| I’m well aware Which is why you start from the principles that were “learned and solved” in the past. Literally none of those things that you’re talking about Chestertons fence hopping are secrets or hidden They’re very well documented in product design, project management, cybernetics, IT etc… There’s been thousands and thousands of articles written about all the different ways to build: functional programming, monorepo vs micro services, strong typed, memsafe etc…. there’s infinite number of framework debates that are already embedded in the LLMs that you simply need to interrogate as part of the planning process before you ship anything It’s actually really simple. The reality is that 99% of software engineers never gave care about any of that ever.
Go ask your average software engineer about Parness information hiding or Conway law inversions. These things are trivially easy to grasp and make engineering intuitively simple to avoid MOST problems. I am consistently teaching principal engineers, VP, senior software engineers, people who know how to write code about basic basic basic information theory. It’s honestly embarrassing. |