#EmbeddedEngineers and #SoftwareEngineers out there, what tooling do you use to build your projects? I am working with a customer whose build environment behaves wildly different locally vs on daily commits (i.e. merge requests) vs nightly vs release. None of them behave the same.

We're using #conanPackageManager currently, wrapping CMake files and with a great deal of add-ons. It's scaling poorly!

C90 project, crosscompiling from Linux/Windows hosts.

https://docs.conan.io/1/introduction.html

Introduction — conan 1.66.0 documentation

What do you think as an essential non-technical skill for a software professional?
#softwareEngineers #programmers #womenwhocode #it #professionals #corporate #softwareDeveloper #softSkills #cpp #cplusplus #c #python #rust

Finally #llm policies https://itsfoss.com/news/llvm-ai-policy/ It's gland to read this.

Certainly the #AI is a great tool that could help us in our jobs as #SoftwareEngineers but also I've read bad quality pull request from vibe coders that represent a bottle neck for the code review.

But the human in the loop policies that mentioned in the articles sound like a good start.

#openSource #pullRequests #quality #programming #coding

Open Source Project LLVM Says Yes to AI-Generated Code, But Not Without Conditions

The new "human in the loop" policy holds contributors accountable for reviewing and understanding all AI-assisted submissions.

It's FOSS
Software engineers should be a little bit cynical

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The newest episode of the #communityCornerPodcast is available for your listening pleasure. We talk with @ericmann about #k8s and his project to make it easier for us non-#devOps #softwareengineers using https://displace.tech/

https://www.phparch.com/podcast/community-corner-kubernetes-with-eric-mann/

Bị bắt nạt bằng code! Bạn có gợi ý món quà hài hước nào dành cho kỹ sư phần mềm, như code hiện thông báo vui nhộn thay vì crash máy? #ProgrammingHumor #LậpTrìnhHàiHước #QuàĐịnhChế #CustomGifts #SoftwareEngineers

https://www.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/1pil4xr/im_getting_a_customized_gift_for_a_software/

Hey #SoftwareEngineers #coders #programmers don't forget that learn is for you and only for you. If the company where you are working needs that you learn something they need to teach you in work time.

If you are learning some technology in your free time it is always to you

🚨 Breaking News: 45 Software Engineers Discover the Revolutionary Concept of Bug Fixing! 🎉 After a strenuous week of fixing a whopping 189 bugs (which is, like, one bug per engineer per day!), the team reluctantly returns to "real work" 😅. Maybe next quarter they'll discover that fixing bugs is actually part of their job description 🤔.
https://lalitm.com/fixits-are-good-for-the-soul/ #BreakingNews #SoftwareEngineers #BugFixing #TechHumor #JobReality #HackerNews #ngated
We stopped roadmap work for a week and fixed 189 bugs

Discussed on Hacker News, lobste.rs and r/programming It’s Friday at 4pm. I’ve just closed my 12th bug of the week. My brain is completely fried. And I’m staring at the bug leaderboard, genuinely sad that Monday means going back to regular work. Which is weird because I love regular work. But fixit weeks have a special place in my heart. What’s a fixit, you ask? Once a quarter or so, my org with ~45 software engineers stops all regular work for a week. That means no roadmap work, no design work, no meetings or standups. Instead, we fix the small things that have been annoying us and our users: an error message that’s been unclear for two years a weird glitch when the user scrolls and zooms at the same time a test which runs slower than it should, slowing down CI for everyone The rules are simple: 1) no bug should take over 2 days and 2) all work should focus on either small end-user bugs/features or developer productivity.

Lalit Maganti