How Software Companies Die
Orson Scott Card
Windows Sources, March 1995, p. 208
The environment that nutures creative programmers kills management and
marketing types - and vice versa. Programming is the Great Game. It
consumes you, body and soul. When you're caught up in it, nothing else
matters. When you emerge into daylight, you might well discover that
you're a hundred pounds overweight, your underwear is older than the
average first grader, and judging from the number of pizza boxes lying
around, it must be spring already. But you don't care, because your
program runs, and the code is fast and clever and tight. You
won. You're aware that some people think you're a nerd. So what?
They're not players. They've never jousted with Windows or gone hand
to hand with DOS. To them C++ is a decent grade, almost a B - not a
language. They barely exist. Like soldiers or artists, you don't care
about the opinions of civilians. You're building something intricate
and fine. They'll never understand it.