Islands Of Sanity
Via InformIT: Safari Books Online – 0201700735 – The C++ Programming Language, Special Edition, I snipped this quote from Bjarne Stroustrup, the creator of the C++ programming language:
“AT&T Bell Laboratories made a major contribution to this by allowing me to share drafts of revised versions of the C++ reference manual with implementers and users. Because many of these people work for companies that could be seen as competing with AT&T, the significance of this contribution should not be underestimated. A less enlightened company could have caused major problems of language fragmentation simply by doing nothing.”
There are always islands of sanity in the massive sea of corpocratic insanity. AT&T’s behavior at that time during the historical development of C++ showed that they were one of those islands. Is AT&T still one of those rare anomalies today? I don’t have a clue.

Another Bjarne quote from the book is no less intriguing:
“In the early years, there was no C++ paper design; design, documentation, and implementation went on simultaneously. There was no “C++ project” either, or a “C++ design committee.” Throughout, C++ evolved to cope with problems encountered by users and as a result of discussions between my friends, my colleagues, and me.”
WTF? Direct communication with users? And how can it be possible that no PMI trained generic project manager or big cheese executive was involved to lead Mr. Stroustrup to success? Bjarne should’ve been fired for not following the infallible, proven, repeatable, and continuously improving, corpo product development process. No?

