top | item 21062240

(no title)

la_barba | 6 years ago

The other huge factor is that developers love re-inventing stuff. Nobody wants to be content just maintaining something that has been working for 30 years, because thats career suicide in today's world. "Hey, tell me about the cool stuff you're working on.." "You guys are still using that framework? Wow!". Its an interesting contrast from the industry I'm in (vaccines) where people are extremely risk-averse and do not ever want to disturb code/process flows that work and are making money. I have come to appreciate software reliability a LOT more.

Also.. given the massive surface area of new untested code thats being constantly pumped out, visiting a website today, is absolutely no different than downloading a random binary from the internet and running it. The ".com" address might as well be an actual .COM file that is downloaded and executed...

discuss

order

BAReF00t|6 years ago

No, I must cometely disagree there.

We certainly love improving stuff. But more than half the point of programming is, that you only have to come up with and do it once. We just copy the code, and add our improvement.

And open source developers aren’t interested in a ”career“, but in making a good program.

Frameworks are another pathological case of monolithism by the way. Use libraries. That can be combined however you want. Under your rule. Not frameworks. That accept no other framework beside them. Under their rule.

I completely agree on the second paragraph though. VMs are not a security solution. The OS has to do its job.