If everything runs fine, do not touch
If everything runs fine, do not touch
If everything runs fine, do not touch
Image Transcription: Meme
People in every profession: We know what we do
Programmers:
["Awkward Look Monkey Puppet", two images of a red monkey puppet from “Ōkiku naru Ko”. On the left, the monkey faces right and sideglances with wide eyes and contracted pupils, while the right image shows the monkey staring straight ahead.]
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You are an excellent human.
Good human
Related video, computer things cosmic rays messed up, including one voting case in Belgium - https://inv.tux.pizza/watch?v=AaZ_RSt0KP8
The medical professions are feeling this meme with you.
I understand 90% of the science behind what I do as a medical diagnostic technologist. It's still fucking magic as far as I'm concerned.
CTs and MRIs? Atom spin/relax releasing detectable energy waves that are somehow able to be read and aggregated by algorithms into a high detail image of the inside of a human body? Tell me that isn't magic and I'll call you a liar.
It may be similar for most professions. But the difference is that programming is much more accessible to everyone than medical stuff, or even car mechanics.
Lets take the example of someone finding solution X for [problem], but X is wrong, but not fatal:
But it seems very likely other professions will also "google the problem"
You haven't spoken to anyone in academia I see
Gets even worse the more years of experience you have. You end up being the solo dev trying to figure out a stupidly over complicated 20 year old piece of software written by a sadist that loves WCF and using tcp sockets to send data between classes in the same project
I know what I do.
I go to ChatGPT, type my problem and copy the solution to my codebase.
If it doesn't work, I search my issue over Stackoverflow or DDG, and copy from there.
And once the code fails in production, which is always, I repeat the process again to find the new solution which will then fail in next iteration.
So don't you ever tell me I don't know what I do. I may not know what code I'm writing or for what, but I very well know what I'm doing.
This is called continuous improvement. Or so I tell my manager.
Copilot go brrrr
Google help you
Acoustics checking in with the same feeling.