Implementers aren't considered bozos anymore.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
As much as we may want to withdraw into a world of pure problem solving, we have to acknowledge that the most successful architectures are the ones you can actually convince someone to implement.
Boulez seemed to me to be a guy who wrote laws. Like a company lawyer.
Chemistry, until my childhood, not that long ago, was regarded as a calculating device. Because you couldn't reduce to physics. So it's just some way of calculating the result of experiments. The Bohr atom was treated that way.
I don't think anybody's just B2B or B2C anymore. You are B2I - business to individual.
Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.
It became obvious to me that if Abril was to consider itself a communications group, it could not remain indefinitely in paper and ink.
Never let an inventor run a company. You can never get him to stop tinkering and bring something to market.
Products have to be designed in a way that they are comprehensible.
There's a big tendency to gravitate toward a closed and proprietary approach too easily.
Proper names are rigid designators.