|
|
|
|
|
by ribadeo
520 days ago
|
|
Perhaps because many of such systems are privately owned and managed systems run by faceless corporate overlords who are ok paying some low wage for a human to work with such outdated systems, and less ok paying for some other humans to build a new system? New systems and rewrites also require you to reconsider bloat and how workflows should function, when upper management just wants you to recreate things the exact same way, obviating any potential benefits achieved... Governmental systems will be subject to complex regulations and specifications etc
Very difficult to address |
|