Brutkey

glipari
@glipari@social.sciences.re

Prof. OS, RTOS, embedded, scheduling, automata. Posting in French, Italian, English.
Blog:
https://blogz.zaclys.com/glipari/


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GitHub
https://github.com/glipari
Professional web site
https://pro.univ-lille.fr/giuseppe-lipari/
Blog
https://blogz.zaclys.com/glipari/

glipari
@glipari@social.sciences.re

@ChieseBrutte@puntarella.party

In gita nella ridente cittadina di Ceprano (FR), opportunamente situata lungo la A1 tra Roma e Napoli, non posso non segnalare la chiesa di San Rocco, dedicata al patrono della cittΓ , fulgido esempio di arte ... non saprei che arte sia, ma comunque fulgido esempio di questa arte qui

glipari
@glipari@social.sciences.re

@ChieseBrutte@puntarella.party

Che ne dite della cattedrale di Lille ?

https://www.photohound.co/images/1039241l.jpg

glipari
@glipari@social.sciences.re

@oblomov@sociale.network
Yes.

I find that a lot of people passioned about open source alternative do not think hard enough about the financial aspects of a software project. For many people, coding is still a thing you can do in your spare time.

So, many smart programmers are burnt out (so many stories!).

Users, on the other hand, expect everything to be free, all the time. Hence the need for making revenues from advertising. It's a trap that is difficult to escape. It's a societal and economical problem, not a technical one.

glipari
@glipari@social.sciences.re

@oblomov@sociale.network
Also, recently I started to think that many of the problems we have today in software come from two "revolutions" that are generally considered positive. The first one is open source: to make it short, I think thar the wide availability of open source libraries and tools has raised the wrong impression that software is cheaper than it really is, and nobody wants to pay for it anymore.

The second is "agile methods": they 1) removed the need for initial specifications and requirements ; 2) in some cases project managers tend to view the user as a beta tester, so they can accelerate deployment of not-so-carefully tested software. The combination of these two factors implies that every app, every web site, every interface changes all the time, in often unexpected ways.