Old grumpy software architect and engineer. Handfasted, has kids and dogs. Knows about fine arts, music, rock climbing, and politics.
Yes, I do that. Works quite well.
I hate that dyslectics' font, though. I understand its intent but I have such a hard time reading it.
My coach at a former employer told me I couldn't be an effective sales person because I think too long before speaking. Of course if I blurt out what I think, it's going to be the truth, and marketers don't like that very much. My clients do, though!
But yes: I edit every text I write. I hate touch phones.
Exactly. Call me when the house is burning, or you're bleeding out and I'm the only emergency person in the building. Otherwise, text me.
I have a similar aversion against using email as chat, but for the exact opposite reason.
I hear you. I've been called a "loner" and "different" my whole life. Sometimes people called me a "rebel" and a "troublemaker". Turns out I'm autistic. Yay me.
And society at large likes to play by rules made up and enforced by itself. Us autistic people aren't included in those. And thus we wind up trying really hard to play by the rules, only to find out others don't... and they don't face any consequences.
If the rules exist to keep me in check, but everyone else gets to roam free, it isn't personal responsibility. Instead, it's a failure of society at large to recognize us and accommodate us equally and fairly.
And... that's why I'm into politics.
Yep, I suffer this. It's annoying. Like, I already have a short temper, why does it have to get worse?
Looks like autistic people like to make and keep lists of things whether useful or not.
Yep. With all these frameworks that create entire web servers for us, instead of web applications that run on existing servers, it seems we have forgotten that web servers exist and how to create them.
Wow... it's the 1980s and Rational Rose just released Case Tools.
Game development environments like Unreal and Unity have had this for years.
Interesting read! Thank you for sharing.
I´ve gained quite a bit of experience with the Java programming language, and very much agree with the accusation that its ecosystem is full of weird choices. Thank you, Mark Rheinhold, I guess. And because of those, other things that got made available got made weird too.
Seeing these benchmarks helps a lot and is quite refreshing: over on Medium, many a content writer regurgitates the same old "tips" without ever providing any benchmarks as proof, thus causing us to believe in fairy tales or continuing traditions for tradition sake, rather than for the benefit of an application.
Thank you for picking an article that includes benchmarks. That is worth repeating.