Last night I went to a 70th birthday party and ended up sitting next to Frank.

Frank used to work as a computer programmer, because this was the 1970s to 90s and people had normal job titles that described real things, instead of "full stack orchestration engineer" or "solutions architect".

Anyway Frank's employer was the Victorian Attorney General's department. He wrote, updated and maintained in-house software for managing the court system, trial documentation managements and so on using low level languages.

The point of this post is that there was nothing special about this period of history that made it possible for government departments to write and maintain their own software to solve their own problems then but not now.

The complete lack of any in-house capacity to do this kind of thing is a political choice. Frank is a reminder of that.

@hugh @robpike The most baffling and infuriating version of this is universities. When you have a whole computer science department hungry for real-world experience building something useful, and the best you can do is friggin’ OneDrive and Google Docs. 🤦🏻😭
@a @hugh why am I tagged on this?
@pussreboots Gah! Sorry, it’s a bug in my client where when I reply to something someone I follow reposted like 2% of the time it adds someone else I follow instead of the reposter. I try to watch for it but missed this one. I’ll clean it up.