JIRA being slow and sluggish doesn't really have anything to do with configuration. It's a horrible tool to navigate UX-wise.
It's crazy how different opinions are on JIRA. I think it's the worst tool I'm forced to use - and have been - at all my dev jobs. It's slow, sluggish, the UX is horrible and it gets in my way. A lot of dev teams that…
I'm relatively outgoing and it still sounds horribly draining
Indeed. I worked with a fully blind colleague(who ironically did accessibility testing..) - it made me so sad he couldn't participate in all the stuff on Slack. I mean yeah he'd get an email if it was important, but…
Not sure if you're arguing for or against the stake at hand :P
It might not be, but how does it fare against similar languages? I have no idea why you'd choose it over Go/Node.js/Ruby or similar for your standard webdev stuff.
JIRA being slow and sluggish doesn't really have anything to do with configuration. It's a horrible tool to navigate UX-wise.
It's crazy how different opinions are on JIRA. I think it's the worst tool I'm forced to use - and have been - at all my dev jobs. It's slow, sluggish, the UX is horrible and it gets in my way. A lot of dev teams that…
I'm relatively outgoing and it still sounds horribly draining
Indeed. I worked with a fully blind colleague(who ironically did accessibility testing..) - it made me so sad he couldn't participate in all the stuff on Slack. I mean yeah he'd get an email if it was important, but…
Not sure if you're arguing for or against the stake at hand :P
It might not be, but how does it fare against similar languages? I have no idea why you'd choose it over Go/Node.js/Ruby or similar for your standard webdev stuff.