On 1 March 2010 15:02, Robert Casto <casto.rob...@gmail.com> wrote:

> You are right but this is a hard sell in many corporations. Many companies
> do not have the manpower or strong enough IT people to implement different
> sets of rules and so it is easier to dictate policy and make everyone follow
> it.
>
> Luckily I work somewhere where I can use whatever tool I find best to get
> the job done. The machine is monitored, updated, scanned, and everything
> else. But at least I can get the tools I need. I think that is what most
> developers want. Some flexibility to get the best tool or at least one they
> are familiar with so they can be productive. Even chefs use many different
> types of knives to get the job done. You don't just give them a paring knife
> and tell them to make due.
>



Updating is fine, but not forced at a specified time with no option to
prevent a reboot.  I may be running an extended test suite. Developers are
not typical computer users in this respect.

Scanning is fine, but every single file?  I've seen IDE performance go up an
order of magnitude simply by having it work in a dedicated "development"
directory that's excluded from scanning.  Given the sheer rate that we
create/modify/delete files, developers are not not typical computer users in
this respect.

Monitoring is fair enough, though I have thrown my fair share of curses at
over-zealous site blocking...



> On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 9:45 AM, Kevin Wright <
> kev.lee.wri...@googlemail.com> wrote:
>
>> This is about developer access to machines, not corporate droids in
>> general.  Computers and the internet are very much the tools of our trade,
>> tools that are blunted and crippled by these security policies.  The real
>> problem is not the policies themselves, but their indiscriminate
>> application.
>>
>> For example, when I was at primary school we had "safe" scissors that
>> weren't especially sharp and had rounded ends.  This made a great deal of
>> sense, given that children and sharp things are not the best of
>> combinations; it was policy that these type of scissors were used throughout
>> the school.
>>
>> However, the blanket ban on sharp objects didn't extend to the kitchens,
>> because it's accepted that knives are the tools-in-trade for chefs and
>> cooks.  The very attribute that makes a knife dangerous is the same thing
>> that makes it useful.
>>
>> When used at a developer level then computers are the same.  Their main
>> strength lies in broad versatility and a capacity to be true general-purpose
>> devices, why should this capability be prevented for professionals?
>>
>>
>> Carried to its illogical conclusion, a policy based on safety to the
>> exclusion of all else would have us all working on ipads, nothing but jelly
>> and tapioca in the canteens, and the lawyers driving such policy should be
>> deprived of their books for risk of paper cuts.
>>
>>
>> On 1 March 2010 14:11, Wildam Martin <mwil...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>>> On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 15:06, Phil <p...@haigh-family.com> wrote:
>>> > Personally I'm inclined to side with them - non IT-Savvy people do
>>> > need protecting from themselves (once took a call from somebody
>>> > complaining he couldn't access the company intranet from his WiFi
>>> > enabled laptop, turned out he was in his car 20 miles from the
>>> > network, no 3G data connection or anything - no, really).
>>>
>>> What about a 2-day crash-course of general IT knowhow for every new
>>> employee?
>>> No technical aid beats good education.
>>>
>>> --
>>> Martin Wildam
>>>
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>>
>>
>> --
>> Kevin Wright
>>
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>
>
>
> --
> Robert Casto
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-- 
Kevin Wright

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