[Turn] Why are active programmers not as good as opposition programmers
Thursday on December 21st, 2006Life
Why are active programmers not as good as opposition programmers
? 1 On-the-job programmers must complete the company's endless non-technical tasks every day, and those in the field do not need them.2��On-the-job programmers write programs to make a living, and those who get less money can only smoke cigarettes below 5 yuan. Those who are in the field are either students or have money, so they are naturally more inspired.
3��Working programmers are generally single, and those who are out of office generally have more than 2 girlfriends. Behind every successful man there is a woman,
4��An in-service programmer takes a private order and hides it left and right for fear that the company will know. Those who take up business in the wild are called the soho family.
5��Before becoming an in-service programmer, he learned technology every day and learned technical articles online. In addition to reading the boss's mission emails after taking office. I can't even understand English manual.
6��Before becoming an in-service programmer, he knew a lot of skills and had a good spirit to overcome difficulties. After taking office, he forgot all the libraries except System.Data and System.Data.SqlClient
7��A few years later, active programmers want to become inactive programmers again. Opposite programmers all wanted to become working programmers, so the roles were reversed again, and the expert and the rookie were reversed again.
8��If an on-the-job programmer is a master, it is common for him to work overtime, have extremely poor physical fitness, and die early. Those who survived were all rookies or project managers.
----------------Transferred from chicyu.boke.com-----------------------------
This is the problem: when interests become tasks or burdens.
Copyright Protection: ShuDudu from the original article, reproduced Please keep the link: https://www.shududu.com/life/Turn-Why-are-active-programmers-not-as-good-as-opposition-programmers.htm