• @RupeThereItIs
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    713 hours ago

    “IT people” here, operations guy who keeps the lights on for that software.

    It’s been my experience developers have no idea how the hardware works, but STRONGLY believe they know more then me.

    Devops is also usually more dev than ops, and it shows in the availability numbers.

    • @lordnikon
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      131 minutes ago

      I know this is not everyone and there’re some unicorns out there but after working with hiring managers for decades i can’t help but see cheap programmers when I see Devops. It’s ether Ops people that think they are programmers or programmers that are not good enough to get hired as Software Engineers outright at higher pay. It’s like when one person is both they can do both but not great at ether one. Devops works best when it’s a team of both dev and Ops working together. IMO

    • @Jestzer
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      283 hours ago

      Yup. Programmers who have only ever been programmers tend to act like god’s gift to this world.

    • r00ty
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      137 minutes ago

      I’ve always found this weird. I think to be a good software developer it helps to know what’s happening under the hood when you take an action. It certainly helps when you want to optimize memory access for speed etc.

      I genuinely do know both sides of the coin. But I do know that the majority of my fellow developers at work most certainly have no clue about how computers work under the hood, or networking for example.

      I find it weird because, to be good at software development (and I don’t mean, following what the computer science methodology tells you, I mean having an idea of the best way to translate an idea into a logical solution that can be applied in any programming language, and most importantly how to optimize your solution, for example in terms of memory access etc) requires an understanding of the underlying systems. That if you write software that is sending or receiving network packets it certainly helps to understand how that works, at least to consider the best protocols to use.

      But, it is definitely true.

    • Mr. Satan
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      31 hour ago

      As a developer I like to mess with everything. Currently we are doing an infrastructure migration and I had to do a lot of non-development stuff to make it happen.

      Honesly I find it really usefull (but not necessary) to have some understanding of the underying processes of the code I’m working with.

    • ValiantDust
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      223 hours ago

      As a developer I can freely admit that without the operations people the software I develop would not run anywhere but on my laptop.

      I know as much about hardware as a cook knows about his stove and the plates the food is served on – more than the average person but waaaay less than the people producing and maintaining them.

    • @ArbiterXero
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      63 hours ago

      As a devops manager that’s been both, it depends on the group. Ideally a devops group has a few former devs and a few former systems guys.

      Honestly, the best devops teams have at least one guy that’s a liaison with IT who is primarily a systems guy but reports to both systems and devops. Why?

      It gets you priority IT tickets and access while systems trusts him to do it right. He’s like the crux of every good devops team. He’s an IT hire paid for by the devops team budget as an offering in exchange for priority tickets.

      But in general, you’re absolutely right.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 hours ago

        Am I the only guy that likes doing devops thatbhas both dev and ops experience and insight? What’s with silosing oneself?

    • @stupidcasey
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      11 hour ago

      It very much depends on how close to hardware they are.

      If someone is working with C# or JavaScript, they are about as knowledgeable with hardware as someone working in Excel(I know this statement is tantamount to treason but as far as hardware is concerned it’s true

      But if you are working with C or rust or god forbid drivers. You probably know more than the average IT professional you might even have helped correct hardware issues.

      Long story short it depends.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 hour ago

      Devops is also usually more dev than ops, and it shows in the availability numbers.

      One of my managers supported the idea that it’s better to come to devOps from a Dev perspective than an Ops perspective; just because the coding is cleaner and easier to manage with that strong coding background. Also, it’s how devops started: we were doing rudimentary devops - or what Ansible is capable of - back in 2002, long before they even fabricated the term ‘devops’.

    • qaz
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      12 hours ago

      Could you give an example of something related to hardware that most developers don’t know about?

      • @[email protected]OP
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        1 hour ago

        Simple example, our NASes are EMC2. The devs over at the company that does the software say they’re garbage, we should change them.

        Mind you, these things have been running for 10 years straight 24/7, under load most of the time, and we’ve only swapped like 2 drives, total… but no, they’re garbage 🤦…

    • @ChillPenguin
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      22 hours ago

      I work on a team with mainly infrastructure and operations. As one of the only people writing code on the team. I have to appreciate what IT support does to keep everything moving. I don’t know why so many programmers have to get a chip on their shoulder.

    • @PriorityMotif
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      01 hour ago

      In my experience a lot of IT people are unaware of anything outside of their bubble. It’s a big problem in a lot of technical industries with people who went to school to learn a trade.