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by skissane
1093 days ago
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> Dev blogs are not equivalent to medical or law journals in many ways that I don’t need to list. Academic computer science white papers are a bit closer. Okay, there are law blogs and medicine blogs too, which are directly comparable to dev blogs. And by that I mean blogs targeted at legal and medical professionals, not blogs on those topics targeted at consumers. For example, BMJ's Frontline Gastroenterology blog [0], whose target audience is practicing and trainee gastroenterologists, and its authors write for their target audience – it is public and anyone can read it, but I don't think the authors spend too much time worrying "what if an unqualified person reads this and misinterprets it due to a lack of basic medical knowledge?" Or similarly, consider Opinio Juris, the most popular international law blog on the Internet. When a blog post contains the sentence "As most readers will know, lex specialis was created by the International Court of Justice in the Nuclear Weapons Case, to try to explain the relationship between international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law (IHRL)", [1] you know you are not reading something aimed at a general audience. [0] https://blogs.bmj.com/fg/ [1] http://opiniojuris.org/2020/01/13/the-soleimani-case-and-the... |
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1) You don’t sound too sure about this. Your previous comment sounded like speculation also. Do you actually read these blogs and/or journals?
2) Again, you’re making comparisons that aren’t equivalent. Your argument fails when you replace “unqualified person” with “unqualified target person”. My pizza delivery driver is not reading dev blogs. The junior and senior engineers on my team over the years who passed 5 rounds of interviews yet still make simple but devastating mistakes are reading these blogs.
> lex specialis
1) In your previous comment, you said that medical and law journals _don’t_ explain every basic little thing. And now you provided a quote where the law blog is explicitly explaining a very basic thing even to their _qualified target audience_. If “most readers” already know something, then what’s the point of re-explaining it? You’re proving my point instead.
2) Another comparison that isn’t equivalent. Even if an “unqualified” person were to read a _professional_ law or medical blog/journal, what’s the worst that could happen? Nothing.
The answer to that question above will definitely change if we’re talking about _nonprofessional_ content (e.g. TikTok law and medical advice). Frankly, more dev blogs veer towards the “unprofessional” side than “professional”.