> Of course most programmers will still be average, by definition. The problem is that the average level of quality and productivity probably won't have changed all that much.
It would appear not.
It's always funny how people take a serious person who has otherwise written a very insightful article, take a sentence out of context, and proclaim it silly.
> Of course most programmers will still be average, by definition. The problem is that the average level of quality and productivity probably won't have changed all that much.
It would appear not.
It's always funny how people take a serious person who has otherwise written a very insightful article, take a sentence out of context, and proclaim it silly.