but he did exercise very poor judgment in running Acunetix.

Comment We've lost email convenience (Score 1) 662

We've lost the basic ability to store and process email. Back when we all used terminals connected to one big computer (Unix, etc.), it was clear where your mail lived: in specific files. You could access it from anywhere (via modem), and you could process it with tools (grep, sed, etc.), use "tar" to back it up, encrypt it with PGP, or basically do whatever you wanted with it, effortlessly. It was YOURS.

Nowadays, half your email lives on a remote IMAP server: accessible from anywhere, but inaccessible to your local tools, and if your mail provider ever gets shut down, you could lose it all. The other half lives in local mailboxes on your desktop or laptop, accessible only when you're physically next to the machine. Or worse, if you use two desktops (one at work, the other at home), you might have local mailboxes on each, making it impossible to do a full search of your email. Some people work around this by carrying a thumbdrive and putting all local mail folders on it... but then you have to back up the thumbdrive, etc.

This is why I download all email from my ISP to a Linux machine at home (via fetchmail), access it via OpenSSH, and read it in emacs, or run a local IMAP server. This provides all the benefits of the old "terminals" model. The downside is you have to be a computer wizard to set it up.

Comment Re:Go for it (Score 1) 1065

Google is your friend. You have the name of the scientist. Go check out the papers and read 'em!

As for your claim, "In real life, the majority of people WILL stop talking if they need to concentrate for a busy intersection / dangerous road and if there's an "OH SHIT!" situation, they won't keep holding the phone".... You've missed the point entirely. If you enter an "oh shit" situation while on the phone, you will NOTICE THIS MORE SLOWLY. That is what the research says: your reactions are delayed due to distraction. And then it's too late to drop your phone.

Comment Re:Go for it (Score 4, Informative) 1065

That's a fine opinion, but look at the research. The data don't agree with you. Driving while talking on a cell phone turns out worse than all the things you mention, when actually measured. There seems to be something special about the way the brain handles a phone conversation that impairs the ability to multitask more severely.

Don't take my word for it. Read the research.

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