On Thu, Feb 12, 2009 at 05:12:58PM -0500, Frank Sweetser wrote:
>
> Seriously, though, if you think that a paycheck suddenly turns someone into a
> brilliant software engineer, then you've obviously never had to painstakingly
> read and explain RFCs to the developers who supposedly implemented them in the
> product you bought, had a trouble ticket filled with with carefully documented
> details and transcripts of reliably reproducible problems come back with a
> response that basically says "Oh, our software doesn't do that, so you're not
> having that problem!", or, when you finally convince them that it really is a
> real bug, have the vendor respond by simply retracting any claim to having
> that feature rather than fix it. And yes, those are all experiences I have
> personally had when dealing with "highly paid engineers."
I used to work for a highly respected security/VPN company. The lead
engineer in charge of their IPSec management application walked into the
test lab one day and saw the "ACK" on the back of my black t-shirt.
him: "LOL, that's great. Bill the cat."
I turned around, showing him the "SYN" on the front of the shirt.
him: "I don't get it."
me: "You know, the 3-way handshake. TCP."
him: "Nope. What is it?"
And there you go. You too can be a lead engineer of an IPSec company by
knowing Java.
--
Jason Dixon
OmniTI Computer Consulting, Inc.
jdixon AT omniti DOT com
443.325.1357 x.241
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