> Where did this come from and what value does it have, other than being condescending to non-native English speakers?
What is condescending? I'm observing that it's a common problem among non-native English speakers. It seems like you're taking offense on behalf of others and unduly so.
> I am a native speaker and we're having a discussion in my native tongue about words in my native language about work I do as a profession.
This is a common idiom among English-speaking IT professionals. If you're not familiar, that's fine. Now you know.
> I do not accept Stackoverflow as an authoritative source for anything
In a minute of Googling, I found several random sources on the Internet that indicate that the term is overloaded precisely as I described. One of those sources was the Oxford English Dictionary. I think that suffices to demonstrate that this is a common idiom, but I can't force you to be persuaded. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
What is condescending? I'm observing that it's a common problem among non-native English speakers. It seems like you're taking offense on behalf of others and unduly so.
> I am a native speaker and we're having a discussion in my native tongue about words in my native language about work I do as a profession.
This is a common idiom among English-speaking IT professionals. If you're not familiar, that's fine. Now you know.
> I do not accept Stackoverflow as an authoritative source for anything
In a minute of Googling, I found several random sources on the Internet that indicate that the term is overloaded precisely as I described. One of those sources was the Oxford English Dictionary. I think that suffices to demonstrate that this is a common idiom, but I can't force you to be persuaded. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯