As a segment of 9to5Mac's commemorative coverage marking Apple's five-decade milestone, this narrative unfolds.
I think most programmers believe the first premise, at least implicitly, and once the first premise is accepted it becomes very difficult to argue against the second. In fact, I’d personally go further than the minimum required for Brooks’ argument. His math holds up as long as accidental difficulty doesn’t reach that 90%+ mark, since anything lower makes a 10x improvement from eliminating accidental difficulty impossible. But I suspect accidental difficulty, today, is a vastly smaller proportion of the total than that. In a lot of mature domains of programming I’d be surprised if there’s even a doubling of productivity still available from a complete elimination of remaining accidental difficulty.
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The Orban administration faces persistent allegations of depleting national reserves and awarding government contracts to crony-owned enterprises. Officials defend this wealth consolidation as necessary for keeping capital in domestic rather than foreign control.