We are overpaid for incredible working conditions and devs basically became capricious divas, despite the fact 90% of them are plumbers, and many not very good ones.
If you had any professional doing the same, wasting so much resources as us, changing part of the tech stack every month, debating vocabulary on twitter ad nauseam instead of coding, and whining about how their first world problem should be the focus right now rather than doing their job, they would get laughed at.
But we were incredibly lucky that IT is the most amazing productivity cheat code humanity has come up with so far, so that all this BS was accepted as the cost of doing business.
Well, here is the wake up call.
No, we are not paid to rate the best cappuccino of the valley, converting the most stable software of your org to Elm nor write a commit hook so that nothing can be pushed before the diversity committee validated the change set.
We are paid to solve problems.
If you don't solve problems, when the hard times come, and they always do, you become part of the problem.
I saw this "Build Your Own Text Editor"[0] on HN a month or two ago, everyone was raving about it so I went through it and it really was fantastic. The learning experience was unparalleled. I'm a believer in the idea of "Build Your Own..." guides now, I hope this Redis guide is just as good as the kilo text editor. I'm definitely bookmarking this for a deep dive when the time is right. Any other top notch "Build Your Own" recommendations would be highly appreciated.
We are overpaid for incredible working conditions and devs basically became capricious divas, despite the fact 90% of them are plumbers, and many not very good ones.
If you had any professional doing the same, wasting so much resources as us, changing part of the tech stack every month, debating vocabulary on twitter ad nauseam instead of coding, and whining about how their first world problem should be the focus right now rather than doing their job, they would get laughed at.
But we were incredibly lucky that IT is the most amazing productivity cheat code humanity has come up with so far, so that all this BS was accepted as the cost of doing business.
Well, here is the wake up call.
No, we are not paid to rate the best cappuccino of the valley, converting the most stable software of your org to Elm nor write a commit hook so that nothing can be pushed before the diversity committee validated the change set.
We are paid to solve problems.
If you don't solve problems, when the hard times come, and they always do, you become part of the problem.