Moving back to .NET

Laeeth Isharc via Digitalmars-d digitalmars-d at puremagic.com
Wed Sep 30 01:30:44 PDT 2015


On Tuesday, 29 September 2015 at 17:52:54 UTC, Chris wrote:
>
> And don't forget a*se covering, risk aversion is often not much 
> more than that. It's one of the most common things in 
> organizations. If things go wrong, at least you stuck to the 
> protocol, the the well-established, widely used language. So 
> they can't get you there. If not they fry you, even if the 
> failure is due to other things.

Yes - that is most of it.  The way that changes is some people 
are less driven by social factors, whether because of who they 
are or the situation they are in.  Some of these succeed, slowly 
perceptions change, and after a while it's the best thing since 
sliced bread.  But these things take time, and it's senseless to 
think one can know the moment of inflection points based on 
logical reasoning (since the timing depends on many other factors 
out of the scope of things one is familiar with - these factors 
are easier to spot with hindsight than in real time).


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