It is difficult and good programmers deserve high compensation, but there is a reason that there is the trope of the fresh out-of-bootcamp developer working 3 hours a week and making $600k a year
It is difficult and good programmers deserve high compensation, but there is a reason that there is the trope of the fresh out-of-bootcamp developer working 3 hours a week and making $600k a year
I assume some of them are doing ad sales, which is revenue generating. Probably a lot of HR (which 80%+ of those positions are a grift, IMO), and a lot of other make-work positions. Their product team is like 200 people and they don’t even have any accessibility engineers.
It’s really not that difficult to understand. Half the battle is getting people to realize it’s easy to sign up for an instance
They really need to fix some of their accessibility issues. Comment text cannot be resized which makes it impossible for me to use the app. Memmy respects the dynamic text sizing in iOS, so I’m using it for now. It’s not up to feature parity with Mlem but the developer is doing a great job with adding features.
There’s a few different ways. If the person is mostly/fully deaf and blind, then communication is primarily through touch sign language interpreter (signing on the person’s hand) or a device that you type into that outputs braille for the deafblind person. Some deafblind people are not fully deaf or blind and can see sign language if the interpreter is very close to them.
Giving up on Unity was a shame