A lot of people study CS or programming because they have been told it would make them a lot of money. If you just want to make money and don’t care about anything else you’re always just going to put in the minimum effort required, so I’m not surprised people just can’t be bothered to switch.
I hate that. I’m the worst salesman ever, so I’m super bad at interviewing, but I’m a good programmer. Companies are very critical and wary though, because some people are very good salesmen but very bad programmers. I don’t blame them, but t’s a rough environment
There’s also lots of people who become developers because they want to build the best software they can and don’t care to spend time thinking about whether one open source hosting platform is better for their code over another if they accomplish the same thing.
Your response is insanely narrow minded and judgemental, not everyone chooses to fight the same battles you do.
A lot of people study CS or programming because they have been told it would make them a lot of money. If you just want to make money and don’t care about anything else you’re always just going to put in the minimum effort required, so I’m not surprised people just can’t be bothered to switch.
I hate that. I’m the worst salesman ever, so I’m super bad at interviewing, but I’m a good programmer. Companies are very critical and wary though, because some people are very good salesmen but very bad programmers. I don’t blame them, but t’s a rough environment
Those people don’t run open source projects
Fair point, but OP didn’t specify open source projects, just why “people” don’t move away from GitHub.
There’s also lots of people who become developers because they want to build the best software they can and don’t care to spend time thinking about whether one open source hosting platform is better for their code over another if they accomplish the same thing.
Your response is insanely narrow minded and judgemental, not everyone chooses to fight the same battles you do.