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986

The bugs are still there, caked on with new features, with a heavy handed implication that VS will be shit canned in the coming releases and superseded by VS Code. Even VS Code is now "cloud" based so you don't need to run it locally anymore, you know for "convenience"

The bugs are still there, caked on with new features, with a heavy handed implication that VS will be shit canned in the coming releases and superseded by VS Code. Even VS Code is now "cloud" based so you don't need to run it locally anymore, you know for "convenience"

(post is archived)

[–] 0 pt

I worked for a company that produced and sold engineering software.

The tech departments are basically told to repackage the same program each year and release a brand new version for marketing purposes and to seem "relevant".

All the engineers would always beg for them to fix the bugs and add a few tweaks. Like one good program that did all would easily last ten years for a lot of these guys designing.

Instead they would get too caught up in "latest trends" like the cloud-based access they also made a big fuss about when none of their users asked for it. Lol.

I don't understand how companies don't understand that people don't like change. Create one SOLID program and let users master and have fun on it for years to come. We don't want new shit where everything is different every 1-2 years.