I get it, I understand your point. But were talking about high stakes here, were talking about the President and Leader of the free world. If you aren't going to take the time to find a Windows System Expert to help make your point, perhaps we deserve this.
I agree. I'm not shitting on CM, he just wasn't the best choice to have going through this because he isn't familiar with it and was stumbling around. It wouldn't be a big deal but for the fact it looked unprofessional. Not sure why he was seeing this stuff for the first time either? Maybe he couldn't have looked at it earlier but if he could have, he should have.
The expert of all? They rarely exist... and when they do they aren't available.
The expert of all who is also Charismatic? I know tons of guys like this. They never are. And they wouldn't show up to this.
The fact there are white hats also going over the data at the symposium? Yes there are.
CodeMonkey is the only well known, well versed person they could get for the task that has community support. Your understanding of what is happening here is more of an observation of how boring it is. This is what a bug hunting session looks like: a bunch of different people working together to solve X problem, nobody being an expert on all:
Windows_guy: is this it?
Linux_guy: no. What are you looking at?
Windows_guy: no idea. I'm not a bash expert.
Unix_guy: is it lunch?
Mac_guy: Windows guy, buy a MAC.
Its not glamorous. Its not fun. Its boring. But its necessary to be done like this to show all the steps of a team working together to find issues.
Criticize CM all you want, the results he found along with the team are the only info I care about.
I didn't say expert of all. A Windows System Admin that knows how to speak to non tech people. That's all I asked for, there are plenty of those people
I get it, I understand your point. But were talking about high stakes here, were talking about the President and Leader of the free world. If you aren't going to take the time to find a Windows System Expert to help make your point, perhaps we deserve this.
I agree. I'm not shitting on CM, he just wasn't the best choice to have going through this because he isn't familiar with it and was stumbling around. It wouldn't be a big deal but for the fact it looked unprofessional. Not sure why he was seeing this stuff for the first time either? Maybe he couldn't have looked at it earlier but if he could have, he should have.
You will never find that guy. The people who can do that are easily 300-600k a year engineers.
And they are complete shut-ins, the kind of people you DEFINITELY don't want on a camera trying to make a case to save the world.
That is why there is a team of White Hats in the back room looking at this tech as well passing info forward... who aren't on camera.
Plus they code in the nude (it's easier to be one with the code) so it's best to not have them on camera.
Sadly... I've known this to be the case in more than one occasion. -_-
That's not accurate at all.
Which part?
CodeMonkey is the only well known, well versed person they could get for the task that has community support. Your understanding of what is happening here is more of an observation of how boring it is. This is what a bug hunting session looks like: a bunch of different people working together to solve X problem, nobody being an expert on all:
Windows_guy: is this it? Linux_guy: no. What are you looking at? Windows_guy: no idea. I'm not a bash expert. Unix_guy: is it lunch? Mac_guy: Windows guy, buy a MAC.
Its not glamorous. Its not fun. Its boring. But its necessary to be done like this to show all the steps of a team working together to find issues.
Criticize CM all you want, the results he found along with the team are the only info I care about.
I didn't say expert of all. A Windows System Admin that knows how to speak to non tech people. That's all I asked for, there are plenty of those people