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Thomas Owens
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Some of the same problems that have plagued old surveys still exist.


Approximately how many people are employed by the company or organization you work for?

My office is about 70. My subsidiary is about 400 or so. My parent company is 50,000. How do I answer? Personally, I answered with the 10,000+ answer, since my paycheck has the parent company's name on it.

I'm also surprised that there's no question about development team size. Although the parent company is 50,000 strong, the development organization is much, much smaller. Even if you consider just my local office (which is a development hub), only about 50% of the office is development.


Which of the following methodologies do you have experience working in?

One of the options is "Formal standard such as ISO 9001 or IEEE 12207 (aka "waterfall" methodologies)". As someone who has worked in aerospace (AS 9100, which is an industry-specific variant of ISO 9001) and pharmaceutical software (based in ISO 9001), I can tell you with absolute certainty that you can deploy the agile methods and still be compliant with ISO 9001 (and likely most, if not all, of the industry specific variants, like AS 9100).

Some of the other options also don't make much sense. Agile and Scrum are both options? Scrum is an implementation of the agile methods (along with Extreme Programming and a number of others). Pair programming is a technique, not a method.


Do you report or otherwise call out the unethical code in question?

The answers to this question are incomplete.

If one were to refer to the Software Engineering Code of Ethics and Professional Practice, the first priority of software engineers (people "those who contribute by direct participation or by teaching, to the analysis, specification, design, development, certification, maintenance and testing of software systems") is to the general public. However, one also has obligations to the client and the employer. The first step would be to report it internally, in order to avoid public disclosure of confidential information (unless there was an immediate danger to the general public). Then, escalating the disclosure as appropriate, perhaps even to the general public - depending on the situation, it may be ethical to disclose confidential information for the greater good of society.

These questions on ethics are not really nuanced enough to get into any kind of meaningful discussion. I answered "Yes, but only within the company" since it's the correct first step based on a number of ethical codes written for computing professionals (including the one I linked to). But it doesn't have to be the last step, and this question doesn't lead to that.


The fact that the survey still targets "people who write code" leaves a lot to be desired. That's the primary audience of Stack Overflow. But there are plenty of non-programmers involved in developing software. I would like to see this improved in the future with surveys that are inclusive of people who are involved in analysis and specification (product managers, business analysts), architecture (architects), testing (manual testers, automated testers), management (development leads, development managers), and process improvement (Scrum Master, agile coach).

I don't know what the inclusion of these other types of roles would look like, but this survey is advertised on the entire network via the blog post. It would be nice to see questions geared toward the software developers that participate on Software Engineering, Software Quality Assurance, Project Management, and maybe a few other sites because those areas are their expertise would be very nice.

Thomas Owens
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