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Which often means "I tried and tried to change that thing that made no sense, until I was told that I would be fired if I didn't stop."



In my experience, that's almost never the case.


In my experience, that's almost always the case.

EDIT: Just to expand a little. In my experience (and Philip Greenspun would support me: http://philip.greenspun.com/ancient-history/managing-softwar...), managers generally are less up to date on technology than the people that report to them. While they may be more "in the know" about the concerns of the business, it's almost invariably backward-looking, i.e. what got the company this far, and protecting those gains. Add to that the rigors of trying to climb the career ladder, the increased status that makes most people less "hungry," and it's just common sense that change comes from the bottom. Good managers recognize that, and try to manage it. Bad managers just say "No." There's a lot more bad managers out there than good ones.


My experience challenges your experience to a duel to settle this for good!


Resumes at dawn!




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