Re: blog: Overlooked Essentials for Optimizing Code (Software Engineering degrees)

2010-11-11 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
[ ... ] Well, I am not sure you got what I meant. What I said is not that engineers will never code or won't have to after a couple years. The idea is more that engineers will be able to have people with different skills to manage, or to work closely with, so they'll have to know many fields to

Re: The Computer Languages Shootout Game

2010-11-04 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
En Wed, 03 Nov 2010 21:36:10 +0100, Jérôme M. Berger jeber...@free.fr escribió: Diego Cano Lagneaux wrote: Of which there are very few. A linux distro or community repository cannot distribute dmd at all, it is prohibited by the license. This is primarily a practical issue

Re: The Computer Languages Shootout Game

2010-11-01 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
Of which there are very few. A linux distro or community repository cannot distribute dmd at all, it is prohibited by the license. This is primarily a practical issue, not an ideological one. Right.. I forgot the issue is also practical. If DigitalMars doesn't allow redistribution, they simply

Re: blog: Overlooked Essentials for Optimizing Code (Software Engineering degrees)

2010-11-01 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
In most Europe, Engineering is always a 5 years (masters) degree, oriented to big project developers who'll (supposedly) lead teams. I've heard it's different in the Anglosaxon systems. Whoa! :o Shit, I'm going to go on a big tangent here, but I'm very surprised to again hear that notion that

Re: blog: Overlooked Essentials for Optimizing Code

2010-10-25 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
En Mon, 25 Oct 2010 13:22:02 +0200, Bruno Medeiros brunodomedeiros+s...@com.gmail escribió: On 22/10/2010 15:56, Diego Cano Lagneaux wrote: Well, you think wrongly. :) If you look at the top universities worldwide, the majority of them have only one computer programming undergraduate degree

Re: blog: Overlooked Essentials for Optimizing Code

2010-10-22 Thread Diego Cano Lagneaux
Well, you think wrongly. :) If you look at the top universities worldwide, the majority of them have only one computer programming undergraduate degree. Sometimes it is called Computer Science (typical in the US), other times it is called Computer Engineering, Informatics Engineering,