The phrase "Human Capital: Moving away from ‘master/slave’ terminology" refers to a column by Megan Rose Dickey in , published on September 25, 2020 . It was part of a larger industry-wide push to retire exclusionary technical language. 💡 Core Argument
: In technical contexts (like circuits or hard drive arrays), these terms often fail to clearly describe the actual data relationship compared to modern alternatives. 🔄 Recommended Replacements
The piece argues that terminology like "master" and "slave" is not only but also technically inaccurate .
The phrase "Human Capital: Moving away from ‘master/slave’ terminology" refers to a column by Megan Rose Dickey in , published on September 25, 2020 . It was part of a larger industry-wide push to retire exclusionary technical language. 💡 Core Argument
: In technical contexts (like circuits or hard drive arrays), these terms often fail to clearly describe the actual data relationship compared to modern alternatives. 🔄 Recommended Replacements published on September 25
The piece argues that terminology like "master" and "slave" is not only but also technically inaccurate . published on September 25