From Wikipedia:
To say that a company "eats its own dog food" means that it uses the products that it makes.
So the question is: do you use the software you are developing?
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From Wikipedia:
So the question is: do you use the software you are developing? |
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I work in a very specialized domain. So personally replicating the workflows of our users is a big challenge especially for new developers on the team. In this case most of our workflow research is based on on site observations and relying on the knowledge of devs who have been on the project for a longer time. It would be extremely helpful if i had the domain knowledge of our users but its not always practical. |
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I do not dogfood the software that I write. I feel like it is because I write some special case software that I am not in the core user base for. But in reality it is because I/we are too lazy. I wish I did. Now, I do use other software that the company I works for writes. I am involved in several alpha and beta programs for other software that the company writes. |
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Well, I once joined a game company just to work on the MMO I was currently playing. BTW, I don't recommend this, it kind of ruins the game. Currently? Not so much. We make kind of specific custom web-apps for other divisions, so it's not really apropos. I'd like to say I try to code as if I'd be using it (feature-wise, etc.), but what I do isn't always what the customer would do, for some strange reason. |
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We all use our products as much as possible. Users give great feedback, so: use! |
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