Remember some of the hot-button issues in tech over the last decade? People angry over the use of the word "passion". The merits of "craftsmanship". Whether the "10x developer" is a myth.

Something connects all of these debates, and nobody's really talking about it. That's why I wrote this essay: https://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2023-07-12-the-looming-demise-of-the-10x-developer/

The looming demise of the 10x developer

Tech's most contentious debates end with people talking over each other, but they make way more sense viewed through the lens of inter-generational conflict.

Test Double
@searls @cammerman Oddly, I was thinking similarly today, but wondering what it was that distinguished the agile-inventing generation from the previous one. Now I wonder how my generation differs from yours. I have a suspicion that we were too early for the idea that you can get filthy rich as a programmer. Also, we predated nerd culture being mainstreamed (thanks, Star Wars and Marvel, I guess). And we were culturally pre-Reagan, so retained hippy-dippy attitudes..
@searls @cammerman I don’t generally like generational analysis, but the shift to commercial shrink-wrap software was huge. (It made all those methodologists talking about “the maintenance phase” look exceptionally clueless.) And then the shift to the web was similarly huge. There was a book called /Microsoft Secrets/. Did a good job of explaining how MS managed a release cycle that assumed yearly(ish) physical distribution. Got blown out of the water by the web.
@searls @cammerman There’s so much richness in the recent history of software, so it really pisses me off that, when historians and anthropologists look at software, they spend their time sniffing the panties of the rich industrialists instead of diving into the nitty-gritty of how line workers produced salable artifacts.