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by tharkun__
1289 days ago
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I have found that many many developers are averse to tickets and complain about having to create tickets (like we see in a sibling of yours). I don't see why. It's really not that hard in most places to create one. Even in large and bureaucratic ones. I always found that tickets are protection. When you're being asked to "drop everything for X", my first thought is to create a ticket for my own protection. At the least I can track the fact that I had to spend N hours on this thing X and I can refer back to it. At best I can document the stupidity of the whole thing w/ the ticket contents. If you're in a place like my sibling where they ban creating a ticket yourself and assigning yourself: run. That's so stupid for so many reason that it's not even funny any longer |
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I can give you my answer: Because the ticketing system is painfully slow to log in to, create the ticket, move it to the proper status, etc. Single sign on can make things worse too. The whole process can add up to easily a minute, and not a productive minute of the actual filing (I would be fine with that) but a minute of poking at things.
This does not make you wrong. If you want to say there's some laziness there, yeah, maybe. But it's not just laziness, there's a psychological torture aspect to it all too that is, if not "objectively" true, then at least not entirely my imagination either.
I really, really, really wish Atlassian would basically drop everything for a quarter or two and work on the speed of their products. There shouldn't be a fundamental reason why their stuff is so slow.