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* A New Low for NASA? (was HELP!!!!!!)
@ 1997-06-11  0:00 Sam Harbaugh, Palm Bay, Florida
  1997-06-12  0:00 ` John G. Volan
                   ` (2 more replies)
  0 siblings, 3 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Sam Harbaugh, Palm Bay, Florida @ 1997-06-11  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



PLEASE SEE MY OPINION BELOW

>Date:    Tue, 10 Jun 1997 09:08:49 -0600
>From:    Luke Holden <Luke@HOLDENS.ORG>
>Subject: HELP!!!!!!

>HELP!!! I Desperately need Ada programmers. I am working on a project
>called GMP (Geooss  Modification Program) The Geooss is a system to
>track the millions of space debris in orbit around earth. NASA uses this
>to figure out when to launch something into orbit and not have it hit
>anything. One problem, The Government did such a bad job on this system
>it desperately needs reprogramming and reorganization. I need as many
>skilled Ada programmers as I can get. <location deleted> There are a few
skills >that will better your chances of being
>hired, they are the folloring:

>-      Ada - Required
><skills deleted>

>It would be nice if you had a formal education but not required. The
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Good God man!  NASA wants to avoid hitting space debris and a formal
education would be *NICE*.  Has NASA really hit a new low?

What contractor will put uneducated programmers on such a project.  I
*really* want to know.  Please make it easy for me and post the answer. I
want to get the info to my congressman Dave Weldon who is on the space
committee I believe.

Thanks.

Sam Harbaugh
Palm Bay, Florida (near where NASA launches things)


>Following would be nice to have:

>- Computer Science
>- Electrical Engineering
>- Math

>For more information please contact Luke Holden at Luke@Holdens.org with
>a resume intact. Or fax me at (719) 590-4129. Thank you very much

------------------------------




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: A New Low for NASA? (was HELP!!!!!!)
@ 1997-06-12  0:00 Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93
  1997-06-13  0:00 ` Robert I. Eachus
  0 siblings, 1 reply; 9+ messages in thread
From: Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93 @ 1997-06-12  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



"Sam Harbaugh, Palm Bay, Florida" <harbaugh@IU.NET> writes:
>>It would be nice if you had a formal education but not required. The
>^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>Good God man!  NASA wants to avoid hitting space debris and a formal
>education would be *NICE*.  Has NASA really hit a new low?
>
>What contractor will put uneducated programmers on such a project.  I
>*really* want to know.  Please make it easy for me and post the answer. I
>want to get the info to my congressman Dave Weldon who is on the space
>committee I believe.
>
    Why so shocked? I've seen "Ada Consultants" who's whole experience
    of the language was pretty much that they had read the name
    somewhere in some magazine article - or maybe on a box of
    Coco-Puffs - they can't remember which. I've seen the code they
    produce and it's a wonder that it ever got past a compiler (often
    not), much less actually runs or even less likely, produces the
    desired result. I've seen "Ada Consultants" who could be
    outsmarted/outprogrammed by a small soap dish and who had an I.Q.
    only slightly lower than that of a bag of hammers.

    The answer? You get what you pay for. Often, the interest in
    consultants is A) "I need a warm body here to round out the body
    quota I've got for the contract & the "real" programmers can make
    up for the damage done by the warm body." B) "Current corporate
    wisdom is that we need to outsource X% of our work and this
    inexpensive "box of rocks" with a contractor badge counts for my
    outsource percentage without destroying my budget." C) "Engineers
    are a commodity that we buy by the pallet-load down at Costco and
    one's pretty much the same as any other." D) Some combination of
    all of the above.

    It makes me wonder just exactly how much money I could get given
    the quality of my resume if I were to lean up against a lamp post
    saying "Hello sailor. New in town?"

    MDC

Marin David Condic, Senior Computer Engineer     ATT:        561.796.8997
Pratt & Whitney GESP, M/S 731-96, P.O.B. 109600  Fax:        561.796.4669
West Palm Beach, FL, 33410-9600                  Internet:   CONDICMA@PWFL.COM
===============================================================================
    "You spend a billion here and a billion there. Sooner or later it
    adds up to real money."

        --  Everett Dirksen
===============================================================================




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread
* Re: A New Low for NASA? (was HELP!!!!!!)
@ 1997-06-16  0:00 Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 9+ messages in thread
From: Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93 @ 1997-06-16  0:00 UTC (permalink / raw)



kgamble <kgamble@RICOCHET.NET> writes:
>
>Seen many cases of consultant's code that had to be discarded or
>drastically revamped because it just couldn't meet the optimization
>requirements that are usually impossed for tight embedded systems. This is
>especially true in the 1750 processor world.
>
    Well, I wouldn't have so much problem with someone who wasn't
    coding "to standards", because I might take that more as an
    indication that I wasn't doing *my* job right. I'd think that any
    consultant/job-shopper/hired-gun that comes in the door would need
    to be treated like any other new employee: It's my job to get them
    up to speed and understanding about what we're trying to do and
    how we're going about it, etc. If they remain stubborn or try to
    do things in some revolutionary kind of way in spite of being
    filled in on what we're really looking for, then maybe they are
    destined for some "attitude readjustment".

    My *real* complaint is when we end up hiring consultants who don't
    seem to understand even the fundamentals of programming, much less
    Ada programming. It all seems to stem back to "you get what you
    pay for" and this is why I'm not too suprised that a company would
    be out trying to hire Ada programmers where a "formal education"
    is "optional".

    MDC

Marin David Condic, Senior Computer Engineer     ATT:        561.796.8997
Pratt & Whitney GESP, M/S 731-96, P.O.B. 109600  Fax:        561.796.4669
West Palm Beach, FL, 33410-9600                  Internet:   CONDICMA@PWFL.COM
===============================================================================
    "You spend a billion here and a billion there. Sooner or later it
    adds up to real money."

        --  Everett Dirksen
===============================================================================




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 9+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~1997-06-16  0:00 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 9+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
1997-06-11  0:00 A New Low for NASA? (was HELP!!!!!!) Sam Harbaugh, Palm Bay, Florida
1997-06-12  0:00 ` John G. Volan
1997-06-13  0:00 ` EricFerg
1997-06-13  0:00   ` Pat Rogers
1997-06-13  0:00     ` Robin Reagan
1997-06-16  0:00 ` Spam Hater
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
1997-06-12  0:00 Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93
1997-06-13  0:00 ` Robert I. Eachus
1997-06-16  0:00 Marin David Condic, 561.796.8997, M/S 731-93

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