I'm 25 y.o. Expert Web/App Design & Development with 7+ years of experience.
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I agree, it is often not the programmers who are to blame, but the business. Now the market value of an employee and his chance to get into a cash vacancy is determined not by the efficiency of the code, but by the knowledge of the list of trendy frameworks and libraries.
Beyond that, business decisions are driven by consumers: businesses do what drives sales and growth.
But consumers do not know the limits of the possible and do not understand that the product they are offered is bad, because they have not seen the good.
And in this closed circuit, programmers (and only a few of them) are the only ones who have an understanding of what a product can be.
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I agree, it is often not the programmers who are to blame, but the business. Now the market value of an employee and his chance to get into a cash vacancy is determined not by the efficiency of the code, but by the knowledge of the list of trendy frameworks and libraries.
Beyond that, business decisions are driven by consumers: businesses do what drives sales and growth.
But consumers do not know the limits of the possible and do not understand that the product they are offered is bad, because they have not seen the good.
And in this closed circuit, programmers (and only a few of them) are the only ones who have an understanding of what a product can be.