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I learn new things and explain them to others for a living. I also write an occasional function in Clojure or Elixir when inspiration strikes.

Musician - singer, guitarist, composer.

FOSS software and OS enjoyer.

#nobot #noindex

Pronounsthey/them
Someone I know referred to dye-and-perfume-free laundry soap as “neurodetergent,” and I haven’t been able to stop thinking about that since.

Laid off :/

I know:

- Unity C#
- Rust
- Python

I can learn:

- Anything

I am in Massachusetts. Remote work would be great too

I've 8 years of experience as an MIT software engineer specializing in research simulation platform projects. I would prefer: not creating the next big AI thing, not making weapons, never having to think about blockchain anything.

Anyone got anything?

#rust #softwaredevelopment #unity3d #python #FediHire #getfedihired

Well, today is the day. I'm finally "sorta happy enough to pull the trigger" on publishing the book I've been working on for a very long time. It's a technical history book: by a techie, for techies (although I think that between all the code samples, there is plenty of meat for "tech-adjacent" and "tech-interested" people). It tells the story of the Lisp programming language, invented by a genius called John McCarthy in 1958 and today still going strong (to the extent that many people see it as the most powerful programming language in existence).

And this is a time for shameless self promotion, even if you don't plan on buying the book, please repost :-). Self-publishing is self-marketing, so there we go.

If you do buy and read it, please let me know how you liked it!

The book landing page, https://berksoft.ca/gol, has links to all outlets where you can buy the book,

Silicon Valley, drunk on exponential curves and both terrified and entranced by endless funding rounds,
has given us the "Hero Developer":

a figure who ships features at midnight,
who “moves fast and breaks things,”
who transforms whiteboard scribbles into billion-dollar unicorns through sheer caffeinated will.

We celebrate this person constantly.

They're on the front page of TechCrunch et al.
They keynote conferences.

Their GitHub contributions get screenshotted and shared like saintly relics.

⭐️Meanwhile, an unsung developer is updating dependencies,
patching security vulnerabilities,
and refactoring code that the Hero Developer wrote three years ago before moving on to their next "zero to one" opportunity.

They will never be profiled in Wired.

But they're doing something far more important than innovation.

💥They're preventing collapse.

>> The Reality of All Systems <<

The second law of thermodynamics states that entropy in a closed system tends to increase over time.

Your codebase is not exempt from this law.

Neither is your body,
your marriage,
your democracy,
or your kitchen.

Everything falls apart.

Everything degrades.

The universe trends toward disorder
with the patient inevitability of continental drift,
and the only thing standing between any functional system and chaos is the inglorious,
repetitive,
thankless work of maintenance.

This should be obvious.

And yet.

We've constructed an entire economic and cultural apparatus dedicated to pretending it isn't true.

We have
"growth hackers"
but no
"stability hackers."

We have "disruptors"
but no "preservers."

The entire vocabulary of modern business is oriented toward the new,
the unprecedented,
the revolutionary.

What we lack is language for the equally difficult work of keeping existing things from falling apart.

Debt accrues interest.

Ignored long enough, it compounds into bankruptcy.

A startup can ship fast and break things for a time,
but eventually someone has to pay the bill.

Usually it's the maintainers,
the ones who arrive after the
Hero Developers have departed for greener pastures,

the ones left to untangle spaghetti code
and wonder why anyone thought it was a good idea to store user passwords in plaintext.

https://www.joanwestenberg.com/the-rime-of-the-ancient-maintainer/

The Rime of the Ancient Maintainer

Every culture produces heroes that reflect its deepest anxieties. The Greeks, terrified of both mortality and immortality, gave us Achilles. The Victorians, haunted by social mobility, gave us the self-made industrialist. And Silicon Valley, drunk on exponential curves and both terrified and entranced by endless funding rounds, has given us

Westenberg.