Jesse Kuhnert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:Finding a developer who knows technology "A" is fairly easy, but finding a developer who can quickly learn technlogies "B" "C" and "D" without very much effort is worth their weight in gold.
The problem is that certain developers have nausea when have a need to learn technologies âCâ, âDâ etc. because they are long enough in the business to know that those technologies are crippled and handicapped cousins of technology âAâ and they will have to spend their mental efforts on fighting deficiencies and quirks of those technologies. It is also very unproductive to retrain developers constantly and resistance to learn new things for the sake of today is very natural. We all should be focused on obtaining knowledge and skills applicable in years to come. Konstantin Ignatyev PS: If this is a typical day on planet earth, humans will add fifteen million tons of carbon to the atmosphere, destroy 115 square miles of tropical rainforest, create seventy-two miles of desert, eliminate between forty to one hundred species, erode seventy-one million tons of topsoil, add 2,700 tons of CFCs to the stratosphere, and increase their population by 263,000 Bowers, C.A. The Culture of Denial: Why the Environmental Movement Needs a Strategy for Reforming Universities and Public Schools. New York: State University of New York Press, 1997: (4) (5) (p.206)