Thank you Carlo! I am planning to always include the voiceover from now on, as many people asked for it in the past!
About the bias: yes there is some, probably. We tried to mitigate the risk by reaching out to many respondents from outside the Refactoring audience, too.
Refactoring audience has on average more years of experience and cares more about personal growth. I would say, anyway, that most answers should stay the same for both Refactoring and non-Refactoring people.
Also, I think that these results are even more interesting for those of us who have participated in the study. Understanding how our ideas and interests compare with respect to the average is a great point also for self reflection.
I love this! The insights, the trends, and seeing how I, an engineer residing in a country where hyperinflation has devaluated virtually everything for the past 3 years, share the same concerns as someone who might not worry about not having decent internet speeds.
It is true! We got respondents from all over the world but we didn't find any major differences based on geography — or lower vs higher income countries.
Enjoyed the article, I am most excited by low/no code solutions as I feel they can free dev time up to work on hard problems vs already solved day-to-day issues—particularly time sucking internal tools. Guess only 2% share my excitement. 😁
Great and very interesting insights! Some of them expected, others more of a surprise.
Also, I really enjoyed the voiceover 🙏
Do you think the results may include a bias given by the initial selection and community-affiliation of responders?
Thank you Carlo! I am planning to always include the voiceover from now on, as many people asked for it in the past!
About the bias: yes there is some, probably. We tried to mitigate the risk by reaching out to many respondents from outside the Refactoring audience, too.
Refactoring audience has on average more years of experience and cares more about personal growth. I would say, anyway, that most answers should stay the same for both Refactoring and non-Refactoring people.
It makes perfect sense.
Also, I think that these results are even more interesting for those of us who have participated in the study. Understanding how our ideas and interests compare with respect to the average is a great point also for self reflection.
I love this! The insights, the trends, and seeing how I, an engineer residing in a country where hyperinflation has devaluated virtually everything for the past 3 years, share the same concerns as someone who might not worry about not having decent internet speeds.
Thanks for the effort to put this together!
It is true! We got respondents from all over the world but we didn't find any major differences based on geography — or lower vs higher income countries.
We are in this together! 😄
Enjoyed the article, I am most excited by low/no code solutions as I feel they can free dev time up to work on hard problems vs already solved day-to-day issues—particularly time sucking internal tools. Guess only 2% share my excitement. 😁