But it made me think, where does this comes from, is it real based on data or just an opinion?
From buzzfeed to [trust worthy publication], how does it rank?
Reading it again, the frist three [ abatraction, asking the right questions and communication] are actually the same thing: the ability to really understand something.
Like this smart guy said, if you can't explain somerhing in simple terms, you don't understand it. That includes abstraction.
So to me, it is more like, understand by asking questions, research, etc, then explain and abstract.
Still I get the need to expand of each one individually.
Your artricle basically states: be intelligent and have social skills, which is true and most of us focus only in the smart part, we have seen people that even learned how to fake smarts.
And, as we know, people who fake social skills often come as unlikeable because we can detect it, I am thunking the same happens with faking intelligence.
Your article proposes an actual measure to real smarts + some social skills too.
Like everything, I write it is my opinion (see the last point in the article).
The first two to build on each other you are right. still, They both are a little bit different. You can sometimes abstract without asking questions.
The second point and third point are also linked! You need to communicate to ask the right questions.
Still, for me, these are different skills. You can be a great communicator without understanding anything cough sales cough.
You are right today; it is easy to fake things on social media. Just look at Instagram. People with zero practical knowledge are just restating what they have found works well.
One of my top posts is about that you don't need a fancy setup and RGB lighting and five monitors to be a great programmer. The amount of DM's I got after this... Crazy that people think that!
I don't want this to be a measure and these are not the only points. These are just something people don't talk about and is overlooked often.
Thank you :)
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What do you mean by researched?
How can you research abstraction? 🤔
This comes from my expierence as a developer
From teaching junior developers
From helping people that don't know anything about programming
From talking to people that are stuck in tutorial hell online
What I meant is: I like it!
But it made me think, where does this comes from, is it real based on data or just an opinion?
From buzzfeed to [trust worthy publication], how does it rank?
Reading it again, the frist three [ abatraction, asking the right questions and communication] are actually the same thing: the ability to really understand something.
Like this smart guy said, if you can't explain somerhing in simple terms, you don't understand it. That includes abstraction.
So to me, it is more like, understand by asking questions, research, etc, then explain and abstract.
Still I get the need to expand of each one individually.
Your artricle basically states: be intelligent and have social skills, which is true and most of us focus only in the smart part, we have seen people that even learned how to fake smarts.
And, as we know, people who fake social skills often come as unlikeable because we can detect it, I am thunking the same happens with faking intelligence.
Your article proposes an actual measure to real smarts + some social skills too.
Like I said, I like it :)
Thanks for it!
Okay, this makes things clearer :)
Like everything, I write it is my opinion (see the last point in the article).
The first two to build on each other you are right. still, They both are a little bit different. You can
sometimes
abstract without asking questions.The second point and third point are also linked! You need to communicate to ask the right questions.
Still, for me, these are different skills. You can be a great communicator without understanding anything cough sales cough.
You are right today; it is easy to fake things on social media. Just look at Instagram. People with zero practical knowledge are just restating what they have found works well.
One of my top posts is about that you don't need a fancy setup and RGB lighting and five monitors to be a great programmer. The amount of DM's I got after this... Crazy that people think that!
I don't want this to be a measure and these are not the only points. These are just something people don't talk about and is overlooked often.
Thank you :)