Has anyone else here been in a similar predicament,
where they have something in there hands that will make
life easier for and entire department of well over 100
persons, but fear to let it go and watch it be devoured
without so much as a thank you. I don't want to be left
feeling like a fool for being the poor sap to come along
once in a great while, make things nicer for all, then be
forgotten in the shadows.
Hmm. The more I think about it, the more my work
situation resembles yours -- only I've already released
the software to the users, and I'm expected to be a
programmer. Most of the users treat my code (and all of
the internal tools in general) as some sort of bounty or
weregild that we (the programmers) are obliged to provide,
and complain bitterly when things break. Never mind the
fact that most -- maybe all -- of these tools came into
being when a couple of coders got together and said,
"So-and-so's wasting a whole week doing repetitive, dull
work. I bet we can automate that."
And I can pretty much guarantee you that, in a couple
of years, my work will only be remembered in the irritation
of maintenance programmers fixing bugs. "Oh, Matt
wrote this. No wonder."
Every once in a while, though, someone will thank me
for a script, or a feature, or a document, that made their
lives just a bit easier. That's what gets me out of bed
in the morning.
--
:wq
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