Complex internet services fail in interesting ways as they grow in size and complexity. Twitter’s recent issues show how failures emerge slowly over time as relationships between components degrade. Meta’s quick launch of Threads demonstrates how platform investments can compound over time, allowing them to quickly build on existing infrastructure and expertise. While layoffs may be needed, companies must be strategic to maintain what matters most - the ability to navigate complex systems and deliver value. Twitter’s inability to ship new features shows they have lost this expertise, while Threads may out-execute them due to Meta’s platform advantages. The case of Twitter and Threads provides a lesson for companies on who they want to be during times of optimization.

  • uberrice@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    Meh, the best programmers are probably somewhere in the middle.

    This also depends on what kind of work you’re doing.

    Writing some frontend with lots of Boilerplate? That’s lots of lines.

    Writing efficient code that for example runs on embedded systems? That’s different. My entire master’s thesis code project on an embedded system consisted of around 600 lines of C code, and it did exactly what it should, efficiently.

    A better metric to that effect would be the git activity graph. People that do important changes don’t commit 20 times a day - they push a commit usually once a day tops to once every 2 weeks

    • shiri@foggyminds.com
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      1 year ago

      @uberrice
      It’s the fact that from what I saw he didn’t differ by project, and the fact that better programmers do more with less.

      He literally had them print out their code to judge off of. Security engineer tracking down vulnerabilities? Well, since that’s just a couple lines of code (if not just characters) after long stretches of testing? Fired for “productivity”