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As of today we still use shared network drives for everything in major German company. We don’t use slack/irc/Skype/zoom/whatever. Phone calls and conferences(!) from the middle of open office is normal. Asana/Trello/Jira are not known at all. GitHub is paid for, but never used. I am single weirdo in multi department project using github ticket system. The code with prefix is copied for colleagues to project’s shared folder. PostIt tickets on the table works good enough for others. Talking about bugs is impossible since nobody knows what’s fixed and what’s not, the bugs have date in the best case. Everything else is done in Excel sheets using in house written scripts. They usually end in a mess since some people use German regional settings and other English ones. That’s state-of-art situation in very rich and big company today. I don’t see any possible changes in future. Old boy club fights all the time against proposed improvements. You can forgot topics like information security, phishing, being silent about work topics outside the office. Hackers are known from the American movies only. On the other hand I also worked in opposite unhealthy paranoid environment. I was hired to design Ethernet camera, but Wireshark usage in their office was prohibited. Packet analysis was seen as the worst thing in the company. I quit after few months trying to explain, that I need to analyze the packets during design phase. I think, it’s very normal, that other countries abuse illiteracy of German industry. |
They (meaning the big 3: VW, BMW and Mercedes) apparently still think that building the best engines/transmissions and being the best at putting them all together is all it takes in order to make a modern car, unfortunately I think EVs will be more about software and the way said software can best manage the car's power resources. From far away Tesla looks like it's doing quite a nice job with its EV software, the Germans, not so much.
If it matters I've never worked in Germany but as an IT person/programmer living in Europe I've followed the German IT industry pretty constantly as Germany is one of the best countries in terms of quality of life (I know it's not perfect, but it sure beats my Eastern European country). Unfortunately for me its backwards IT industry (again, as seen from the outside) keeps me away from it.