Thought of the day by John von Neumann
There’s no sense being precise about something when you don’t even know what you’re talking about.
John von Neumann
There’s no sense being precise about something when you don’t even know what you’re talking about.
John von Neumann
Too many chefs spoil the code.
Jimmy Nilsson
What I learned from Steve Jobs
1. Experts are clueless.
2. Customers cannot tell you what they need.
3. Jump to the next curve.
4. The biggest challenges beget best work.
5. Design counts.
6. Changing your mind is a sign of intelligence.
7. “Value” is different from “price.”
8. A players hire A+ players.
Steve Jobs talks about managing people
The management of a company that makes furniture, doing well, took it into their heads to expand their line into pianos. Why not make pianos? They bought a Steinway piano, took it apart, made or bought parts, and put a piano together exactly like the Steinway, only to discover that they could only get thuds …
The interface inheritance enforce you to implement a method with a given signature, but it doesn’t enforce you how to implement it or to use some default behaviour!
I am rephrasing an old political proverb, but it’s true. If a manager ask you to release four days earlier, after he has promised you to postpone the release date with a week probably the chaos is so big in teams with this kind of managers that you can’t expect any quality from the software …
The real reflection of intelligence is to create order in the chaos despite of catastrophic environment!