The corollary being, fixing bugs and improving UX may very well be more valuable to your users than playing with that hot new JS framework.
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Replying to @AdamRackis @sean_batt
May be! And honestly, there is so much joy to be had from making your users happier.
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Replying to @wycats @sean_batt
There is for me. But I see SO many devs get pissed at the purported injustice of doing that, rather than diddling away on JS's latest craze
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Replying to @AdamRackis @sean_batt
I find it bizarre. Maybe situations where devs aren't in direct contact with users? At
@tildeio engineers handle support tickets. Helps.1 reply 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @wycats @AdamRackis and
It basically means that engineers have a rough sense of the relative priority of inbound problems.
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Adam Rackis Retweeted Adam Rackis
Maybe. I think it's more, many devs don't ever make this leap ->https://twitter.com/AdamRackis/status/892171716587376640 …
Adam Rackis added,
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I don't know if I was ever on the other side. I got involved in coding in the first place to build great software.
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Oh man—back in my corporate days, where my software was used by ~4 people in another department—I wasted SO much time on silly architecture
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The first OSS coding I ever did was an XSLT stylesheet that converted jQuery XML docs into an HTML page. I was proud of the results!
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Replying to @wycats @AdamRackis and
The architecture was horrible but even IE had XSLT processing built in so I didn't need a server.
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The first (and last) coding project I did as a teenager was porting http://starchive.cs.umanitoba.ca/?stardates/ to VB6. First spec impl too I guess :)
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