Subj : Cobol/gnucobol To : DUMAS WALKER From : Jcurtis Date : Thu May 29 2025 14:39:00 > LOL, now you have me thinking about it. When I first hired on, my title > was Programmer/Analyst. As I moved up, it was Systems Engineer. It seems > like "developer" entered the lingo when we started adding "distributed > systems developers," which was not an official title -- those were the > folks that did programming for (usually) Microsoft Windows server-based > systems. > It may have been, as more than one would later admit to me, because they > didn't really know how to do the "bare bones" programming per-se. They > knew how to work the GUI framework tools to have as much of the code as > possible generated for them, and how to tweak it to get it at least close > to what was asked for. > Eventually, management, the business analysts, and project leaders got to > where they called us all "developers" and the name sort of stuck. ;) Sounds about right. Developers. Generic word for computer geeks of all kinds. Easier for management to offshore. * SLMR 2.1a * --- þ Synchronet þ Vertrauen þ Home of Synchronet þ [vert/cvs/bbs].synchro.net .