What I do.
Sep. 14th, 2007 10:35 amThat meme got me thinking about the differences between what I do, and perceptions of what I do.
This quiz asks you fairly bluntly if you like Sums. I said 'no' (as I hate sums and have a go-slow on that part of my brain that deals with numbers) so I didn't get any of the computery type jobs suggested, (apart from designer, which is really Drawing, and doesn't count).
Website development and programming type stuff is percieved as a fairly sum-based discipline, which I don't think it is necessarily, or not the kind I do, anyway.
I think of it more as working out what people want, and how it might be easiest for them to get / do it, then explaining how to do it to computers using their language. Well, not their language, exactly, but a language that they have learnt and so have I*. Or perhaps as a sort of training: finding the triggers for the behaviours you want the machines to perform, and doing them in the right order...
Very rarely do I need to use my rather sad -2 to Sums Skill, and when I do, it's usually on marketing analysis type stuff rather than on 'making stuff work' type stuff. Not that I am a programmer really, but I do seem to write or adapt quite a lot of stuff that certainly has that sort of programming smell about it.
* possibly this explains the odd miscommunication...
This quiz asks you fairly bluntly if you like Sums. I said 'no' (as I hate sums and have a go-slow on that part of my brain that deals with numbers) so I didn't get any of the computery type jobs suggested, (apart from designer, which is really Drawing, and doesn't count).
Website development and programming type stuff is percieved as a fairly sum-based discipline, which I don't think it is necessarily, or not the kind I do, anyway.
I think of it more as working out what people want, and how it might be easiest for them to get / do it, then explaining how to do it to computers using their language. Well, not their language, exactly, but a language that they have learnt and so have I*. Or perhaps as a sort of training: finding the triggers for the behaviours you want the machines to perform, and doing them in the right order...
Very rarely do I need to use my rather sad -2 to Sums Skill, and when I do, it's usually on marketing analysis type stuff rather than on 'making stuff work' type stuff. Not that I am a programmer really, but I do seem to write or adapt quite a lot of stuff that certainly has that sort of programming smell about it.
* possibly this explains the odd miscommunication...
no subject
Date: 2007-09-14 11:29 am (UTC)Perhaps it used to be more Sums* when computers were much simpler?
Strangely, Marketing (which I am trained in, unlike programming which I just kind of drifted into) is seen as a creative, imprecise discipline, but the sort I deal with seems to involve a lot more Sums then programming does.
*as the world of mathematics is entirely dark to me, I can't be more precise than that about the sort of skills/aptitudes I mean.
no subject
Date: 2007-09-14 11:43 am (UTC)I think you are right.
no subject
Date: 2007-09-14 12:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-09-14 01:08 pm (UTC)But the short story is that all working programs are actually mathematical proofs (mostly that it is possibly to construct an answer to a particular problem). It's just that in some cases we don't yet really have the mathematics to pose the question in a formal fashion...
no subject
Date: 2007-09-16 01:36 am (UTC)Marketing to me seems like 9 parts statistical analysis to 1 part creativity, at least as it's practiced today. The popular impression of the field is misleading at best.