Defining Occupations As They Actually Are


Recommended Posts

  • Accountant - Someone who knows the cost of everything and the value of nothing.
    Auditor - Someone who arrives after the battle and bayonets all the wounded.
    Banker - The fellow who lends you his umbrella when the sun is shining and wants it back the minute it begins to rain. (Mark Twain)
    Economist - An expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today.
    Statistician - Someone who is good with numbers but lacks the personality to be an accountant.
    Actuary - Someone who brings a fake bomb on a plane, because that decreases the chances that there will be another bomb on the plane.
    Programmer - Someone who solves a problem you didn't know you had in a way you don't understand.
    Mathematician - A blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat which isn't there.
    Lawyer - A person who writes a 10,000 word document and calls it a "brief".
    Psychologist - A man who watches everyone else when a beautiful girl enters the room.
    Schoolteacher - Is some one who likes children. A royal baby sitter.
    Consultant - Someone who takes the watch off your wrist and tells you the time.
    Diplomat - Someone who can tell you to go to hell in such a way that you will look forward to the trip.

Programmer - Someone who solves a problem you didn't know you had in a way you don't understand.

This is so true. I do software development for a living and I often have to fix problems/issues with older software that we still support. I don't know how many times I'll be told of an issue, I'll find and fix it, and when I try to explain what was broken and how I fixed it I usually just get a blank stare.

Economist - An expert who will know tomorrow why the things he predicted yesterday didn't happen today.

Programmer - Someone who solves a problem you didn't know you had in a way you don't understand.

Basically sums up what I've been doing at work for the past couple of months

This is so true. I do software development for a living and I often have to fix problems/issues with older software that we still support. I don't know how many times I'll be told of an issue, I'll find and fix it, and when I try to explain what was broken and how I fixed it I usually just get a blank stare.

Oh so very true. "What you working on?" - "I just fixed the issue with the order system, where billing addresses could be expired" - "..."

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Hello, I have used a few TEAM Group SSDs, USB flash drives, and Micro SDXC cards in the past. They all seemed to work fine. Regards, Aryeh Goretsky
    • "just $100 per TB"? Just? Are we trying to make this seem like the new normal? Kinda weird to make it sound like that is not a ridiculously expensive asking price.
    • The reviews you refer to mean nothing. Where there is no journalism there is no reason to call the gaming media's opinion pieces "reviews". For GP games there is indeed a metric for success - increasing subscriptions. Which turns in revenue. The only circumstance in which subs do not rise when great is being released is a Game Pass system where the company is close to fully saturated with customers in a subscription. However, in that case as the theory goes you spend aplenty in all kind of games - from shady live service cash cows and customer offending agitprop crap in purple colours to robust and entertaining single player games. And keep a solid level of profitability. Ignoring the simply innocuous but mid games MGS has released primarily of the second kind.
    • Report: Microsoft to use AWS to help GitHub deal with a major surge in demand by Pradeep Viswanathan Thanks to the surge of coding AI agents, GitHub's usage has skyrocketed over the past 12 months. To meet this demand, GitHub started with a plan in October 2025 to increase capacity by 10x. However, by early this year, the company realized that it needed 30x scale. This rapid growth has caused severe strain on the platform's reliability, resulting in several small outages over the past few months. In April, GitHub published a long blog post explaining the steps it is taking to resolve these reliability issues. In the post, the company also confirmed that it is working toward a multi-cloud architecture for better resilience. Today, Business Insider reported that GitHub is turning to Amazon Web Services to help deal with a major surge in AI-driven coding activity. It is important to note that GitHub is still in the process of moving completely to the Azure cloud. The current plan is to move the platform fully to Azure by 2027 so that it can scale better as per developer demand. Therefore, the current decision to utilize AWS might be part of a short-term plan to meet immediate demand. A Microsoft spokesperson confirmed that GitHub is using multiple cloud providers with the following statement: For Microsoft, the decision highlights the operational pressure behind the AI boom. GitHub has to stay reliable for developers at a time when rivals such as Codex, Cursor, Claude Code, and other AI coding tools are gaining attention. And the decision to use AWS for computing capacity seems practical given the circumstances.
    • It's growing on me, however, your right, it make better usability sense if the tabs were bellow the address bar.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Collaborator
      vjlex earned a badge
      Collaborator
    • Reacting Well
      Dys Topia earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Conversation Starter
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      517
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      182
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      106
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      88
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!