Exactly- risk aversion is the driving force. When I was a civil engineer, paper was king. It's wasteful printing 5x copies of one 1000+ page spec, but it's reliable.
I did write a shop drawing automation program when I worked at the office. There was resistance to it at first, but getting the right people on board and demonstrating the improvements helped a lot to get it all the way to the executives of the company. During my push to get my software adopted I learned a lot similar to your perspective; many professionals don't dislike new technology, but they're unwilling to put their name beside it unless it's proven to work.
A lot of young engineers like myself want to walk in on the first day and start shaking things up. But working in a slower, more risk averse field has made me a better software engineer by tempering some of those impulses to adopt the latest and greatest tech. Taking a pragmatic and proven route will nearly always get you reliable and predictable results.
>A lot of young engineers like myself want to walk in on the first day and start shaking things up. But working in a slower, more risk averse field has made me a better software engineer by tempering some of those impulses to adopt the latest and greatest tech. Taking a pragmatic and proven route will nearly always get you reliable and predictable results.
I did write a shop drawing automation program when I worked at the office. There was resistance to it at first, but getting the right people on board and demonstrating the improvements helped a lot to get it all the way to the executives of the company. During my push to get my software adopted I learned a lot similar to your perspective; many professionals don't dislike new technology, but they're unwilling to put their name beside it unless it's proven to work.
A lot of young engineers like myself want to walk in on the first day and start shaking things up. But working in a slower, more risk averse field has made me a better software engineer by tempering some of those impulses to adopt the latest and greatest tech. Taking a pragmatic and proven route will nearly always get you reliable and predictable results.