4/12/2026 at 2:17:59 AM
From 20y experience and CS degree, I see software engineering as a constant struggle against accidental complexity. Like quicksand, every movement you make will pull you deeper, even swimming in the right direction. And like entropy, it governs all things (there are no subfields that are free of complexity). It even seems impossible to give a meaningful, useful definition, perhaps by necessity. All is dark.But now and then, something beautiful happens. Something that used to be dreadful, becomes "solved". Not in the mathematical strict sense, but some abstraction or some tool eliminates an entire class of issues, and once you know it you can barely imagine living without it. That's why I keep coming back to it, I think.
As a species, I think we are in the infancy stages of software engineering, and perhaps CS as well. There's still lots of opportunity to find better abstractions, big & small.
by klabb3
4/12/2026 at 7:43:32 AM
I'm a tech lead and pushing back against accidental complexity is basically my fulltime job.by mmcnl
4/12/2026 at 8:30:36 AM
I'm an Engineering Manager, and I think I have a similar role just applied to people processes rather than code. One nuance though - a lot of the time I suspect it's deliberate complexity designed to obfuscate how little people actually do.by onion2k
4/12/2026 at 9:16:28 AM
Thats projection.by macrocosmos
4/12/2026 at 9:46:15 AM
Well, maybe. It's projection, because I certainly don't make simple processes myself a lot of the time, but I do try to optimize them afterwards. I have a few decades of seeing people implement processes than I've had to use, and then had to simplify as I moved into more senior roles. I've had people push back quite forcefully when I've pointed out they do things like writing reports that no one reads or gathering data that teams ignore. People often fight for added complexity because their perception is that it's important, and that means they must be important because they're the one in control of it.There is an element of projection because there is in most things people talk about; I'm speaking about this through my filters and biases after all. But it's grounded in a fair chunk of experience.
by onion2k
4/12/2026 at 2:47:11 AM
This was really well written and I agree with you completely. Though I am not so optimistic as a species we have much runway left to get meaningfully much farther out of that infancy.As tech progresses and those abstractions become substantially more potent, it only amplifies the ability of small groups to use them to massively shape the world to their vision.
On the more benign side of this is just corporate greed and extraordinary amplification of wealth inequality. On the other side is authoritarian governments and extremist groups.
by appplication
4/12/2026 at 5:25:10 AM
Wealth inequality is a direct cause of authoritarianism and is not benign.by Droobfest
4/12/2026 at 5:05:19 AM
Perhaps, but generally annoying millions of technology people tends not to end well for firms. Usually the market simply evolves to better match the fiscal conditions.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Competitive_exclusion_principl...
The Internet itself will likely further fracture into different ecosystems. =3
by Joel_Mckay
4/12/2026 at 2:49:25 AM
Can you provide some examples of these beautiful abstractions or tools?by vbezhenar
4/12/2026 at 9:24:50 AM
To get perspective(we know what worked), here’s some 50+ years abstractions:A file is a simple stream of bytes in Unix. (If you think what else it might be then compare to Multics’ segments). Separate processes that may be connected using simple standard I/O streams [pipe] (vs everything is DLL in Multics) — the concept of shell itself (policy vs. mechanism separation http://www.catb.org/esr/writings/taoup/html/ch01s06.html ).
https://retrocomputing.stackexchange.com/questions/15685/wha...
For comparison, you need a new app on iOS for what might have been a shell pipeline (hierarchical file system is absent at user level).
by d0mine
4/12/2026 at 3:38:52 AM
Take message queues. ZMQ and the like have basically solved message passing which was a ghastly thing to worry about for many years.by kelsey98765431
4/12/2026 at 4:25:43 AM
Memory garbage collection, borrow checker, compile-time static typing in dynamic languages (Typescript, Python).Language specific for JavaScript: Strict comparison operator === that disables type coercion, together with banning ==.
== allows "5" equals 5.
by stephbook
4/12/2026 at 9:52:53 AM
The actor model for concurrency.by brabel
4/12/2026 at 3:36:20 AM
Read The Linux Programming Interface bookby whattheheckheck