@eliocamp @coolbutuseless another good developer arrives at the crushing reality that CRAN’s motivations do not align with either end users OR developers. Who do they serve? No one seems to know.
Imagine I posted a joke here about me inviting Idris over for the evening, and Idris says OK but only if it can bring its friend GHC along, and then GHC shows up and it's towing its "service animal" which is a 5,000 pound elephant with "LLVM-13" painted on the side
In Perez-Reverte’s book The Club Dumas, the main character is given a 40pg report containing an author history, publication record, supporting images, citations, and bibliography to accompany a grimoire that he’s hired to investigate. Similar reports should be written and published for all major computing grimoires.
@DrJackBrown Business Inside said the remarks were "not entirely out of the ordinary, many judges advise jurors that while they can speak to the media after high-profile trials it may not be in the best interest to do so."
L. L. Bean stands for Large Language Bean. @lowqualityfacts
"If a developer experience initiative attempts to provide developers with new and adaptive strategies, but the larger context then invalidates the behaviors by which a person can execute those strategies, psychological outcomes may be more negative than not intervening in the first place. "
What I'm listening to today: "Edelleen ja edelleen", Sleepers Tomb
Quiet, insistent drone ambient track. You're asleep, your phone's alarm keeps pushing at the barrier from some other world trying to break through and drag you out, but it's not working. A piece built up slowly on a modular suitcase that splays the track's internal process open to view like something on a dissection table. Good mood. I think the name is Finnish for "On and On"
I need a couple of dozen small blobs of similarly-structured-but-not-identically-structured JSON that look like they came from a biology lab to use in a tutorial on manipulating JSON in SQLite and Postgres. If you have such, I'd be grateful for a ping: gvwilson@third-bit.com. (Yes, I know, it's a weird request, but you're a weird bunch of people and I love you for it.)
There is really good stats thinking you can do on this and there are many models for mapping this type of change, but you won't get this thinking from business analytics or mainstream data science unfortunately. You need to look to the sciences that have done causal inference in complex real world situations.
People often say "ugh stop overthinking it. Just set a target and measure a change."
All models are wrong etc, but on some topics putting "simple" over everything is fundamentally broken.
Finally this is a great example of the dangers of thinking all changes are simple and linear. There are MANY patterns. A spike in negative evaluations is a well documented characteristic of any time you learn more about the world so again, a salient point made by @mekkaokereke that we must be very careful to observe before we diagnose. Here's an adjacent example in schools: sometimes we have evidence for an intervention working because it *slows down an existing negative trajectory*
Have you heard about code smells? It’s a kind of language for discussing suspect design and technical debt. Learning to recognize and name particular code smells could help team discussions and give ideas for good refactorings. https://youtu.be/L-cN7NI-Fes
I think THAT happens because MANY of the things I can do to avoid wasting engineers' time are things that standard productivity proxies like "lines of code merged" would suggest are wastes of MY OWN time.
It's things like:
- briefing everyone before the meeting so we don't lose an hour to "round robin what is everyone working on"
- Socializing how to do a thing so it doesn't get done 45 different ways
- STOP people from doing the thing that a loud, misinformed voice is telling people to do
@HeyChelseaTroy I'm interested in hearing more about short circuiting status round robins with an intro summary
code / data wrangler in Switzerland.
Compulsive reply guy. Posts random photos once in a while.