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Why I resigned from my job

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
csharpvisual-studiocollaborationtoolscareer
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  • A AspDotNetDev

    Nonsense! IDE's are too fancy as it is. Let's all program in assembly language and pass it off to a compiler using the command line! Productivity is WAY overrated.

    [Forum Guidelines]

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Member 4480474
    wrote on last edited by
    #21

    Assembler? Pah! Keyboards are for wusses. I remember keying in bootstrappers on an octal switch bank. That was in the days when the in-joke about why computers came in big 19" racks was so that we could fit a bean counter inside each one. What? It's 4pm? Time for dinner and off to bed! Creak.... E:^)

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    • T thisraja

      I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

      J Offline
      J Offline
      J Dunlap
      wrote on last edited by
      #22

      I think it's funny that people are taking your post seriously - given that this is your alternate account for posting as different characters from people's work places and other funny stuff. Good job on the humor! :) Just so it's not a manifestation of multiple personality disorder! :laugh:

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      • T thisraja

        I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

        D Offline
        D Offline
        Dario Solera
        wrote on last edited by
        #23

        Are you the boss that is being talked about in the thread below? :-D

        If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe, but not a personality. [Charlie Brooker] ScrewTurn Wiki, Continuous Localization and My Startup

        X 1 Reply Last reply
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        • T thisraja

          I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

          D Offline
          D Offline
          DaveAuld
          wrote on last edited by
          #24

          Well i hope you enjoy the change..........everyone needs change now and again.

          Dave Don't forget to rate messages!
          Find Me On: Web|Facebook|Twitter|LinkedIn
          Waving? dave.m.auld[at]googlewave.com

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          • T thisraja

            I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

            C Offline
            C Offline
            cefarix
            wrote on last edited by
            #25

            CLI HLT

            L 1 Reply Last reply
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            • T thisraja

              I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

              M Offline
              M Offline
              Mark_Wallace
              wrote on last edited by
              #26

              Sounds like everyone wins. Good choice.

              I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

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              • A AspDotNetDev

                Nonsense! IDE's are too fancy as it is. Let's all program in assembly language and pass it off to a compiler using the command line! Productivity is WAY overrated.

                [Forum Guidelines]

                L Offline
                L Offline
                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #27

                That's still way too comfortable. Let's hook up a hexadecimal keypad and enter machine codes directly into memory. Actually, I have done this just last weekend on my very first computer :-) But still I see a point here: Often the younger fellows have their heads up in frameworks and the cool things the IDE can do for them and fail miserably at keeping control over memory usage or performance. Those rookies should spend some time with a tiny 8 bit computer with no more than 8 k RAM and everything would be nice and well.

                A while ago he asked me what he should have printed on my business cards. I said 'Wizard'. I read books which nobody else understand. Then I do something which nobody understands. After that the computer does something which nobody understands. When asked, I say things about the results which nobody understand. But everybody expects miracles from me on a regular basis. Looks to me like the classical definition of a wizard.

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                • C cefarix

                  CLI HLT

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  Lost User
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #28

                  START: 0000 7A REQ
                  LOOP: 0001 3F 00 BN4 START
                  0003 7B SEQ
                  0004 30 01 BR LOOP

                  Here you go. One complete little program. Now guess for what processor.

                  A while ago he asked me what he should have printed on my business cards. I said 'Wizard'. I read books which nobody else understand. Then I do something which nobody understands. After that the computer does something which nobody understands. When asked, I say things about the results which nobody understand. But everybody expects miracles from me on a regular basis. Looks to me like the classical definition of a wizard.

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                  • T thisraja

                    I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

                    L Offline
                    L Offline
                    Lost User
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #29

                    ProgrammerToVP wrote:

                    debugging by sprinkling code with printfs

                    Thats why productivity and quality was so low. Lets face it, technology has moved on and you cant cope.

                    Morality is indistinguishable from social proscription

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                    • M Member 4480474

                      Assembler? Pah! Keyboards are for wusses. I remember keying in bootstrappers on an octal switch bank. That was in the days when the in-joke about why computers came in big 19" racks was so that we could fit a bean counter inside each one. What? It's 4pm? Time for dinner and off to bed! Creak.... E:^)

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Mike Winiberg
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #30

                      BTDTGTTS - Elliott 903...

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • D Dario Solera

                        Are you the boss that is being talked about in the thread below? :-D

                        If you truly believe you need to pick a mobile phone that "says something" about your personality, don't bother. You don't have a personality. A mental illness, maybe, but not a personality. [Charlie Brooker] ScrewTurn Wiki, Continuous Localization and My Startup

                        X Offline
                        X Offline
                        Xiangyang Liu
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #31

                        Not really, he is just being funny. :)

                        My .NET Business Application Framework     My Younger Son & His "PET"

                        D 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • S Single Step Debugger

                          This sounds like a good decision and probably a relieve for both you and your subordinates. The "drag and drop" technologies which exists from some 20 years and are intended to simplify the development of the UI and help programmers to focus on the business logic, have nothing to do with your rant...and vi and emacs?!? Are you serious? The dispute which one is more crappy died a decade ago with the conclusion that they are both a pile of crap. There are more humble and far more superior text editors around for both Windows and Linux.

                          The narrow specialist in the broad sense of the word is a complete idiot in the narrow sense of the word. Advertise here – minimum three posts per day are guaranteed.

                          O Offline
                          O Offline
                          Owen Lawrence
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #32

                          Deyan Georgiev wrote:

                          There are more humble and far more superior text editors around for both Windows and Linux.

                          Please name them, and tell me how YOU use them. I spend far more time waiting for the cursor to catch up to me in Visual Studio than I ever do in vi. VS also has me moving my hands off the main keyboard to either the mouse or the cursor keys, which again slows me down. It's as if I've poured tar all over my hands. Why would anybody want do that? - Owen -

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                          • T thisraja

                            I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

                            T Offline
                            T Offline
                            tom1443
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #33

                            Congrats! I'm counting the days when I can stop doing this for pay and start once again doing it for fun.

                            1 Reply Last reply
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                            • T thisraja

                              I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

                              E Offline
                              E Offline
                              edmurphy99
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #34

                              All these sissy windows and icons, I once had to write an entire database using nothing but ones and zeros --Dilbert

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • A AspDotNetDev

                                Nonsense! IDE's are too fancy as it is. Let's all program in assembly language and pass it off to a compiler using the command line! Productivity is WAY overrated.

                                [Forum Guidelines]

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                mght
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #35

                                aspdotnetdev wrote:

                                Nonsense! IDE's are too fancy as it is. Let's all program in assembly language and pass it off to a compiler using the command line punch cards! Productivity is WAY overrated.

                                FTFY

                                // mbghtri ToDo: // Put Signature Here

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                                • X Xiangyang Liu

                                  Not really, he is just being funny. :)

                                  My .NET Business Application Framework     My Younger Son & His "PET"

                                  D Offline
                                  D Offline
                                  Dan Neely
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #36

                                  The question is who is he?

                                  3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18

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                                  • T thisraja

                                    I have been with my current company for 35 years. For 35 years I have encouraged use of open technologies at my company. Unfortunately, the programmers these days do not enjoy to work in open technologies. They rather prefer drag and drop programming offered by tools such as Visual Studio 2010. Programmers are reduced to drag and drop, and cut and paste machines. I can't bear this any more. I so long the days of vi, emacs, debugging by sprinkling code with printfs. We have moved so far from those days that I have to give up now. It is sad! I am now moving to full time job of being a basketball coach of my kids basketball team.

                                    G Offline
                                    G Offline
                                    grgran
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #37

                                    I so long the days of vi, emacs ... EMACS! I heard that that was a great OS, but that the editor sucked ;-) Seriously, sounds like you are seriously burnt out. Take a break, kick back, coach some basketball. If you still miss all those vi, emacs, printf days, grab a copy of Linux (or BSD) and contribute to open source where many of those tools are still favored.

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                                    • A AspDotNetDev

                                      Nonsense! IDE's are too fancy as it is. Let's all program in assembly language and pass it off to a compiler using the command line! Productivity is WAY overrated.

                                      [Forum Guidelines]

                                      O Offline
                                      O Offline
                                      Owen37
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #38

                                      ASSEMBLY? Wimp! We need to all go back to plugging in patch-cords and flipping switches to directly program the circuits. None of this wimpy machine abstraction! ;P

                                      A 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                        Deyan Georgiev wrote:

                                        with the conclusion that they are both a pile of crap.

                                        :laugh: :laugh: To be fair, after I learned Vi I like it. But the way you phrased it was funny.

                                        modified on Wednesday, May 19, 2010 7:53 PM

                                        R Offline
                                        R Offline
                                        Rajasekharan Vengalil
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #39

                                        Ditto. Emacs I somehow never ended up liking or using. The philosophy of vi is the idea of doing as much as one can with the least amount of stress on your fingers. Now if only getting out from edit mode didn't require you having to reach all the way up to the escape key it'd have been more or less perfect!

                                        -- gleat http://blogorama.nerdworks.in[^] --

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                                        • O Owen Lawrence

                                          Deyan Georgiev wrote:

                                          There are more humble and far more superior text editors around for both Windows and Linux.

                                          Please name them, and tell me how YOU use them. I spend far more time waiting for the cursor to catch up to me in Visual Studio than I ever do in vi. VS also has me moving my hands off the main keyboard to either the mouse or the cursor keys, which again slows me down. It's as if I've poured tar all over my hands. Why would anybody want do that? - Owen -

                                          R Offline
                                          R Offline
                                          Rama Krishna Vavilala
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #40

                                          Owen Lawrence wrote:

                                          Please name them,

                                          Pico and nano :)

                                          O 1 Reply Last reply
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