Oh god I forgot about those lame “witty” responses, all so original hahaha.

It’s crazy how egocentric people can be. “Let’s take something that’s not mine and then complain about it!”.

[-] GameOfHotPotato@programming.dev 163 points 1 year ago

It’s because the majority isn’t here yet. You would have the same quality in smaller subreddits, as long as they are somewhat moderated.

Just wait a few months and you’ll see the idiots returning with their cheap comments.

I've started using it a few months ago to visualize the current and proposed architecture of some subsystems. It takes a bit of time getting used to writing it but once you get the hang of it it's a nice way to improve discussions. I'm not using Structurizr but rather PlantUML (and a C4 lib) as that integrates rather nicely with our Jira wiki.

It's a nice tool in my toolbox, especially useful when talking about the bigger parts of the system. Nothing beats drawing some boxes and lines on the whiteboard for some quick conversations though.

1

They've contacted me last week and from what I understand they'll pay you studying for the Azure Architect certificates (around 6 weeks or so). Does anyone have any experience with them? If so, is it worth switching to that company for a few weeks to get training?

[-] GameOfHotPotato@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I wouldn’t necessarily say it’s critical thinking as that’s too wide a term to be useful. What I would put in my top 3 skills are:

  • problem decomposition
  • curiosity
  • being open to feedback / criticism

Problem decomposition allows you to take huge problems and fix them as if they’re nothing more than a few tiny issues.

You won’t learn anything after the initial knowledge required to do your job and keep on growing without being curious.

The same can be said for feedback, a lot of people attach their ego to their work. This is such a limiting factor, holding you back from improving in areas you weren’t aware of.

GameOfHotPotato

joined 1 year ago