Agreed. Doing things in a computer is just organizing the information you have at hand.
That could be files or symbols in files that defined a set of operations a computer should run on symbols in another file/db.
This isn’t magic. But it’s susceptible to social behaviors and those are “growth every quarter, demand, demand!” so we latch onto buzzwords or trends because some VC funded dork thinks their way of laying out a todo app is best. IMO anyway.
Having gone freelancer and flipped the bird to corporate life, I’m way happier and write little code: not having to learn new frameworks makes when to write more generic, re-useable, dependency less, code way more obvious. And I don’t have to worry about a Github repo going inactive.
We’re making it harder with tent pool frameworks due to information overload. When the work is information organization, less is more.
A parallel to all that “more data is just a bigger security liability.” theme that popped up a couple years ago. It’s also a progress liability.
That could be files or symbols in files that defined a set of operations a computer should run on symbols in another file/db.
This isn’t magic. But it’s susceptible to social behaviors and those are “growth every quarter, demand, demand!” so we latch onto buzzwords or trends because some VC funded dork thinks their way of laying out a todo app is best. IMO anyway.
Having gone freelancer and flipped the bird to corporate life, I’m way happier and write little code: not having to learn new frameworks makes when to write more generic, re-useable, dependency less, code way more obvious. And I don’t have to worry about a Github repo going inactive.
We’re making it harder with tent pool frameworks due to information overload. When the work is information organization, less is more.
A parallel to all that “more data is just a bigger security liability.” theme that popped up a couple years ago. It’s also a progress liability.