https://ploum.net/2024-12-23-julius-en.html
Blog Livres Software A Propos
[clickworke]
My colleague Julius
by Ploum on 2024-12-23
* Traduction en francais
Do you know Julius? You certainly know who I'm talking about!
I met Julius at university. A measured, friendly young man. He always
wore a smile on his face. What struck me about Julius, aside from his
always perfectly ironed clothes, was his ability to listen. He never
interrupted me. He accepted gratefully when he was wrong. He answered
questions without hesitation.
He attended all the classes and often asked for our notes to "compare
with his own" as he said. Then came the infamous computer project. As
a team of students, we had to code a fairly complex system software
using the C language. Julius took part in all our meetings but I
don't remember witnessing him write a single line of code. In the
end, I think he did the report formatting. Which, to his credit, was
very well done.
Because of his charisma and elegance, Julius was the obvious choice
to give the final presentation.
He was so self-confident during the presentation that the professors
didn't immediately notice the problem. He had started talking about
the C virtual machine used in our project. He even showed a slide
with an unknown logo and several random screenshots which had nothing
to do with anything known in computing.
For those who don't know about computing, C is a compiled language.
It doesn't need a virtual machine. Talking about a C virtual machine
is like talking about the carburettor of an electric vehicle. It
doesn't make sense.
I stood up, interrupted Julius and improvised by saying it was just a
joke. "Of course!" said Julius, looking at me with a big smile. The
jury was perplexed. But I saved the day.
Throughout our studies, I've heard several professors discuss the
"Julius case." Some thought he was very good. Others said he was
lacking a fundamental understanding. Despite failing some classes, he
ended up graduating with me.
After that, our paths went apart for several years.
I've been working for nearly a decade at a large company where I had
significant responsibilities. One day, my boss announced that
recruiters had found a rare gem for our team. An extraordinary
resume, he told me.
From the perfect cut of his suit, I recognised Julius before seeing
his face.
Julius! My old classmate!
If I had aged, he had matured. Still charismatic and self-assured. He
now sported a slightly graying three-day beard that gave him an air
of wise authority. He genuinely seemed happy to see me.
We talked about the past and about our respective careers. Unlike me,
Julius had never stayed very long in the same company. He usually
left after a year, sometimes less. His resume was impressive: he had
gained various experiences, touched on all areas of computing. Each
time, he moved up in skills and salary. I would later discover that,
while we held similar positions, he had been hired at twice my
salary. He also got bonuses I didn't even know existed.
But I wasn't aware of this aspect when we started working together.
At first, I tried to train him on our projects and internal
processes. I assigned him tasks on which he would ask me questions.
Many questions, not always very relevant ones. With his
characteristic calm and his signature smile.
He took initiatives. Wrote code or documentation. He had answers to
all the questions we could ask, regardless of the field. Sometimes it
was very good, often mediocre or, in some cases, complete nonsense.
It took us some time to understand that each of Julius's
contributions needed to be completely reviewed and corrected by
another team member. If it was not our field of expertise, it had to
be checked externally. We quickly had a non-written rule stating that
no document from Julius should leave the team before being proofread
by two of us.
But Julius excelled in formatting, presentation, and meeting
management. Regularly, my boss would come up to me and say, "We're
really lucky to have this Julius! What talent! What a contribution to
the team!"
I tried, without success, to explain that Julius understood nothing
of what we were doing. That we had reached the point where we sent
him to useless meetings to get rid of him for a few hours. But even
that strategy had its limits.
It took us a week of crisis management meetings to calm down a
customer disappointed by an update of our software. We had to explain
that, if Julius had promised that the interface would be simplified
to have only one button that would do exactly what the client wanted,
there was a misunderstanding. That aside from developing a machine
that read minds, it was impossible to meet his complex needs with
just one button.
We decided to act when I heard Julius claim to a customer, panicked
at the idea of being "hacked", that, for security reasons, our
servers connected to the Internet had no IP address. We had to forbid
him from meeting a client alone.
For those who don't know about computing, the "I" in IP address
stands for Internet. The very definition of the Internet is the
network of interconnected computers that have an IP address.
Being on the Internet without an IP address is like claiming to be
reachable by phone without having a phone number.
The team was reorganised so that one of us was always responsible for
keeping Julius occupied. I never wanted to speak ill of him because
he was my friend. An exasperated programmer had no such restraint and
exposed the problem to my boss. Who responded by accusing her of
jealousy, as he was very satisfied with Julius's work. She was
reprimanded and resigned shortly after.
Fortunately, Julius announced that he was leaving because he had
received an offer he couldn't refuse. He brought cakes to celebrate
his last day with us. My boss and the entire human resources
department were genuinely sad to see him go.
I said goodbye to Julius and never saw him again. On his LinkedIn
account, which is very active and receives hundreds of comments, the
year he spent with us became an incredible experience. He hasn't
exaggerated anything. Everything is true. But his way of turning
words and a kind of poorly concealed modesty gives the impression
that he really contributed a lot to the team. He later became the
deputy CEO then interim CEO of a startup that had just been acquired
by a multinational. An economic newspaper wrote an article about him.
After that episode, he joined the team of a secretary of state. A
meteoric career!
On my side, I tried to forget Julius. But, recently, my boss came to
me with a huge smile. He had met the salesperson from a company that
had amazed him with its products. Artificial intelligence software
that would, I quote, boost our productivity!
I now have an artificial intelligence software that helps me code.
Another that helps me search for information. A third one that
summarises and writes my emails. I am not allowed to disable them.
At every moment, every second, I feel surrounded by Julius. By dozens
of Juliuses.
I have to work in a mist of Juliuses. Every click on my computer,
every notification on my phone seems to come from Julius. My life is
hell paved with Juliuses.
My boss came to see me. He told me that the team's productivity was
dangerously declining. That we should use artificial intelligence
more effectively. That we risked being overtaken by competitors who,
without a doubt, were using the very latest artificial intelligence.
That he had hired a consultant to install a new time and productivity
management artificial intelligence.
I started to cry. "Another Julius!" I sobbed.
My boss sighed. He patted my shoulder and said, "I understand. I miss
Julius too. He would certainly have helped us get through this
difficult time."
* Picture by Max Gruber/Better Images of AI
I'm Ploum, a writer and an engineer. I like to explore how technology
impacts society. You can subscribe by email or by rss. I value
privacy and never share your adress.
I write science-fiction novels in French. For Bikepunk, my new
post-apocalyptic-cyclist book, my publisher is looking for contacts
in other countries to distribute it in languages other than French.
If you can help, contact me!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Permalinks:
https://ploum.net/2024-12-23-julius-en.html
gemini://ploum.net/2024-12-23-julius-en.gmi