• Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 hours ago

    The first sign that the company you just joined is amateur hour, every hour of the day, every day of the year is that they don’t have a Staging environment.

  • steventhedev@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago
    When I was a young dev
    My senior took me into the city
    To push my code to prod
    He said "Son, when you promo
    Would you be the savior of the broken
    The buggy and the OOM'd?"
    
  • HubertManne@moist.catsweat.com
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    1 day ago

    last place I worked had an environment refered to as poc/staging. poc. staging. these are supposed to be as far apart as possible in a non prod environment not combined.

    • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      Yeah. Warning - uninvited poetic waxing on feature flags and leadership choices, incoming…

      We all agree we inevitably do some live testing at our customers risk, because no test environment is perfect.

      With feature flags, we’re able to negotiate how many of our customers to test on, at a time.

      But some of us prefer to forgo feature flags and risk our entire customer base on every change. It saves money, at least for a little while.

      I’m not exactly fun at executive leadership meetings, but somehow I keep getting invited to them. Heh.