Ek-Hou-Van-Braai@piefed.social to Programmer Humor@programming.devEnglish · edit-21 day agoNow listen here you little shitmedia.piefed.socialimagemessage-square100fedilinkarrow-up11.13K
arrow-up11.13KimageNow listen here you little shitmedia.piefed.socialEk-Hou-Van-Braai@piefed.social to Programmer Humor@programming.devEnglish · edit-21 day agomessage-square100fedilink
minus-squareSamskara@sh.itjust.workslinkfedilinkarrow-up99·1 day agoIn my experience there’s usually a confluence of individual and institutional failures. It usually goes like this. hotshot developers is hired at company with crappy software hotshot dev pitches a complete rewrite that will solve all issues complete rewrite is rejected hotshot dev shoehorns a new architecture and trendy dependencies into the old codebase hotshot new dev leaves software is more complex, inconsistent, and still crappy
minus-squareViatorOmnium@piefed.sociallinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up19·edit-21 day agoThat’s one of the failure modes, good orgs would have design and review processes to stop it. There are other classics like arbitrary deadlines, conflicting and shifting requirements and product direction, perverse incentives, etc. I would even say that the AI craze is a result of the latter.
minus-squarePapstJL4U@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up6·1 day agoYeah, certain code developed organically (aka shifting demands). Devs know the code gets worse, but either by time or money they don’t have the option to review and redo code.
In my experience there’s usually a confluence of individual and institutional failures.
It usually goes like this.
That’s one of the failure modes, good orgs would have design and review processes to stop it.
There are other classics like arbitrary deadlines, conflicting and shifting requirements and product direction, perverse incentives, etc.
I would even say that the AI craze is a result of the latter.
Yeah, certain code developed organically (aka shifting demands). Devs know the code gets worse, but either by time or money they don’t have the option to review and redo code.