Sunday, December 02, 2007

Self learning: Knowledge is power

Here I am reading about Decision Making, Software Engineering and Network Security. That is what I love to do... reading... learning... but lately I have not felt inspired... I felt like... like there was nothing worth learning anymore... I guess I was just overwhelmed with work and the stress of life, because I am regaining my will to learn more... always learn more...

I think that maybe what re-started my desire for knowledge was a conversation I had today with my girlfriend... we were talking about how was it possible that most people didn't do problem analysis before trying to solve problems with their work processes... I think it is because they know anything about the real meaning of Six Sigma and how to measure quality in a process, we think it is logical to start analyzing the current situation because we learned that from our university courses on software engineering but... why should anyone else know about it? Most people are pressured at work to "just do something" to solve problem without stopping to determine first what are the root causes for the problem they need to solve, and they end up treating the symptoms instead of the disease, and transform a problem that could have been solved with a single action in to a chronic problem that needs to be handled again, and again and again.

The sad part is that a lot of time the solution for the problem has been known by some people for quite a long time, but the person that is assigned to solve the problem ASAP in a particular place doesn't know that the problem he is dealing with was solved a long time a go, and he/she end up spending an excessive amount of time and energy to discover a partial solution to a problem that would have been easy to solve if he/she had the right information.

My favorite example of this are source code versioning systems... the first one (Source Code Control System (SCCS)) was invented in 1972, but today, 36 years later I still arrive at software departments or even software enterprises that do not use any software for version control... how is that possible if really good versioning systems like SubVersion are opensource and free? and have excellent integration with Windows (TortoiseSVN), I believe it is because of "lack of knowledge", people just doesn't know that there are free and easy software to deal versioning and they end up designing complex proceedings to manually handle the versioning of files... they do it that way because they plain do not know there are better ways...

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