The other great thing about Go is it has a lot fewer language snobs like this guy as the people who use it typically don't have time for that kind of crap (SysAdmins, DevOps guys, people building orchestration tools,…
I would say a solid understanding of the fields that development most commonly intersects with. Typically business (including politics), product, networking, operations, and security. You don't need to be an expert but…
But devs are perfect and special snowflakes who should be deferred to in every context. The users should just do what we put in the nonexistent documentation or figure it out on their own because the software is perfect…
Valuations are a funny thing. There's sooo much cash floating around in large companies coffers doing nothing (especially Microsoft's) that the numbers start meaning a whole lot of nothing after awhile.
The other great thing about Go is it has a lot fewer language snobs like this guy as the people who use it typically don't have time for that kind of crap (SysAdmins, DevOps guys, people building orchestration tools,…
I would say a solid understanding of the fields that development most commonly intersects with. Typically business (including politics), product, networking, operations, and security. You don't need to be an expert but…
But devs are perfect and special snowflakes who should be deferred to in every context. The users should just do what we put in the nonexistent documentation or figure it out on their own because the software is perfect…
Valuations are a funny thing. There's sooo much cash floating around in large companies coffers doing nothing (especially Microsoft's) that the numbers start meaning a whole lot of nothing after awhile.