4. Professionalism
It’s a lot easier to be a
nonprofessional
How to be Professional ?
● Do No Harm to Function
● Do No Harm to Structure
● Work Ethic
5. 90 Days Plan for New Software Engineer
This page intentionally left blank
6. Practicing
Musicians rehearse scales. Football players
run through tires. Doctors practice sutures
and surgical techniques. Lawyers practices
arguments. Sodiler rehearse missions.
When performance matters, professionals
practice.
9. Time Management
Eight hours is remarkably short period of time
It’s only 28.800 seconds.
We expect that we will use those few precious seconds as efficiently and
effectively possible
10. Meetings
Meetings cost about $200 per hour per attendee
Meeting:
1. Meetings are necessary
2. Meetings are huge time wasters
Do not attend every meeting. One of the most
important duties of your manager is to keep you
out of meetings.
11. Pomodoro Technique
You set a standard kitchen timer for 25 minutes
While that timer is running, you let nothing interfere with what you are doing
After 25 minutes, take a break of five minutes
It could be 14 time slot each day
12. Acceptance Testing & Testing Strategies
Communicating Requirement
Acceptance Test: communication, clarity and precision
Professional developers test their code.
QA should find nothing
14. Pressure
How do you want a surgeon to behave ? Appear calm or want him sweating &
swearing ?
Professional developer is calm and decisive under pressure.
Avoiding pressure:
1. Commitments
2. Staying Clean : Don’t leave technical debt
3. Crisis Discipline, don’t change your behaviour when the crunch comes
16. Apprenticeship
Medical profession has developed
a discipline of intense mentoring.
It’s true that there are relatively few
death caused by software bugs.
But there are are significant
monetary losses.
Somehow, the software
development industry has gotten
the idea that programmers are
programmers, and that once you
graduate you can code.
17. Apprenticeship
School can teach the theory of computer
programming. School does not and cannot
teach the discipline, practice, and skill of
being a craftsman.
Those things are acquired through years of
personal tutelage and mentoring.
18. Long Term Guidance
Guiding the next batch of software
developers to maturity will fall to us, not to
the universities.
It’s time for us to adapt a program of
apprenticeship, internship, and
long-term guidance