search for: proprietorship

Displaying 4 results from an estimated 4 matches for "proprietorship".

2014 Dec 29
3
Design changes are done in Fedora
On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 3:03 PM, Warren Young <wyml at etr-usa.com> wrote: > > As a software developer, I think I can speak to both halves of that point. > > First, the world where you design, build, and deploy The System is disappearing fast. Sure, if you don't care if you lose data, you can skip those steps. Lots of free services that call everything they release
2014 Dec 30
0
Design changes are done in Fedora
...ll back to the prior version. None of this is revolutionary. It?s just what you do, every day. > when it breaks it's not the developer answering > the phones if anyone answers at all. Tech support calls shouldn?t go straight to the developers under any development model, short of sole proprietorship, and not even then, if you can get away with it. There needs to be at least one layer of buffering in there: train up the secretary to some basic level of cluefulness, do everything via email, or even hire some dedicated support staff. It simply costs too much to break a developer out of flow to...
2015 Jan 01
1
Design changes are done in Fedora
...ion. > > None of this is revolutionary. It?s just what you do, every day. > >> when it breaks it's not the developer answering >> the phones if anyone answers at all. > Tech support calls shouldn?t go straight to the developers under any development model, short of sole proprietorship, and not even then, if you can get away with it. There needs to be at least one layer of buffering in there: train up the secretary to some basic level of cluefulness, do everything via email, or even hire some dedicated support staff. > > It simply costs too much to break a developer out of...
2014 Dec 30
3
Design changes are done in Fedora
...ry. It?s just what you do, every day. And it is time consuming and expensive. >> when it breaks it's not the developer answering >> the phones if anyone answers at all. > > Tech support calls shouldn?t go straight to the developers under any development model, short of sole proprietorship, and not even then, if you can get away with it. There needs to be at least one layer of buffering in there: train up the secretary to some basic level of cluefulness, do everything via email, or even hire some dedicated support staff. > > It simply costs too much to break a developer out of...