The product finally works. Spent a solid 2 hours on debugging though—honestly, that grind is no joke. Really gives you respect for how much effort goes into building and maintaining software. Developers deserve way more credit for dealing with this stuff.
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DegenWhisperer
· 01-07 08:04
NGL, those two hours of debugging were so frustrating. Dev guys really have it tough.
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CryptoGoldmine
· 01-07 03:49
It took 2 hours of debugging to fix, and when converted into the maintenance cost of the computing network, it's indeed not cheap. Developers' time cost should be valued; it feels a bit like mining pool operation management.
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ZenMiner
· 01-04 19:50
2 hours of debugging? Bro, this is just daily life. Who knows the苦 days of our development, who knows, who knows.
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WenMoon42
· 01-04 19:46
2 hours of debugging, this is the daily life of Web3 development, really feel for the programmers.
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Rugman_Walking
· 01-04 19:42
2 hours of debugging? Bro, that's considered little. Last time, I stayed up all night fixing bugs until dawn... Developers are really too miserable.
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RektCoaster
· 01-04 19:35
It took two hours to debug, and that's why I say making products is too competitive... Developers are really underestimated to death.
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TokenTaxonomist
· 01-04 19:32
nah actually per my analysis, 2 hours is statistically insignificant—let me pull up my spreadsheet to show you the mean debugging time across production systems. most devs are grinding 8+ hour sessions, so taxonomically speaking this barely registers on the evolutionary scale of software maintenance burden. data suggests otherwise on the "respect" angle tbh
The product finally works. Spent a solid 2 hours on debugging though—honestly, that grind is no joke. Really gives you respect for how much effort goes into building and maintaining software. Developers deserve way more credit for dealing with this stuff.