Jared
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
Yeah.
Yeah.
I totally get that.
As a software developer who hates code review and always has, and probably always will, you know, I'm ready for that one to go by the wayside.
Yeah.
It's weird.
I guess I'm an M of two minds because I've, I've been both people.
I've, I do enjoy crafting a function and like the, you know, the thought process and the toil and the,
The win at the end of it where you're like, you know what, that's a well-factored thing that works as a core.
And I built that.
I totally love that.
But I think at the end, but I'm okay not doing it too.
Like I actually kind of just want the end result.
And so I guess I've been on either side of that fence.
That being said, I do think developers enjoy making internal tools for themselves and for their clients.
uh colleagues and so we're talking verification tools i hope that we'll enjoy the process of like coming up with really cool tests and tools and building those at a fast rate without any of the toil i i actually have a theory that i just thought of for that because i agree with you i think developers love building internal tools for themselves and stuff like that i think one of the reasons for that is because there's so little friction for doing so
It only runs in Chrome, but that's fine because that's the only browser I'm using.
You know, like that feels good.
I don't have to do all the extra stuff.
So when it comes to building the machine that builds the machine, as you so eloquently put it in your blog post, do you think that's something that every engineering team is going to reinvent inside themselves as they reinvent themselves?