Why I Fire Programmers | Prime Reacts
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Unlock all features
FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.
Related videos
Be A Great Programmer
ThePrimeTime
220.0k views
The Best Programmers I Know - Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
234.4k views
A Rant About Professional Programming - Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
151.2k views
Why "Vibe Coding" Is Not My Future | Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
260.8k views
Why CoPilot Is Making Programmers Worse
ThePrimeTime
178.7k views
Real Programmers Write Machine Code
ThePrimeTime
130.0k views
Not All Programmers Are Good | Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
141.9k views
Why I Use C | Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
242.9k views
Real Programers Don't Use Pascal
ThePrimeTime
142.0k views
20 Years Of Programming | Prime Reacts
ThePrimeTime
90.1k views
Top Comments (10)
Every single time Prime highlights a sentence on his screen but leaves out the first and last letter, a kitten dies
20% linked in post review. 80% bubble sort tutorial
Lmao at chat "this is not pythonic enough" at Prime's bubble sort
There was a developer at the company I work for now made such a mess of a project during his time and then left. The quality of the product has become so bad, and customer outrage has become so vocal, that they are threatening to just shut it down. It boggles my mind how somebody who can do so much damage can stick around for so long.
ahhh linkedin and its ideology juice
I think what OP is getting at is that being bad isn’t the issue, it’s being unable to improve. I’ve hired many under developed workers as I saw their potential to grow. I’ve also fired talented individuals because they’re combative and constantly go off on their own. I think the OP just wrote it too “inspirational-ly”, like it’s going to be on a slide during a TED talk
bubblesort is literally the educational example of "this is the intuitive way most new programmers think up a sorting algorithm. now let's move on to actually good algorithms"
"i love youuuu" *door slam*
Bro i don’t know whats more impressive: 1-Casually doing bubble sort alg mid stream 2-Being fkn fast in vim 3-Or doing both while casually talking and being hilarious.
3:50 the xor swap attempt 🤣
Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge
- Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
- Chat with videos, export text & PDF
- $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research
Free forever plan • All features unlocked
Top Comments (10)
Every single time Prime highlights a sentence on his screen but leaves out the first and last letter, a kitten dies
20% linked in post review. 80% bubble sort tutorial
Lmao at chat "this is not pythonic enough" at Prime's bubble sort
There was a developer at the company I work for now made such a mess of a project during his time and then left. The quality of the product has become so bad, and customer outrage has become so vocal, that they are threatening to just shut it down. It boggles my mind how somebody who can do so much damage can stick around for so long.
ahhh linkedin and its ideology juice
I think what OP is getting at is that being bad isn’t the issue, it’s being unable to improve. I’ve hired many under developed workers as I saw their potential to grow. I’ve also fired talented individuals because they’re combative and constantly go off on their own. I think the OP just wrote it too “inspirational-ly”, like it’s going to be on a slide during a TED talk
bubblesort is literally the educational example of "this is the intuitive way most new programmers think up a sorting algorithm. now let's move on to actually good algorithms"
"i love youuuu" *door slam*
Bro i don’t know whats more impressive: 1-Casually doing bubble sort alg mid stream 2-Being fkn fast in vim 3-Or doing both while casually talking and being hilarious.
3:50 the xor swap attempt 🤣