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by summerlight
1508 days ago
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> the problem is that Google promotes people for "solving hard problems" not for solving USEFUL problems. This is the real problem, but people typically underestimate difficulty of correctly identifying "useful" problems at scale. Fixing a bug is nice, but correctly prioritizing bugs worth fixing is harder than said because most cases relevant engineers have limited contexts on UX and PM also has limited contexts on its difficulty. I don't deny that big techs have a bias toward solving "interesting" problems, but in many cases seemingly simple bugs are not that really easy to solve while not making any dent on business. |
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I work at a big tech company and see this all the time. Bugs that clearly exist and are impacting users, but they're hard to solve and have no or very little business impact. It doesn't really make sense to work on them, but it's kind of sad they just get left :/.