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Case File
d-29742House OversightOther

Nonsensical software design dialogue with no actionable content

The passage consists largely of fragmented dialogue, random characters, and generic commentary on software development. It contains no specific names, dates, transactions, or allegations linking influ Contains only generic statements about software programming productivity. Mentions a Dilbert comic link unrelated to any investigation. No mention of persons, institutions, financial flows, or legal

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #015925
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage consists largely of fragmented dialogue, random characters, and generic commentary on software development. It contains no specific names, dates, transactions, or allegations linking influ Contains only generic statements about software programming productivity. Mentions a Dilbert comic link unrelated to any investigation. No mention of persons, institutions, financial flows, or legal

Tags

softwarenoisegeneric-commentaryhouse-oversight

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Software 235 IT MEAN WHAT ARE YOU TRYING TO ACCOMPLISH WITH THE SOFTWARE? IM TRYING TO MAKE YOU DESIGN MY SOFTWARE. -- 3 bj ww rg — ] > r=) a Q 6 i a bs 4 = f=] o wn o o S a 2 CAN YOU DESIGN IT TO TELL YOU MY REQUIREMENTS? www.dilbert.com money and handle security when communicating with foreign banks is necessary. A human being must write lines of code for all the rules and every exception, making provision for any gibberish that might be typed in by the customer. Many people ask, “Wouldn't it be great if my computer could write software for me? Humans could sit back and put their feet up?” While most people don’t actually believe this could happen, they will often ask why we can’t specify software exactly and use unskilled people to write it. Both proposals fundamentally misunderstand the nature of writing software. What do Programmers Do? A human software programmer can write up to 1000 lines of code per day. At the beginning of a project, when the work is unconstrained, programmers write fast. Things slow down once programmers encounter the enemy: the real world. By the time the code is complete and selling in shops, the productivity of a programmer can be as low as one line of code per day. This is staggeringly low and luckily only applies to big

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Domainwww.dilbert.com

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