Finding & Nurturing The 0.1% Who Could Be Great Software Developers

Aboel3z@programming.devbanned from sitebanned from site to Programming@programming.dev – -1 points –
Finding & Nurturing The 0.1% Who Could Be Great Software Developers
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Fuck off with the special diamond in the rough .1% bullshit... good developers are trained. I do think there's a mental predisposition for some folks to think in a way compatible with computers but good developers aren't birthed fully formed into the world.

Also: Let's be honest, 99.9999% of our work is not that special. It's cookie cutter business software. There are only of handful of problems I encountered where you could argue, it would have actually required an "awesome" developer. All the others were business problems, lack of knowledge or too ambitious deadlines (thanks, sales!).

Nowadays, I'm lucky if I get more than 2h in code per day. Even if I were the best dev in the world, my company wouldn't benefit that much.

Literally all it takes is proper practice, and adequate time to learn. You aren't fucken born for it. I'm sure anyone could do it with a UBI and a cheap thinkpad.

perhaps 1 in 100 software developers that might apply for a job are really up to snuff.

Lol. This is not the calibre of the developer pool, it's that the company sucks and the great developers can tell that by the time they finish reading the job post.

Edit: Let's all say it together: "Great developers land at great jobs with great bosses and great pay and great work/life balance." Then they spend decades telling anyone asking them to change jobs to go fuck themselves.

Source: I hear a polite version "go fuck yourself" all the time. Usually over a shared lunch that I paid for. As it should be. The talent is out there, and mostly happy where they are. They just don't want to talk to a shitty employer. Heck, they usually don't even want to talk to my excellent employer.