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Correct response:
"Ah cool! Google also pay their developers well over 6 figures on average, offer 30 days holiday, have unlimited free on-site food, and give all developers a healthy training budget for the year. If we can sort the above out, I'll see what I can do about that feature." -
@CoffeeNcode Not quite that many, but we're in a similar boat. We're generally a reasonably small part of that many external ongoing projects though, so most of them just require a few hours here and there spread over a few weeks.
It gets manic sometimes, and isn't ideal, but it is do-able. -
Fradow9166y@CoffeeNcode
11 of those 15 projects are apps, that all share the same framework and libs. Some of them have not been updated for quite a while now (right now, only 3 are actively worked on).
And then you have the public website (not actively worked on apart from Christmas promo), an obsolete back-end on life support, and the decoupled back-end and front-end (2 separate project). We hired a freelancer for the front-end (though he is gone, that's my responsibility now).
Short answer: we cannot give all of those projects enough love, and we switch often. Business determines what's the most important to work on right now. Generally, only 3 to 6 projects are worked on during a given month. -
Fradow9166y@linuxxx you can replace Google by Facebook, Apple or Microsoft in this context ;) Or any big company for that matter.
"Google does it". I hate that sentence. It's always the beginning of an unreasonable expectation.
Perhaps if we had as much devs as Google we could do it too. But we are 2 devs spread over 15 projects, so fuck off.
rant