Embedded Developer's Survival Guide, 2005 19
An anonymous reader writes "LinuxDevices has published the full keynote address delivered at the Embedded Systems Conference 2005 by Wind River CEO Ken Klein. The hardnosed speech presents a five-point action plan for device software developers who are interested in keeping their jobs -- as opposed to becoming "roadkill," as Klein puts it. The speech is decidedly short on warm fuzzies, but does offer a few practical considerations for engineer job survival in the post-recession era."
Re:Truly Enthralling Reading (Score:1)
Here is a link for you (Score:1)
Article summary (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Truly Enthralling Reading (Score:2)
Maybe embedded developers are:
1. too busy working to read Slashdot
or 2. too unemployed or broke to afford internet connectivity
Re:Truly Enthralling Reading (Score:1)
Re:Truly Enthralling Reading (Score:1)
Re:Truly Enthralling Reading (Score:2)
To me, it looks like he's fantasizing about quality improvements from moving engineering work overseas, where labor is cheaper. Execs often think the less
summary (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:summary (Score:2, Insightful)
Quite so. I find it hard to stomach what this guy is saying - first he purports that he is one of us engineers because he has a science degree, then says he has 500 people reporting to him and sits on a board. Which is it? Suit or techie? Suit, obviously. Then he has the gall to proclaim that it's the engineers' faults that 30-40 percent of projects fail. IMHO the following factors are most likely to cause a project to fail:
Re:summary (Score:1)
Re:summary (Score:2, Informative)
What practical considerations? (Score:3, Insightful)
- If you get laid off, it must have been your own fault for not keeping up with management's desires.
- Make sure to change to whatever job management wants you to do, without complaint.
- Don't be threatened by outsourcing; learn to manage the contractors. (Because, of course, every engineers secretly longs to be a project-manager, and there will be plenty of PM jobs to soak up all the unemployed engineers...)
- The CEO's job depends on your doing your job well. (Curiously failing to mention that, if the CEO loses his job, a golden parachute kicks in, he cashes out a buttload of stock options, then finds a new job without much trouble - none of which is available to us).
It never ceases to amaze me how companies try to hire people smart enough to develop good products, and then expect them to fall for such transparently self-serving bullshit.Maybe instead of the article's suggestion of "don't take change personally" (really!), I should learn to not take insults of my intelligence personally. If only I could mod the article "-1, Troll"...
Re:What practical considerations? (Score:2, Insightful)
You forgot to mention:
Politics-Oriented Software Development (Score:3, Interesting)
The alternate viewpoint to this article is given by Kuro5hin's "Politics-Oriented Software Development" [kuro5hin.org]. That article includes advice and insights such as: