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        <title>ACCU  :: Editorial</title>
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        <h2>Journal Articles</h2>


<div class="xar-mod-head"><span class="xar-mod-title">Overload Journal #45 - Oct 2001 + Journal Editorial</span></div>

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   <h1><strong>Title:</strong>&nbsp;Editorial</h1>
<p><strong>Author:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p>
<strong>Date:</strong> 26 October 2001 17:46:07 +01:00 or Fri, 26 October 2001 17:46:07 +01:00</p>
<p><strong>Summary:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Body:</strong>&nbsp;<div class="sect1" lang="en">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e20" id="d0e20"></a></h2>
</div>
<p>I find myself lacking a burning software engineering issue to
bang on about in this editorial. So I shall subject you to a random
collection of thoughts and comments until I fill the requisite
space.</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Computer Literacy:</b></span> A chain of
technical bookshops in the bay area named Computer Literacy has
just closed its doors. This is a great shame as they were a great
place to pick up weird and eclectic engineering textbooks. It's
doubly sad as they were kindly hosting the ACCU-USA monthly
meeting, and they carried our newsletter in all their stores.
[<a href="#accu-usa">accu-usa</a>] Their stumble came when they set
up a website called Fatbrain to sell books online. [<a href=
"#fatbrain">fatbrain</a>] Their costs soared competing against the
online book-selling giants and in the end they were forced to sell
out to Barns and Noble to survive.</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Printers Ink:</b></span> Another
independent purveyor of strange books and magazines has finally
folded. They limped along for a couple of years after benefactors
stepped in to prop them up a little longer. They finally
capitulated and closed all but the Mountain View store, which Books
Inc took over with a renegotiated lease, and an inventory limited
to the mainstream. [<a href="#ace-interview">ace-interview</a>]</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Liar's Poker:</b></span> Michael Lewis, an
American journalist and author, wrote the book 'Liar's Poker' from
first hand experience of 1980's Wall Street. It's an amusing
account of his failure to become a big-swinging-dick of the bond
trading world. [<a href="#Lewis">Lewis</a>] His most recent book,
'The New New Thing', is a biography of Jim Clark, the Stanford
Professor who went on to found Silicon Graphics, Netscape, and
Healtheon. Lewis became obsessed with what drives Clark to invent,
build and abandon his creations. After losing control of SGI to its
financial backers Clark set out to redress the balance of power
from the money men to the engineers. [<a href=
"#Lewis-Jim-Clark">Lewis-Jim-Clark</a>]</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Economics:</b></span> The economy of
Silicon Valley was bad, and now it's getting worse. New investment
from both venture funds and big companies has dried up. American
enterprises live and die by their quarterly results, and with every
dismal earnings announcement comes another round of layoffs. The
flabby overcapacity built up in the booming internet years has long
since been cast aside, now they're down to making hard choices
about what's a core business and what's a non-essential accessory.
The balance of power has flipped back from the engineers to the
money managers.</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Death of a dot com:</b></span> In the new
harsh environment of 'reality' my own new new thing just hit the
wall. The third round money was raised, but the founders refused to
sign the deal. They chose to own a big chuck of nothing instead of
a small piece of something. Sigh. Anyone want to buy some
intellectual property?</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Interviewing:</b></span> And so I've been
out there interviewing, and it hasn't been much fun. A year ago the
modus operandi was to contemplate what you'd like to work on, find
companies that were doing that, pick the market leader, email the
VP of engineering, negotiate a deal, reject the counter offer from
your current employer, and start next Monday morning. Now job
openings are scarce, the recruitment process is excruciating, and
the competition is stiff. Managers are looking for people with very
specific skill sets and background experience. They want people who
have done exactly the same job before. There's not much learning
opportunity in that.</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Puzzles:</b></span> I've had to relearn
white board programming, and how to answer dumb logic puzzles. I
find that my day job exercises neither of these skills. Ask me
about using a pair of scales to identify the odd ball out from a
bag of twelve using only three comparisons, and a say 'who cares'.
Ask me about how to enthuse and empower a troublesome QA department
and I'll wax lyrical about the wonders of automated testing. Do
logic puzzles make people who can define, architect, design,
implement, test, and deliver a product? Do crossword puzzles make
writers? Nope. (Is this just me being crusty? I actually managed to
answer the dumb logic puzzle correctly, but rejected the company on
the grounds of giving me a lame and unimaginative interview. If
you'd like to study and memorise the most commonly trotted out
puzzles you'll find them listed on the web. [<a href=
"#ace-interview">ace-interview</a>])</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Homework:</b></span> I've been working
from home the past month, but I'm being troubled by demons. They're
tormenting me with all the alternative fun things I could be doing
instead of work. I'm happily working away, deep in thought, and
next thing I know I'm under a piece of furniture playing with the
cat, or standing in front of an open refrigerator about to place a
spoonful of peanut butter into my mouth.</p>
<p><span class="bold"><b>Library:</b></span> They can't get to me
at the local city library, as they have no cats or refrigerators
there. (In the USA the definition of a city is somewhat less
stringent than in the UK. Mountain View has a population of only
75,000 people. Back home you'd need a cathedral and a note from the
Queen.) Phrases that come to mind when I think library are: large
print Mills and Boon romance novels, a strange musty smell,
radiators leaking rusty water, books about Ashton Tate dBase 4,
VisiCalc, and WordStar. But these do not apply to Mountain View
City Library, oh no, for it has: A network port for every seat!
Superb air-conditioning! Conference rooms for hire! And I think
they have books too. [<a href="#mtnview">mtnview</a>]</p>
</div>
<div class="bibliography">
<div class="titlepage">
<h2><a name="d0e81" id="d0e81"></a>References</h2>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="accu-usa" id="accu-usa"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[accu-usa] <span class="bibliomisc"><a href=
"http://www.accu-usa.org" target=
"_top">http://www.accu-usa.org</a></span></p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="fatbrain" id="fatbrain"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[fatbrain] <span class="bibliomisc"><a href=
"http://www.fatbrain.com" target=
"_top">http://www.fatbrain.com</a></span></p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="Lewis" id="Lewis"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[Lewis] 'Liar's Poker', Michael Lewis.</p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="Lewis-Jim-Clark" id=
"Lewis-Jim-Clark"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[Lewis-Jim-Clark] 'The New New Thing: A
Silicon Valley Story', Michael Lewis.</p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="ace-interview" id=
"ace-interview"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[ace-interview] <span class=
"bibliomisc"><a href="http://www.acetheinterview.com" target=
"_top">http://www.acetheinterview.com</a></span></p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="Merrells" id="Merrells"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[Merrells] Overload 30, Editorial - Books,
John Merrells.</p>
</div>
<div class="bibliomixed"><a name="mtnview" id="mtnview"></a>
<p class="bibliomixed">[mtnview] <span class="bibliomisc"><a href=
"http://www.ci.mtnview.ca.us" target=
"_top">http://www.ci.mtnview.ca.us</a></span></p>
</div>
</div>
</p>
<p><strong>Notes:</strong>&nbsp;</p>
<p><em>More fields may be available via dynamicdata ..</em></p>
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