• Bappity@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    yeah sure, happy teams start with jira but they end up as angry and sad teams

  • theyllneverfindmehere@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    For those complaining about Jira… I used to be one of you. After changing jobs and using several alternatives, I am begging to be back on Jira. Manage Engine is currently the bane of my existence.

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      3 months ago

      That might very well be the case, however, why are all of these apps so incredibly bad?

      Jira especially seems like the definition of feature creep. It’s more bloated than a lactose intolerant child after a tub of ice cream.

    • expr@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      I also wonder if people complaining about Jira are still on Jira Server. Jira Cloud is a much nicer experience. Certainly not perfect, but I’ve yet to see an actual viable alternative (once worked someplace that tried to move all project management to Gitlab… 🤮).

      • the_artic_one@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        Cloud is way worse than server in my experience. Server was only bad because it was usually configured poorly and IT would never give admins to anyone who actually needed it. Cloud is bad because it’s slow as hell and can’t be configured correctly because the ability to configure it correctly has been sitting in “Gathering Interest” on Atlassian’s issue tracker for two years despite thousands of votes and comments.

        • xenoclast@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Same. Or Shortcut. They both are good at being useful but not being your fucking LIFE. Do the important bit and go away.

          JIRA is a middle management job creation tool. Which is why it’s everywhere

      • keyez@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I worked at a engineering focused contract where we moved all our project management to gitlab and it saved so much time for everyone. Only hard part was collating data up to management in a way they could understand but I was happy to spend a few hours every few months to do that than using jira in any capacity

        • expr@programming.dev
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          3 months ago

          I’m sure it’s fine for small-scale usage, but overall it’s extremely inflexible and doesn’t really scale well at all. There’s also a lot of very basic functionality that’s straight up missing. For example, there’s no way to have a global epic priority. You can rearrange epics in an epic board, but the ordering of the epics there is not persisted elsewhere. There were many, many other shortcomings we kept running into.

          Oh, and after a lot of our tickets had been imported (which itself was a huge undertaking since the auto import tools are complete trash), it started to be very slow. It feels like a very unfinished, unpolished product.

          We use Gitlab’s CI/CD features extensively at my current job and it’s very, very nice. That’s what they are actually good at, not project management.

      • Kissaki@programming.dev
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        3 months ago

        Jira Server is the on-premise Jira, right?

        We had to change to Jira Cloud. (Vendor lock-in, mainly because of time-tracking appendix tools of that.) It’s horrendeous. UI and UX is horrendeous. The DOM is horrendeous. Performance is horrendeous.

        My CSS Hacks to fix the UI to a degree I can reasonably work with it are a lot more work now with the generated DOM class and ids. Sometimes they at least have test IDs which can be used.

        Some things, like the board component quick filter, are not even available anymore.

        The interactivity functionality is irritating and annoying most of the time.

        The browser extension we use further fucking up doesn’t help either of course.

        Don’t even get me started on Confluence. Which can’t even find pages when I type the exact page title, or ranks them low. And editing tables is a hassle beyond belief now that responsive tables (self-sizing) are gone. It’s wasteful on space too of course, with huge spacing.

    • Kushan@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Honestly 95% of Jira complaints are because people have crap workflows configured. Out of the box Jira is pretty terrible but it’s very customisable and you need to adjust it to suit your needs - and they have to be your needs and workflows.

      That being said, there’s that last 5% that Jira just gets in the way. If anyone has ever had multiple teams working on a single product, Jira is very prescribed about how you’re supposed to structure that and If you don’t, it’s a pain.

      • xmunk@sh.itjust.works
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        3 months ago

        I’d suggest that 95% of Jira complaints are actually about corporate culture which is felt most keenly through asshole PMs trying to micromanage you through a ticketing system. It’s mostly a fine piece of software - if you have a certified wizard to configure it it can be great… if you have a dummy it’s going to be barely usable - but you can say the same thing about github issue tracking.

        The unfortunate thing is that the teams most likely to use Jira are also the teams I most likely never want to work on.

      • Mojave@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        I can type out the entire 10 word long name of my sprint into the searchbar, and it Jira will pull up 22 pages of things that are not even CLOSE to what I searched. It’s a nightmare to try and find my current sprint among the 65 other team’s sprints every month.

        • Kushan@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          I find jiras search to be decent enough, you might get better results using a filter on sprint name with your current sprint in it.

      • socsa@piefed.social
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        3 months ago

        Right, the entire issue is that it basically acts as a massive layer of insulation between reality and bad management. The whole thing is like a fucking paradox - any time you make a change to workflows or procedures there’s this stupid period where you need to “wait for buy in” where it doesn’t matter how outwardly idiotic the change is, you can’t actually call it obviously fucking stupid for like several weeks, or you are seen as being contrarian, or causing trouble. And the real bullshit is that the “better” the tools are, the more this effect is amplified. So as an engineer, I have paradoxically come to appreciate bad management tools simply because when someone does something stupid with them, I can call it out more easily.

        • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          I so agree. My boss likes it and I find it bizarre that anyone pays for that garbage. We are switching to JIRA now due to a decision over his head :)

        • killabeezio@lemm.ee
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          3 months ago

          Oh God. Those are the 2 worst ones. They are mainly used for IT tickets, not for developing software. Jira isn’t the worst, but it does lack basic features. It’s just when companies use Jira you just know you are going to have to deal with a bunch of PMs who all they care about is velocity.

          There are so many other simplified alternatives these days. Basecamp is one.

        • TrickDacy@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          You are lucky. I’ve never used those but I can tell you that PT is a huge piece of shit. The UI is among the worst ever. My go-to example for why I hate it is that you can literally be working on a ticket, reading it or writing in it, and if another coworker does something to it that causes it to move positions in the board or list, the fucking thing will literally disappear from your screen in front of your eyes. It feels like the designers have never used software before.

    • socsa@piefed.social
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      3 months ago

      The issue is more that all of these planning tools enable bad managers to implement bad management practices and workflows without any actual tracking for what constitutes bad management. Almost without fail, every manager I’ve worked with who is very attached to these products ends up using them for the sake of using them. And then when that produces shit results it’s all about “engineering buy in” and “process learning curves” and they end up doing real damage to products before someone notices that Jira actions are not correlated with protective management.

      The biggest issue is that good, effective management tools actually end up being a double edged sword because of how they shield bad managers the illusion of legitimacy.

    • Changer098@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3 months ago

      We switched to a different tool that’s developed by the same company I work for, and there has been nonstop complaining about it ever since. Jira might not be the best tool, but it’s better than the alternatives by miles.

      Also technical shit posting on Confluence is just the best. (I don’t like Atlassian, I just want to go back to Jira)

    • littlewonder@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      What the? I thought Manage Engine was mainly for MDM. If they crammed an ITSM in there, there’s no way it’s as robust as software that was built for it.

      Have you tried ClickUp?

      • theyllneverfindmehere@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Someone else asked about click up, no I haven’t even heard of it until this thread.

        Manage Engine over commits on what it thinks it can do and it does none of them well.

    • pageflight@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Company started on Asana, individual teams jumped to Jira, company eventually followed. I was always accidentally creating blank tickets in Asana.

  • KellysNokia@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    All my homies hate agile, Jira, scrum, kanban, etc.

    In truth none of these items are inherently wrong - what’s wrong is leadership picking up new tools and adopting management structures expecting them to solve fundamental organizational issues.

    Instead they only serve to magnify the outcomes of your existing corporate culture.

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      It’s funny that “Individuals and interactions over processes and tools” is the first of the tenets of agile and the most ignored. I think most people’s frustrations with agile are from people worrying too much about processes and tools.

      • Knock_Knock_Lemmy_In@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Scrum/Agile has 2 advantages over waterfall.

        • things that don’t work get stopped early, without stigma.

        • the team works together towards an overall goal, it is not individuals working on individual tasks.

        The “agile” tools themselves rarely encourage either of these practices.

        Jira

        • assigns tasks to individuals.
        • treats closed and cancelled differently.
    • mogranja@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I think you hit the main issue right there. Devs don’t hate the tool, they hate that the tool doesn’t solve the issue. Like trying to drill a hole with a screw and a hammer.

    • JustLookingForDigg@lemm.ee
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      3 months ago

      Strong agree! It drives me crazy how much hate scrum agile gets because when it’s implemented intelligently I’ve found it really helps align everyone’s expectations (I’m a dev)

  • GreenSofaBed@lemmy.zip
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    3 months ago

    I use Teams and Jira, and I can’t even imagine the amount of wasted time when I click anything in either of them and nothing happens for a good while, just waiting around.

    • KellysNokia@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      If you press F12 and look at the network calls you can see the insane amount of analytics they are sending for every twitch of the mouse

      • toddestan@lemm.ee
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        3 months ago

        Maybe the old, discontinued on-premise version. The cloud version of JIRA is a huge step back.

        With that said, Teams is not a good product either.

      • filcuk@lemmy.zip
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        3 months ago

        I beg to differ.

        I’ve not had a real issue with teams since the early ‘new teams’ release. Nor have I had issues prior.

        Using Jira is actually something I dread every day.
        Knowing I have to go through the list of tasks and projects, where each click means another few seconds of staring blankly at the screen as it loads.

        In an age where I’m used to every interaction having a near instant reaction, using Jira feels like peeling potatoes with a butter knife.

        • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Maybe you just don’t have a reasonable comparison. We just switched from Slack and Zoom to Teams and it has significantly impacted our ability to collaborate and communicate. It’s constantly dropping calls, video quality is awful, annotation is awful, the layout is wasteful with tons of wasted space, audio is terrible, there’s no closed captioning visible while screen sharing, there are too many problems to list. It’s the type of product I’d expect from a high school programming class, not a trillion dollar company.

            • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              I never had any issues with Zoom or Slack. They do what they’re supposed to do. Jira is fine too, but I’m not a PM, so I don’t have to deal with anything other than the Kanban board.

              Edit: I guess it’s relevant that I’m on a MacBook Pro, and not a Windows machine.

          • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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            3 months ago

            constantly dropping calls, video quality is awful […], audio is terrible,

            I have none of these issues with Teams. Maybe your internet connection sucks?

    • CluckN@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Don’t worry teamsters we added 6 new ticket statuses so they can get auto-sorted straight to the abyss.

  • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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    3 months ago

    I absolutely love how this implies that the team is happy before going to Jira.

    so not only can Atlassian not write software, they can’t develop a usable product, and they can’t even market it without insinuating how shitty it is.

    • BatmanAoD@programming.dev
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      3 months ago

      I read “happy ___ starts with ___” as stating that happiness was the eventual result of a process that started with ___.

      • Skates@feddit.nl
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        3 months ago

        Yes, like most normal people do.

        There’s a lot of discussion when you’re a software dev about the best way to do things, and a lot more is spent on this debate than on actually writing code. One could wonder if there is so much discussion because there are so many good ideas that it’s difficult to choose the one that is optimal for the situation.

        But then you read one of these posts on lemmy and you are reminded that someone with internet access and thumbs could spare the short time they have to take a shit to egregiously misunderstand a simple fucking slogan, smugly post about their shit take on the internet, and then return to their job where they will then spend hours misunderstanding the simplest of fucking concepts, slowing down everyone else along with them.

        • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          Jira is great software if you ignore all the insufferable bugs in it that Atlassian ignores just to make their on-prem option so clunky you have no choice but to use their SAAS offering. I know, I know, “ThEy DrOpPeD sUpPoRt AlReAdY!”

          ever had to rebuild a sprint because Jira failed to properly migrate the old cards over to the new one, but instead throws them all into the backlog randomly and now you have to hunt them down over the next hour?

          how about when you’re writing an update to a card and you’re two paragraphs in with log examples and the UI decides to dump your entire content when you accidentally click outside the wysisyg?

          But how can I forget the worst one! have you ever had your session timeout while you’re writing a detailed bug report with screenshots, logs, and example data, and when you finally submit it you lose EVERYTHING because you need to login again and you can’t go back?

          I have, and you know what, I’ll still use Jira because even the best trash can be better than the worst trash.

          yeah, I’ll take a fat dump on shitty products all day long because the negligence of Atlassian product development is abhorrent and deserves to be called out.

          • toddestan@lemm.ee
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            3 months ago

            I’ve often wondered if Atlassian even uses the products they sell. There’s just so many stupid bugs that I would assume no one at Atlassian would put up with if they had to eat their own dog food. Instead, those bugs don’t seem to get fixed and seem to linger in their products forever.

          • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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            3 months ago

            ever had to rebuild a sprint because Jira failed to properly migrate the old cards over to the new one, but instead throws them all into the backlog randomly and now you have to hunt them down over the next hour?

            No, never. Did you maybe not select the ‘move to new sprint’ option when closing the old one?

            how about when you’re writing an update to a card and you’re two paragraphs in with log examples and the UI decides to dump your entire content when you accidentally click outside the wysisyg?

            That has never happened to me, either.

            • GreenKnight23@lemmy.world
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              3 months ago

              congrats, you’ve had a far better experience than I have. just because you haven’t had the joys of experiencing Jira in its true form doesn’t negate the atrocious UX many others have. if Jira was the perfect product that you claim, then why is there so much vitrol and hate for the product at all?

              I started my career as a big supporter of Jira. It made the work so easy to manage and report on. then sometime in 2020 an update came through that absolutely shit on my already over-burdened workload.

              I used to deal with the sprint problem every kickoff, and yes I did select migrate to new sprint. no it doesn’t work when the process breaks in the middle and doesn’t recover or rollback. now I don’t handle kickoff, so not my problem anymore but I witness it happen literally every kickoff.

              I also used to deal with the WYSIWYG issue daily. now I don’t post updates to cards outside of one-liners like “check the logs at this time” or “fixed upstream in xy branch”.

              I get why people share their hate online because misery loves company, but I just don’t get why anyone would waste so much effort on defending it. example; I use spaces over tabs. lots of hate either way online. never have I defended or argued over one vs the other. it’s a preference much like Jira. forced to use it at work and have to make the best of it.

              so, why be a white knight for Atlassian if you’re not employed by them? and if you are employed by them, why be so dismissive about the issues brought up?

              • bleistift2@sopuli.xyz
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                3 months ago

                Wow, you are touchy. All I said was that I never experienced these two issues you report.

                why be a white knight for Atlassian if you’re not employed by them

                I don’t know. I’ll never share an opposing view ever again. All points I encounter shall from now on be taken as the one and only truth. I will never again engage in discourse, I promise.

    • Valmond@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      I hate jira because it slots your work stupidly by the management, or so I feel it.

      A manager usually works with time slots, say 8 a day (or whatever), they are all mostly disconnected, like do meeting with A, go to standup of team B, PMD for dev C etc etc. Dev isn’t like that but everyone seems to start thinking it is: how many “items” was finalised last “sprint” etc and other stupid metrics.

      Am I alone here or is there even worse things with jira in your opinions?

    • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Now imagine a very large company implementing that shit software for other kinds of engineering projects! Yey! Lot’s of great engineers have quit because of it.

      Jira, we’ll brain drain your company and make it seem more productive!

      Next thing you know…well the guy who understood that is no longer here. But we can take our best guess… should the door pop inward or outward during a flight?

    • FuglyDuck@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      “I’m not your friend. By the way, if you don’t use Jira you’re fired.” -Middle Managment

      “I hate Jira too. you’re fired”- Senior management.

      • steventhedev@lemmy.world
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        3 months ago

        Seriously though - JIRA isn’t always a massive pain in the ass. It’s just the way it’s used that sucks. Workflow restrictions so devs can’t move tickets from testing back to in progress, dozens of mandatory fields, etc.

        When your tools start dictating your workflow rather than the other way around then it’s time to switch tools.

        • Valmond@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          And the metrics, “we see many back and forth between the dev and test” -> devs stops doing it.

  • Alph4d0g@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 months ago

    They have a predatory business model. “Hey we’re cheaper than the competition”. Once you’re soaking in it and need features, they have options but it’ll cost you. I reckon they have slick sales people who know how to pander to the egos of middle management as well. You know … The people who don’t actually have to use the tool but sure like to feel like they somehow matter.