I told somebody I know who knew about Reddit’s API changes about Lemmy. He has a master’s degree in Computer Science and works as a software engineer. But then, he told me that it’s too confusing to get into, even for someone like him. This is great feedback and I hope that these issues will be fixed in the coming months. [https://vlemmy.net/pictrs/image/957bd891-e0b2-4056-b09b-71b80b3d3c94.png] [https://vlemmy.net/pictrs/image/c093063b-b793-44f2-96aa-368347aec676.png]
If a human needs to explain to me how to use a platform....
Reminds me of another thread I saw recently where someone was pointing out that they have extra code reviews in place for the one person on their dev team with a masters.
The thing about that is if you are competent you can get a high paying job with a bachelor's in CS, so anybody who has a master's is either not competent or is somebody who isn't very motivated by money and genuinely enjoys learning. I have some idea which side this guy falls on.
Reminds me of another thread I saw recently where someone was pointing out that they have extra code reviews in place for the one person on their dev team with a masters.
The thing about that is if you are competent you can get a high paying job with a bachelor's in CS, so anybody who has a master's is either not competent or is somebody who isn't very motivated by money and genuinely enjoys learning. I have some idea which side this guy falls on.
Good UX is a human indirectly explaining how to use a platform without ever interacting with you. :think-about-it:
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