(Fwd) [IP] MS Windows Crash Traps Thai Politician in Car

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Author: Vaughn Treude
Date:  
Subject: (Fwd) [IP] MS Windows Crash Traps Thai Politician in Car
Sorry, I should have used a smiley on that one. :-) I have nothing against
mentoring, and mentoring is indeed an important skill, and I have benefitted
greatly from it. I've also tried to be a mentor at times, which is not to
say I'm particularly good at it! :-) To clarify, my beef with Extreme
Programming (XP) is that they preach that we should ONLY program in pairs.
That would get old quick. But, yes, mentoring would be a good way to take
care of morons by converting them into good programmers.

By the way, here's that like about the killer software. It was embedded in
the Therac-25 radiation machine, which was manufactured by a Canadian
company, and was responsible for several deaths in both the U.S. and Canada
in the 1980's: http://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~muffy/papers/HIS1.ps.

Vaughn

On Tuesday 27 May 2003 11:57, you wrote:
> On Tue, 27 May 2003, Vaughn Treude wrote:
> > Another option (I almost hate to suggest it, because the concept
> > seems pretty noxious to a "cowboy programmer" like me), might be to use
> > the "pair programming" approach pushed by the Extreme Programming
> > methodology. This could have a lot of value in the early stages of one's
> > employment and/or contract. Of course, I'm assuming you have enough
> > competent developers to act as mentors for the new ones. :-)
>
> I have no experience with "pair programming,"
> but I had a mentor when I started working and
> it was good.
>
> Being a good mentor is hard; one has to allocate
> time learning about mentoring.
>
> To an extent, a local user group such as PLUG
> plays the role of a mentor.
>
> Here is a quote from UCLA professor Phil Agre.
>
> "Knowledge lives in communities, not individuals.
> A computer user who's not part of a community of
> computer users is going to have a harder time of
> it than one who is."
>
> How to help someone use a computer
> http://dlis.gseis.ucla.edu/people/pagre/how-to-help.html
>
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