The Artima Developer Community
Sponsored Link

Java Buzz Forum
Coté Memo #070: Lost in the review hole, Lord of Computing

0 replies on 1 page.

Welcome Guest
  Sign In

Go back to the topic listing  Back to Topic List Click to reply to this topic  Reply to this Topic Click to search messages in this forum  Search Forum Click for a threaded view of the topic  Threaded View   
Previous Topic   Next Topic
Flat View: This topic has 0 replies on 1 page
Michael Cote

Posts: 10306
Nickname: bushwald
Registered: May, 2003

Cote is a programmer in Austin, Texas.
Coté Memo #070: Lost in the review hole, Lord of Computing Posted: Apr 8, 2015 4:52 PM
Reply to this message Reply

This post originated from an RSS feed registered with Java Buzz by Michael Cote.
Original Post: Coté Memo #070: Lost in the review hole, Lord of Computing
Feed Title: Cote's Weblog: Coding, Austin, etc.
Feed URL: https://cote.io/feed/
Feed Description: Using Java to get to the ideal state.
Latest Java Buzz Posts
Latest Java Buzz Posts by Michael Cote
Latest Posts From Cote's Weblog: Coding, Austin, etc.

Advertisement

There's few links today, just some pointers to now published material that I've alluded to recently, and some moaning on needing to be a better team-player.

Follow-up

  • We got up to 100 subscribers, so good job there, y'all ;)

  • As several people wrote, the word I was looking for in that discussion of lower case letters is "semiotics", the study of symbols.

  • The podcast I excerpted from on the operational needs of cloud platforms (and people who don't capitalize words) is now up. There's audio, of course, and a full transcript.

Tech & Work World

I am not scalable

I've been struggling with extending my reach of effectiveness at work. That is, working well with others. When it comes to "getting things done," I'm very good at it if I do all of it on my own, and every knob and wing-ding from concept to delivery is under my control. Once someone else gets involved in more than a faceless way, things slow down. I almost give up because I can't stand to wait.

This is very much so driven by the blogger culture that I "grew up in" over the lat 90s and 2000s. You would just type, hit publish, think of new edits, hit publish again, etc. It gets enforced by a (non-pairing) programmer mentality where you can do all you need on your own (short of last code review, perhaps), pretty much.

In the white-collar world, things are rarely like this. First, there's often at least one other person who has to approve your work. This is often to the benefit of the message and making sure the company does well. Second, there are often "gate keepers" who control the release of product into the world.

Each of these steps (and others) are intended to add value to the end product, but I still struggle to value those steps myself and, thus, find the value in them. Obviously, that's an annoying problem for all people involved. Now, watch me click publish...

New Podcast

I (re-)started a new podcast today, here's the first episode:

How to demo your cloud poop, don't smoke corn silk, and other advice for people who lived in the 1930s - Lords of Computing Podcast 001

After catching up several times over the past few months, John Willis and I decided to reboot our podcast from long ago. In this first episode, we talk about putting together good demos for cloud platforms, among other things.

We've re-named it the Lords of Computing, borrowing an ancient domain name I've had forever. Take a listen, and subscribe! (This will be three podcasts I do regularly now, which is great: it's one of the things I like doing most.)

Fun & IRL

No fun today, just work. I did notice that there was a half pot of coffee left at 3pm today. Something was going wrong.

Sponsors

Meta-data

Read: Coté Memo #070: Lost in the review hole, Lord of Computing

Topic: Wisdom to code by, an illustrated guide to programmer proverbs Previous Topic   Next Topic Topic: Biological computer simulation of selfish genes

Sponsored Links



Google
  Web Artima.com   

Copyright © 1996-2019 Artima, Inc. All Rights Reserved. - Privacy Policy - Terms of Use