Previous blog posts from this author did quite well, and I feel this is another one that articulates their train of thoughts on the software development landscape quite well. This entry mostly is...
Previous blog posts from this author did quite well, and I feel this is another one that articulates their train of thoughts on the software development landscape quite well. This entry mostly is about the question of why someone should care and worked up about a system (specifically software development) being broken in so many places.
This is why I've stayed in the medical device sphere even though the pay is very good, but far less than many other industries using the same technologies. I feel like my work has value and that...
I was paid spectacularly well, but nothing I produced had any value.
This is why I've stayed in the medical device sphere even though the pay is very good, but far less than many other industries using the same technologies. I feel like my work has value and that in itself is a huge motivator and I can be proud of what I produce.
Previous blog posts from this author did quite well, and I feel this is another one that articulates their train of thoughts on the software development landscape quite well. This entry mostly is about the question of why someone should care and worked up about a system (specifically software development) being broken in so many places.
I’m glad to see him starting a company and trying to fix things. That’s how you do it.
This is why I've stayed in the medical device sphere even though the pay is very good, but far less than many other industries using the same technologies. I feel like my work has value and that in itself is a huge motivator and I can be proud of what I produce.
I'm about to binge this entire blog. Good find.