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by michaelmior
3385 days ago
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This may be true at Startup 2.0 but there are plenty of companies who still value people with deep development knowledge. While I've met people who are are skilled developers and designers and they can be incredibly productive and useful in many contexts, it's not possible to have the same depth of knowledge when your focus is split. I agree that developers should always be eager to learn new things, but I think it's also reasonable for a developer to want to stick to development and not design. |
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Our "creatives" tend to not know this stuff. Also they don't know other basic stuff about color spaces and typography.
You have to know a certain amount of these things in the webspace so that you can properly head off problems and explain requirements, especially as a senior developer.
More often than not, their "talent" (because they see it as a creative job) is more respected than your magic (because they don't have the faintest concept of what you do). If you're not in a technologhy company and it comes down to your needs or the designers, if you don't know their job too, you're going to lose.
I know all of this design shit, but I'm also a fullstack dev all the way down to the metal. It is possible. I just happened to grow up hacking on a C64, got into designing websites early and then worked in print production and dabbled in video for a while before getting back to software development.