I once worked at a company that sold industry-specific core-business software to deep-pocketed corps who couldn’t / wouldn’t / shouldn’t roll their own.
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@landley
I only half agree: from the little I know of the book, he’s on to something, but his specific assessment of which jobs are BS and how to tell seems deeply flawed and facile to me.A more accurate assessment is that BS is marbled through most of our jobs in varying proportions, and you can’t really label specific positions — much less specific types of jobs — as being BS across the board.
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@Npars01 @inthehands It’s all going to come tumbling down and they’re blind to see it from their lofty towers.
Both the people and the planet just can’t take it anymore. -
@bouriquet @Npars01
Sooner or later, yes, it has to. My concern is who gets hurt along the way. -
@inthehands Thanks for this thread. I live in the product world, and half the time, we're in the cross-hairs of angry developers and the people who want unrealistic growth and $$$. Most of the product managers I meet are beyond burnt out.
Like any new shiny thing: LLMs, blockchain, "IBM Watson", we're asked to do something with it to show we're "doing innovation". But why? For what purpose and customer/user benefit?
Just do it, they'd say.
So now there's AWFUL "AI" embedded in every UX.
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@MayInToronto
So many work environments would be so vastly improved if people in different roles simply believed in the reality of each other‘s problems, instead of grabbing whatever power they can to force their worldview onto other people‘s jobs. -
@inthehands I'm a big (vocal) proponent of giving small teams the autonomy to make these decisions and the guidance/support to excel at it.
90% of the time, the problem lives in leadership, shininess value for investors, and/or a misalignment between the product's viability vs the company's set targets.
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@MayInToronto
Yeah, trust an autonomy go a very long way. And well good leadership can’t magically solve everything, it sure can help create the conditions for success and well-being. -
Osteopenia Powers ,replied to Paul Cantrell last edited by
@inthehands @Npars01
‘Rich people have too much money so they are distorting markets by speculating’ is *not* a word? -
@Osteopenia_Powers
I mean, I assume it is and I just don’t know. -
Deirdre Saoirse Moenreplied to Paul Cantrell last edited by
@inthehands I want to give an example of this.
Friend of mine is IT guy for a non-software firm that uses a major db vendor and uses another third-party database set of tables, etc. And they have addons from another company.
Neither of these products use boolean column types. So the first set uses "Y" or "N" as a bool, and the second was written in Iceland, so decided to use "J" and "N" instead.
This kind of thing is just trivially awful, but chews up just great wads of time.
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This is always the case when the customer, i.e. the buyer, is not also the user. As in almost all enterprise software, like this library software you mentioned.
The one good thing about smartphones, is that the buyer was mostly also the user, so that bad products fell through the gap of mediocrity.
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