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Cake day: 3 juin 2023

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  • This applies to any project, really. At my workplace, if someone refuses to let other teams look under the hood of a product, 95% of the time, it’s because their code is absolute garbage, but their leaders didn’t want to wait so they pushed it to prod and now it’s up to some junior employee to fix all the shit that blows up in prod.

    And just for closure, 5% of the time, it’s because there actually is no product at all.


  • Man, I didn’t agree with any of your comments before this one, but I could at least see your point of view, but this…

    You can plug in anything you want here. Now, the engineers can give their opinions and estimates, but they can’t decide it. The PM can. It’s his job to weigh the risks and uncertainties and decide on the path forward.

    You are either a PM yourself or are just making shit up to argue. The PM, at best should only be responsible for signing off on tech choices. If PMs were making decisions, then we would all be using Excel as an enterprise database, documentation tool, and version control.





  • This is what I am hoping will happen. With the current reddit structure, for each topic, you have multiple communities -

    1. The noob-friendly one that is not actively moderated and has a lot of reposts and garbage content
    2. The offshoot that was created because the main sub went downhill. Has stricter moderation and content policies.
    3. The meme offshoot that was created because the main sub banned memes.
    4. The circlejerk version.

    /r/gaming is garbage, /r/games is for discussion. /r/StardustCrusaders is a fan-art dump, /r/Shitpostcrusaders is a meme juggernaut The mods of the Game of Thrones subreddit wouldn’t allow people to shit on the show, so /r/freefolk was formed, and that also served as a template for stuff like /r/titanfolk.

    Anything that gains critical mass will break down into multiple sub communities. It’s inevitable.