> there are no bonus points for doing things the hard way
Perhaps not from the technical perspective, but there are social advantages if you are a member of a clique that does things the hard way and considers it a sign of competence. ("Any idiot can write a code that compiles using autocomplete and syntax highlighting, but it takes a true master to achieve the same result using a decades-old Linux equivalent of Notepad.") They don't seem to understand that the ancient masters did things the hard way not as a pointless exercise, but simply because the easy way was not available back then.
Perhaps not from the technical perspective, but there are social advantages if you are a member of a clique that does things the hard way and considers it a sign of competence. ("Any idiot can write a code that compiles using autocomplete and syntax highlighting, but it takes a true master to achieve the same result using a decades-old Linux equivalent of Notepad.") They don't seem to understand that the ancient masters did things the hard way not as a pointless exercise, but simply because the easy way was not available back then.