After two decades in this industry, I've come to the same conclusion. Developers may use logic in coding, but trend-wise, we're bunch of herds following whatever others are doing. We forget whatever lessons we learned…
If you're a new programmer, I don't think you should start from OO. OO-based languages are built on procedural, structural and imperative programming foundations. Starting from OO may force you to see everything as an…
I also have that theory, and it's not a stretch since the act of business is to commoditize everything. I especially saw it in the IT consulting business.
Yes, forget the acronym. It's simply, "think for yourself." Do you ever talk to someone on a topic (in technology or politics) and it feels like you're talking to list of commonly accepted prepackaged talking points?
I was asked that question in my recent interview, and I told them that beyond the basics of the intent for using the index and some basic commonalities, it's hard to explain the details of how it works due to the fact:…
What you're seeing may be a case of survivorship bias. Monetized licenses aren't popular, so those licenses don't stick around.
After two decades in this industry, I've come to the same conclusion. Developers may use logic in coding, but trend-wise, we're bunch of herds following whatever others are doing. We forget whatever lessons we learned…
If you're a new programmer, I don't think you should start from OO. OO-based languages are built on procedural, structural and imperative programming foundations. Starting from OO may force you to see everything as an…
I also have that theory, and it's not a stretch since the act of business is to commoditize everything. I especially saw it in the IT consulting business.
Yes, forget the acronym. It's simply, "think for yourself." Do you ever talk to someone on a topic (in technology or politics) and it feels like you're talking to list of commonly accepted prepackaged talking points?
I was asked that question in my recent interview, and I told them that beyond the basics of the intent for using the index and some basic commonalities, it's hard to explain the details of how it works due to the fact:…
What you're seeing may be a case of survivorship bias. Monetized licenses aren't popular, so those licenses don't stick around.