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Do you know these moments when you:

  • stopped laughing at Dilbert, because you realize its true
  • spent evenings completing a project that never went into production
  • when requirements are blurry but the schedule is not

There are so many factors that can frustrate developer and hinder him from being productive.

What factors do you experience at your current workplace?


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What Makes you lose motivation?

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43 Answers

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I work in an open war room. Most of my colleagues are great. However, some lack basic etiquette, and it drives me crazy:

  • never using 'please' or 'thank you'
  • never asking 'do you have a minute?' or 'are you interruptible?' before a question
  • not observing that everyone else leaves the room when they take a call
  • some bodily-function issues that make me feel like we've been reduced to Lord of the Flies
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  • A really messy legacy codebase made for nonprogrammers

  • Meeting-itis

  • Coworkers interfering with my tasks at hand; showing lack of confidence in my results (no matter how good results at all...)

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Several of the "senior developers" at my company (myself included) also do double-duty as "account managers", the direct client contacts for everything from day-to-day support issues to longer term enhancements.

We're constantly interrupted by phone calls, meetings or coworkers that require attention on almost everything but programming.

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Our outsourced IT systems are so user-unfriendly that even a cowboy physicist programmer could write something more user friendly.

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Not understanding how programmers work -- that context switching is expensive, and celebrating "heroes" who put out a fire rather than those who design the house to not catch on fire in the first place.

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17" monitors. What century are we living in? I had to buy my own bigger ones.

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I've become irreplaceable. I recently saw four people promoted to higher paying positions. I was not considered because they don't have anyone who can currently replace me. Of course they won't hire anyone for me to train the issue of being irreplaceable never seems to come up when deciding on pay increases.

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I mostly work from my own home office, but what frustrates me most about some of the clients I do work for, is the almost complete lack of forward planning or even purpose. They want the latest web site gizmo, but they don't know why, other than they want it.

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The loudmouth managers sitting right behind me, who refuse to close their office doors when yelling at someone on the phone. They constantly distract me and then wonder "why isn't it done yet?" (even though they have no technical background and should never, ever, ever make estimates).

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OK, I hope this isn't legally binding :-p:-

  • The fact that it's an internal IT department meaning software quality is horribly compromised. This simple fact means that I, as a developer who's actually passionate about programming, will never be happy until I work for a real software house. Joel Spolsky wrote about this very well:-

Internal software only has to work in one situation on one company's computers. This makes it a lot easier to develop. You can make lots of assumptions about the environment under which it will run. You can require a particular version of Internet Explorer, or Microsoft Office, or Windows. If you need a graph, let Excel build it for you; everybody in our department has Excel. (But try that with a shrinkwrap package and you eliminate half of your potential customers.)

Here usability is a lower priority, because a limited number of people need to use the software, and they don't have any choice in the matter, and they will just have to deal with it. Speed of development is more important. Because the value of the development effort is spread over only one company, the amount of development resources that can be justified is significantly less. Microsoft can afford to spend $500,000,000 developing an operating system that's only worth about $80 to the average person. But when Detroit Edison develops an energy trading platform, that investment must make sense for a single company. To get a reasonable ROI you can't spend as much as you would on shrinkwrap. So sadly lots of internal software sucks pretty badly.

The other problems pretty much stem from this one. I also feel rather trapped in internal software atm too. :'-(.

  • Lack of code review and properly enforced standards meaning code quality is extremely variable.
  • No bug tracking so problems keep on coming up and you simply forget how to deal with them, also there's no log of what's been keeping us busy and what hasn't. Not good.
  • Lack of regression tests for the majority of existing software including critical systems, meaning breaking changes are common.
  • Being second-class citizens in the company as a support department, since you're a very expensive department and you make the company no money.
  • Working on very boring CRUD problems all day.
  • Having experienced contractors telling you that it's like this everywhere they've worked... (in internal IT)
  • Having financial pressure meaning you pretty much have to stay there for at least a fair while longer.
  • Never being allowed to refactor code, ever, regardless of atrocious quality in some instances.
  • Dealing with accidental complexity all day and perhaps 5 minutes of some inherent complexity.
  • Feeling like there's no way out...
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Internet filtering softwares !

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working hours: from 9 to 5 instead of 8 to 4. when you get back home it's really late

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Lack of basic organization. For example, not being able to plan a three hour session for a talk by an expert. Not organizing work streams relative to release schedules, not using the perfectly adequate bug tracker.

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