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adir1 | 13 years ago

Actually, my feeling is that you misunderstood Jeff. He makes a great point - we can't all be programmers, world needs people with all kinds of skills.

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GuiA|13 years ago

The way I interpreted Jeff's post is that as hackers, we tend to see have a very skewed view of the world, and that we believe our tools (programming) are the only way to fix problems, and that everyone should learn how to use them.

Jeff's point is that while certain tools (writing, arithmetic, etc.) are indeed of extremely relevant use no matter what you do, programming doesn't fall in that category, and anyone arguing that all should learn to code regardless of what they do is falling in that fallacy.

(i'm not saying I agree or disagree with that, that's just the way I perceived the post. That being said, Zed's post, especially the last paragraph, is of great value.)

zedshaw|13 years ago

I'm sure he'll write a follow-up clarifying what he said so that he's not guilty of saying anything.

demetris|13 years ago

That’s the trick.

You say one thing, then say another thing. The other thing kind of negates the first thing you said, so, by repeating the recipe, in a short while you have said everything about your topics and you have also said nothing.

Not all writers are like that of course.

tolmasky|13 years ago

"We can't all learn how to read, the world needs people with all kinds of skills."

It is perfectly possible to both learn programming and also have other skills. Who knows, maybe you'll be able to do something crazy like apply lessons from one field to another.

WiseWeasel|13 years ago

Just because we can't all be programmers doesn't mean we shouldn't all learn to code to any extent.