This is good advice. ankp's comment is also good advice.
A well-run technical organization shouldn't have to choose between good programmers, code that performs, and the ability to quickly operationalize new hardware when necessary. If you're having to choose, you've got more work to do.
A well-run technical organization shouldn't have to choose between good programmers, code that performs, and the ability to quickly operationalize new hardware when necessary. If you're having to choose, you've got more work to do.