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Jay Kimble -- The Dev Theologian

Philosophizing about the .Net religion

Coding Slave: A Message from another Dev Theologian

So I finished reading Coding Slave last weekend.  It's taken me awhile to fully process it.  Bob Reselman has written a book that truly describes the programming condition.  I would highly recommend this book for this reason alone.  I know that we all know the issues, but I really like the way that Bob puts it into perspective.  Some of us (American Coders) think that the problem is outsourcing jobs to other countries; the real problem (my opinion) is the fact that we have let greedy people rule us all, so it's not that there are programmers working for lower wages; it's that we are all in bondage to the employers. 

Bob talks about the idea of creating a Programming Trade Guild.  This seems somewhat like a good idea, bu I'm not sure it will solve our problems.  I think the real problem is that during the Internet bubble we cranked out tons of code (very little of which was very good); then when the bubble burst the companies we worked for (or hired on to) were looking for ways to decrease costs which meant that we had to continue working at the pace we did before, but now our pay was lower (or a least stayed the same)... they took away QA so they could lay more people off; they took away our project managers because they were expendable, so now we work harder and harder with less and less.  Ok, maybe I'm painting an overly really bad picture (and it's probably not that bad), but it seems like we are working harder and harder.  I'm not sure that starting some kind of union wll resolve the issue (and I think that if Bob really thought that was the answer, he would have given away Coding Slave from the start and started the union). 

Bob also discusses the fact that we are slaves to the machines, and not the other way around... we have got to get the machines to serve us.  We need to work less.  The 50+ hour work weeks have got to stop. 

I'm not entirely satisfied with Bob's answers (I let you read the book and see if you can discover them).  I personally have 2 answers of my own. 

1) Go back to a normal pace and make sure you spend time with your family!  Relationships matter!  Otherwise, we are not all that different than the machines that we program...  we're simply logic circuits.
2) My other answer is a spiritual one.. As I think about the book the words of song by Larry Norman -- The Great American Novel -- ring in my ears "Don't ask me for the answers I've only got one; A man leaves his darkness when he follows the Son."  (You may have your own religion the attempts to resolve the question of evil in the world... if you do then substitute that answer here instead... Life doesn't always make sense).



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