Yeah, don't bother. We just started using it at work a few days ago. Not a single page loads in less than 7 seconds (with a primed cache, a completely fresh load takes 30+). Every page also pulls in 50+ subrequests, many of which have caching disabled. It's a new org, new project, and a single digit number of issues, so this can't be a scale issue (though I dread to imagine how awful that would be).
That would be understandable (though hardly acceptable) for an SPA, but this is Enterprise, where every navigation still requires a full reload, and the page you're actually looking for (the issue page) is never less than 3 links away from the useless dashboard that some designer put in because that's what all the cool kids do.
How did this shit get past QA? Did the QA people give up on trying to file any issues because the UI was so slow? Do all developers at Atlassian have a Stockholm Syndrome that would put Microsoft to shame? That this actually made it through development (nevermind that it somehow has paying users) is absolutely mind-boggling.
At least they have a rule not to regress performance! Best to institute such a rule when it’s already slow as molasses, like they did, that way you can hit your KPIs while still shipping garbage.
We are running a 3000+ seat instance at Atlassian on the same cloud as everyone else with nothing close to that performance. Let's get you on the line with support to see what's off.
That would be understandable (though hardly acceptable) for an SPA, but this is Enterprise, where every navigation still requires a full reload, and the page you're actually looking for (the issue page) is never less than 3 links away from the useless dashboard that some designer put in because that's what all the cool kids do.
How did this shit get past QA? Did the QA people give up on trying to file any issues because the UI was so slow? Do all developers at Atlassian have a Stockholm Syndrome that would put Microsoft to shame? That this actually made it through development (nevermind that it somehow has paying users) is absolutely mind-boggling.