|
|
|
|
|
by chaboud
9 hours ago
|
|
The percentages, as with 91% of statistics, are made up, but that general asymmetry is why I think this is a perilous time for folks in the middle, still learning judgement and how to scale through others. Experienced folks who know how to describe and articulate through others have a huge opportunity here. I have ultra-quick interns in my laptop, waiting to apply aggressive and slightly presumptuous energy to any and every problem. I also know how to pull them back in and get them to focus that energy (because junior devs were the same). New folks will sink or swim quickly, but they're less expensive and more plastic on average. They're raised in this. We'll see what that does to quality. Deeply technical managers, designers, scientists, program managers, and product managers are now in possession of an incredible power, to be able to craft existence proofs to counteract the couched recalcitrance that engineering orgs have held over their judgment for decades. There's a certain intellectual integrity in this, even if nobody can actually read the code at the rate it's being produced. |
|