She's not on my team and doesn't need to be a professional text editor. She can be very bad at editing text, and still be productive at what she needs to do. And so are most people, even in IT.
I also had to work with a mostly Java shop (a branch within HP) where I was on the ops team. A significant portion of my day was spent walking between cubicles and "fixing" Maven builds. I wasn't really fixing the builds though. Every time it was because another Java dummy couldn't figure out how to do something trivial in Intellij or Eclipse and were blaming the ops for that.
No matter how much I despise Intellij products, the average Java programmer at the time seem to be incapable to internalize even the bare minimum these editors require to function. I call this "the race to the bottom", a situation where technology encourages its users to be dumber, where, in turn, the dumber users make technology worse by requesting dumb features. And this is how Intellij is. It tries to cushion the fall, to put a fence around every useful but potentially "dangerous" operation by limiting what users can do to a fixed number of choices, where free-form input would've been appropriate, by creating layers of renaming of basic stuff the users need to work with in a failed attempt to "make it easier to understand", by hiding things that it perceives as being "out of scope", giving no easy way to reveal the hidden features.
So, yeah, these programmers were a liability to the company. So much so they needed to payroll a dedicated person to do their work for them. And, of course, a dedicated person could only service single Java dummy at a time, while the rest were taking a break downstairs playing table tennis or socializing in cafeteria. Good times!
I also had to work with a mostly Java shop (a branch within HP) where I was on the ops team. A significant portion of my day was spent walking between cubicles and "fixing" Maven builds. I wasn't really fixing the builds though. Every time it was because another Java dummy couldn't figure out how to do something trivial in Intellij or Eclipse and were blaming the ops for that.
No matter how much I despise Intellij products, the average Java programmer at the time seem to be incapable to internalize even the bare minimum these editors require to function. I call this "the race to the bottom", a situation where technology encourages its users to be dumber, where, in turn, the dumber users make technology worse by requesting dumb features. And this is how Intellij is. It tries to cushion the fall, to put a fence around every useful but potentially "dangerous" operation by limiting what users can do to a fixed number of choices, where free-form input would've been appropriate, by creating layers of renaming of basic stuff the users need to work with in a failed attempt to "make it easier to understand", by hiding things that it perceives as being "out of scope", giving no easy way to reveal the hidden features.
So, yeah, these programmers were a liability to the company. So much so they needed to payroll a dedicated person to do their work for them. And, of course, a dedicated person could only service single Java dummy at a time, while the rest were taking a break downstairs playing table tennis or socializing in cafeteria. Good times!