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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] [OT] Good IT Resume
- Date: Wed, 25 Jul 2007 08:21:47 +0100
- From: Karen Pauley <karen-linux@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] [OT] Good IT Resume
- References: <8572e260707182339i5ca059c4l1be1f51559c16f54@mail.gmail.com> <Pine.NEB.4.64.0707231313110.9448@homeric.cynic.net> <d8fcc0800707230647j31bc776dje3e18d57b04352e7@mail.gmail.com> <Pine.NEB.4.64.0707241211330.8162@homeric.cynic.net> <d8fcc0800707240550o691c99f9n4524a2fe71c847e8@mail.gmail.com> <Pine.NEB.4.64.0707251409590.8162@homeric.cynic.net>
- User-agent: Mutt/1.5.5.1+cvs20040105i
On Wed Jul 25 14:43:05 2007, Curt Sampson wrote: > On Tue, 24 Jul 2007, Josh Glover wrote: > >or b) programmers who are not in the top %1. > > That I'm also going to disagree with. I've worked with a lot of junior > developers, and in my experience, they excel when you bring them "in to > the fold," as it were, rather than relegate them to "program to this > specification." I agree. I have used a variety of agile methodologies with programming teams and I actually think they are more suited to normal programmers than the top 1%. At one point I managed a team of 18 programmers, we had a mixture of juniors and seniors and two programmers who would have been considered exceptional. One of the exceptional programmers was an expert in his field that was recruited specially to put in a testing framework. Although the exceptional programmers could easily work productively without detailed specifications in general they didn't interact well with the rest of the team. They found it really hard not to just completely take over when pair programming and they didn't actually like that lots of the agile methodologies have rules that you are supposed to follow. The expert in testing was very happy to put in a framework that allowed others to carry out test first programming but it really wasn't that easy to get him to agree to do that with his own code. XP seems to require a lot of team work and working together towards a shared common goal. It also requires a belief that the methodology is going to work. Some very talented programmers much prefer to work on their own and they don't believe in any particular methodology as they have their own way of working that works for them. And because they are so good they get away with breaking lots of the rules. -- Karen
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