Software has a problem.

OK, it has many problems. I’ve already highlighted one of them. But this is another important one.

The problem is that software—all software, with no exceptions—sucks. The reason for this is multifaceted and we could spend years and years arguing about who has the larger list of reasons, but in the end it boils down to the proverbial shoemaker’s children: Our development tools are the worst of the worst in software.

  • @ttmrichterOP
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    32 years ago

    Oh irony of ironies, today is a perfect example of what I’m alluding to in the blog. I was unable to post this all day today because the recent server update caused some problem with a component that Lemmy uses for pictures.

    Software sucks.

    Note, I’m not trying to drag Lemmy’s programmers here. They can’t help the fact that the software tooling landscape is a wasteland. They’re the victims in this, not the perps.

    • sparseMatrix
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      2 years ago

      Many use cases, many hats. Most of us play multiple roles in our lives, whether we know it or not – and so wear multiple hats.

      We’re all victims, to a degree, of poor software design, and we’re all responsible for it to a degree as well. If for no other reason, because we make some compromise for some other perceived gain. We literally enable bad software every time we use it.

      Thinking of you here, Google, and your compatriots Facebook and Twitter.

      Not just to be argumentative, but rather to suggest that there is something we can all do about it. Even those among us who are not programmers or engineers can raise awareness among both other users and service/software providers, and refuse to use bad software and crappy insecure web technology.

      • @ttmrichterOP
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        22 years ago

        One thing we can all do (users and practitioners both) is STOP ACCEPTING EXCUSES. Buggy software is broken software. Period. Shove this in the practitioners’ faces (and accept that it will be shoved into ours!) and stop standing for it.

        One of the reasons we in this industry have gotten into this state is that we’ve convinced the public (and ourselves) that this is normal. We’ve shot ourselves in the foot for so often that we think walking around leaving bloody footprints behind is normal.

        And we’re about the only branch of “engineering” (scare quotes because I can count on one hand the number of software makers I think use engineering principles–and I don’t number myself on that hand) that tolerates the kind of cowboy bullshit that is normal. Cowboy civil engineers get sued to perdition and/or jailed when their output is fundamentally broken. When mechanical engineers make broken shit, they go bankrupt from the returns. Yet when software “engineers” product total and absolute shit they get away scot free and, indeed, they often, bizarrely, manage to sell the repairs as “new software”.

        • sparseMatrix
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          22 years ago

          Excellent commentary. Excellent use of markdown for emphasis. 5/5

          • @ttmrichterOP
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            12 years ago

            Excellent evasion. Truly stupendous pedantry. 5/5

            • sparseMatrix
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              12 years ago

              Evasion? Pedantry? I’m afraid you’ve lost me. In any case it seems odd you would adopt such an acerbic posture with someone who essentially just agreed with you right down the line.

              Go figure.

              • @ttmrichterOP
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                22 years ago

                Yes. Your reply was not even slightly sarcastic and was clearly supportive. My bad.