On Sunday 05 Nov 2006 11:25 pm, freeman murray wrote:
> historically people learn how to program on the job.
> when people stayed with a job for many years there was time
> for jr. engineers to establish mentorship relationships
> with more senior people on their teams.
>
> globally work culture has evolved such that people bounce
> much more quickly between jobs. as a result it seems senior
> people and management have much less tolerance "wasting"
> senior peoples time answering jr. questions. this is exacerbated
> in India where there is often a desire to scale dev teams quickly.

I see several threads worth of problems here. When you speak of "seniors" and 
"juniors" you are speaking of a very real hierarchy that exists within groups 
of humans. But this whole business of  non-hierarchical work relationships in 
the "globalized IT industry"  seems to have been pushed to unreal limits in 
India.

If you go back to Kiran's 17K rant you find that one of his red lines is a 
work area that appears to create a hierarchy between a "boss" and "others". 
It appears that teh industry wants to pretend that there is no hierarchy in 
an environment in which such hierarchy clearly exists and the need for that 
pretence adds needless stress and creates unnecessary friction.

shiv

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