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Work is implementing Pair Programming. This sounds like a special sort of hell
So, I work as a Software Engineer at an online company. I'm great at my job because, to be honest, I'm a better then average programmer and I'm better at solving problems, interacting with customers and keeping people's spirits up.
The work WAS well suited to me, because there's a lot of different technologies and systems, and I'm the team leader for the maintenance team. I get to play with all the defects, riddle out what's causing them and fix them. Brilliant stuff.
But, we've had some negative feedback from our customers, because we've been focusing heavily on delivering new products (At the management's request), and so management has panicked, and is Pair Programming.
Pair Programming is where you team up with another developer and one of you codes and the other gives input, feedback and monitors for bugs. It can be a great learning tool, improve quality and be really fulfilling.
To me, it sounds like hell. I won't have anything to do with my hands while I'm pairing, unless I'm typing, where I'll have to keep breaking my focus to explain what I'm doing and why I'm doing it, as well as interacting with my pair. When I'm not typing I KNOW I'll be bored, because of my team members, two of them only work on a language that I'm totally dis-interested in, that's commercially dead. The other two are either completely incompetant (No, really... He's here because he works VERY long hours to make up for being slow and bad at his job, and my manager recognizes that) and a new programmer who isn't bad, but doesn't have a problem-solving bone in his body.
So, I'll be either bored by the technology, or having to watch someone who's simply not stimulating to watch. I won't learn anything. I'll be bored to tears. I won't have anything to do with my hands. We start on monday.
I'm just venting here, really. I don't expect I'll be able to do anything about it. I've explained everything to my boss and his attitude is "Well, you've just got to do what the business wants", which I think is a terrible attitude because, frankly, this isn't what I signed up for.
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