← Back to context Comment by UK-AL 10 months ago In a lot of companies the definition of senior engineer helping others develop technical skills. 3 comments UK-AL Reply throwanem 10 months ago In a few of those companies, so also is the job. rsynnott 10 months ago I think that’s overly cynical. It should always be part of the job (except in places where title inflation has hit the level that it really doesn’t mean anything at all) and usually is. throwanem 9 months ago I agree that it's cynical. Excessively so? You see a hell of a lot in twenty-plus years.
throwanem 10 months ago In a few of those companies, so also is the job. rsynnott 10 months ago I think that’s overly cynical. It should always be part of the job (except in places where title inflation has hit the level that it really doesn’t mean anything at all) and usually is. throwanem 9 months ago I agree that it's cynical. Excessively so? You see a hell of a lot in twenty-plus years.
rsynnott 10 months ago I think that’s overly cynical. It should always be part of the job (except in places where title inflation has hit the level that it really doesn’t mean anything at all) and usually is. throwanem 9 months ago I agree that it's cynical. Excessively so? You see a hell of a lot in twenty-plus years.
throwanem 9 months ago I agree that it's cynical. Excessively so? You see a hell of a lot in twenty-plus years.
In a few of those companies, so also is the job.
I think that’s overly cynical. It should always be part of the job (except in places where title inflation has hit the level that it really doesn’t mean anything at all) and usually is.
I agree that it's cynical. Excessively so? You see a hell of a lot in twenty-plus years.