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09:06
I subscribe to the newsletter of an entrepreneur/angel investor/VC network, I reckon that they have one of the best A.I. email generators - always able to cater the newsletter to reader's interests.
If you find the picture eerie, probably because it is ... taken at night, with long exposure.
09:49
Can only say, the ways human eyes and cameras accept photons seem different :D
user7659542
10:28
I have worked for 5 different clients in the past 3 years since I started my company. And I keep on coming to the conclusion that like 90% of software engineers I meet are unfortunately quite important: barely know how scheduling works, never heard about softIRQs, have no clue about software patterns, etc... I would totally forgive such a lack of knowledge for junior software engineers or people who just graduated
user7659542
But unfortunately I also see this amongst senior engineers with 20 years of experience.
Just boggles my mind that even they are unable to write proper software tests or don't bother setting up a build server with CI/CD.
Guys, get your shit together!
Specifically people in the embedded space didn't know about that? I can understand web-devs not knowing it
user7659542
@PeterT my bad, yes I am speaking about the embedded space as this is where I work
user7659542
This really makes me wonder what the difference is with big software firms like FAANGs
user7659542
how good are those firms? Or are they disappointing too?
10:31
They just optimize for different things. I think the companies doing embedded stuff are very focussed on getting devices right and software is just a part of that
While the web-giants have much more to gain by making time investments into software dev infrastructure
user7659542
software is like one of the major components in an embedded system. I mean, your hardware has much lower chance of evolving over time than your software, so you better be clever and have a proper devops and software architecture which easily allows you to bug fix and expand on top of that later on
user7659542
So many companies start with shit software because they think their software is just a proof of concept or they just don't care and end up using that same software 10 years later. Where ten years later they are crying because they don't understand the software any more and are affraid of modifying obscure parts of that same software
user7659542
6 mins ago, by traducerad
I have worked for 5 different clients in the past 3 years since I started my company. And I keep on coming to the conclusion that like 90% of software engineers I meet are unfortunately quite important: barely know how scheduling works, never heard about softIRQs, have no clue about software patterns, etc... I would totally forgive such a lack of knowledge for junior software engineers or people who just graduated
I have to be honest, I don't know if I think "building and expanding on existing software" is always a plus for some embedded stuff. I think that's where throwing aways code is a little more excusable
user7659542
*unfortunately quite incompetent
user7659542
10:37
@PeterT there are different "types" of embedded software, so this is debatable. You have the firmware running on small microcontrollers that do something very specific. But you also have a eg in a centralized system architecture a central CPU which orchestrates everything. For instance like in a car
user7659542
You can already feel that that central CPU will be running lots of code
user7659542
and so rewriting this everytime might be suboptimal
oh yeah, don't throw away the millions of lines from one car model year to the next
user7659542
fyi, I am trying to simplify things here but I think you got the gist
user7659542
in such cases throwing everything away is not necessarily the way to go. You want, in such cases, to have a clever software architecture for your central cpu which allows for expansion later down the road. And this also requires a proper devops
user7659542
10:40
software imo has a life cycle and therefor a life expectancy. Devops allows you to have a longer life expectancy because it, to some extent, forces developers to not merge utter trash into their software
user7659542
otherwise you may have to rewrite those millions lines of code from one car model year to the next, which is stupid and expensive
Well, I like proper devops setups, but I can understand why some managers/higher ups don't want to invest in it.
user7659542
@PeterT those managers are shooting themselves in the foot 99% of the time
They can turn into a huge time-sink themselves and potentially not seeing a clear ROI for possibly years is hard the way people run shit nowadays
user7659542
make people and their skills grow in your company, by inter alia investing in devops. So many developers have never exceeded the competency level of a graduate
user7659542
10:43
@PeterT why a huge time sink? Just install jenkins, write tests and think strategically about your software architecture, that is already a very good start.
user7659542
this is not impossible to do and imo not a huge time sink. I am wondering what FAANGs do on top of this
I don't think I've seen "inter alia" used before, is that common in some fields?

Well you won't find me disagreeing with the principles, in the previous company I worked for, I was the one to setup jenkins
They were just copying binaries over machines, and every two weeks there was a "works on my machine" situation
user7659542
@PeterT yes it is common in the field of English language
user7659542
:p
user7659542
10:47
@PeterT lol, see this is the sort of crap that is so unprofessional. Totally normal for a university project but not a (multinational) firm
user7659542
Unless I am using "inter alia" incorrectly, but I don't think so... Let's ask our professional scientific/academic writer @Mikhail
user7659542
I would like to work at a firm that really has all of its shit together from a technical (software) POV. I guess have to work at a FAANG to witness this. But I probably don't have the skills and also don't want to be asked to come up with a way to reverse a fcking tree or a shortest path algorithm
I don't think the skill floor is too high at those companies, they need a lot of people
so I very much doubt that you "don't have the skills"
user7659542
Yet, they keep on asking absolutely retarded questions that don't prove anything
Well what else than astrology for hiring managers are they supposed to use? :P
user7659542
10:52
¯_(ツ)_/¯
maybe they should begin every interview with a tarot card reading
 
3 hours later…
14:10
I should probably be posting these versions as separate answers to gain marginally more rep from fringe questions like these :) — sehe 7 secs ago
@traducerad inter alia
 
7 hours later…
20:57
@traducerad Google seems to be about mapping one protocol buffer into another. That being said they usually have fairly specialized teams. So for example, a lot of ML at FAANGs is deployed using auto-ml like techniques but on the other hand they have specialized teams that implement or optimize those components. Same with embedded dev. The breadth of experience for engineers from large US tech companies is often lacking.
@traducerad i'm more of a writer of science fiction
Had another paper recently come out:
 
1 hour later…
user7659542
22:02
if one makes 100k/annum net, their corresponding gross salary is approximately 220k, according to some online calculator.
user7659542
Is this +/- correct? Or did I not use the calculator correctly?

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