On Fri, Feb 18, 2011 at 9:51 PM, Nico Kadel-Garcia nkadel@gmail.com wrote:
I've repeatedly seen this sort of "I can do it better myself, just the way I think it should work!" with system auditing tools, source control systems, and software building structures. It's usually far, far more efficient to learn the existing structure well and build on it than to start from scratch: a lot of hardwon lessons are very expensive to relearn.
And, since I've been around since the ASR 33 days of paper tape when you had to really think straight and maintain good relations with the operators in order to get 7 compiles a day, I wonder why we still spend time waiting on files to be compressed and to be decompressed when you can't fill up a modern day disk drive with a project's code, much less an array of said drives most modern build systems would have.