Ward Cunningham - Is there a revolution coming in the way people communicate?

CodeAsExpression
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Posted by The Channel 9 Team // Thu, Aug 18, 2005 6:40 AM

Ward Cunningham, architect on the pag team here at Microsoft, sees the world of communication changing rapidly. He talks about blogs, coder inspiration, Wikis, and more.

Do you see a revolution coming in the way people communicate with each other? Particularly the way developers share ideas?



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Clip Length: 00:00:40 Replies: 5 // Views: 20,288
  ipattern
 
 
  Mon, May 31 2004 5:18 PM
I do not see the Revolution per say, but I do see clear open willess of developers to share their code with the world. Blogs has been an interesting enviroment where people share not only their code, but their general thought of direction. It is always about the Information and when the flow of Information becomes free and easy then great break thought are about to happen!

Maxim

[www.ipattern.com do you?]

  jj
  J.J.
 
  Tue, Jun 1 2004 5:08 AM
I agree on the revolution thing Maxim highlights. I think coding will be less important in the future. It's will be more about application ideas.

One time I heard someone said something about systems that you only have to tell WHAT to do, and not HOW to do it.

Jelle

  Steve411
  Browning HP 9MM
 
  Tue, Jun 1 2004 9:16 PM
[quote] 
  Ward Cunningham, architect on the pag team here at Microsoft, sees the world of communication changing rapidly. He talks about blogs, coder inspiration, Wikis, and more.
   [/quote]

hehe, you guys forgot the "e" on 'page'

  sbc
  Get Firefox (tabs, themes, extensions, standards)
 
  Wed, Jun 2 2004 6:38 PM
It is actually PAG (Patterns & Practices Group)

  siri
  wildman
 
  Fri, Jun 4 2004 5:25 PM
Ward is fast becoming one of my heroes.  I love the discussion of expressive code he begins.  It gels perfectly, in my mind, with the Robert Hess' comment that the biggest problem with teaching programmers is that they get used to writing sloppy code. 

I write sloppy code because, as Ward says, I become reluctant to improve it once it works.  And if I never do that I will by definition rarely write truely expressive and elegant code.  So by spending my time almost exclusively producing first draft code, I nurture the habit of writing crappy code.

Ward seems to have a lot of interesting (and inspiring) things to say about the philosophy of programming.  I wish I worked at microsoft so he could be my mentor.  Perhaps more videos from him might console me?