Comment by keybored
1 month ago
> My "actual job" isn't to write code, but to solve problems.
Air quotes and more and more general words. The perfect mercenari’s tools.
The buck stops somewhere for most of us. We have jobs, we are compelled to do them. But we care about how it is done. We care whether doing it in a certain will give us short term advantages but hinder us in the long term. We care if the process feels good or bad. We care if it feels like we are in control of the process or if we are just swimming in a turbulent sea. We care about how predictable the tools we use. Whether we can guess that something takes a month and not be off by weeks.
We might say that we are the perfect pragmatists (mercenaris); that we only care about the most general description of what-is-to-be-done that is acceptable to the audience, like solving business problems, or solving technical problems, or in the end—as the pragmatist sheds all meaning from his burdensome vessel—just solving problems. But most of us got into some trade, or hobby, or profession, because we did concrete things that we concretely liked. And switching from keyboards to voice dictation might not change that. But seemingly upending the whole process might.
It might. Or it may not. Certainly could go in more than one direction. But to people who are not perfect mercenaries or business hedonists[1] these are actual problems or concerns. Not nonsense to be dismissed with some “actual job” quip, which itself is devoid of meaning.
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