Inspired by the very similar thread about school incidents.

  • CEbbinghaus
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    1024 months ago

    Software company before git. The source server corrupted and the product code was lost. 5 guys had to get together and figure out the latest version between them (everybody had different changesets) and produce a new “current” version. At the end we lost all history prior and ever since all changes prior to 2008 have been attributed to 1 guy.

    • @[email protected]
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      604 months ago

      I used to work at an accounting/consulting firm who were dead set on writing business applications in VBA within Excel. The code was embedded in the notebook, and to distribute the software was sending the latest version of the Excel file. This made version control virtually impossible, and we would instead combine our work manually.

      I cannot recommend having tech-illiterate people lead software projects.

    • @[email protected]
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      254 months ago

      Gotta respect that save. Reminds me of the Toy Story 2 assets being lost from a server failure and they were saved by one employee having a copy on their personal computer at home.

    • @[email protected]
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      44 months ago

      More impressive than the fact that you saved a repo once is that the same repo still exists today with the complete git history. At the rate companies abandon products for new ones, old repos are rare.

      • CEbbinghaus
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        44 months ago

        Our repo is old as time. Carried through from SourceSafe to TFS to Git

    • @[email protected]
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      24 months ago

      Subversion has existed probably for longer than your company, the fucking managers couldn’t be arsed to read a damn book?

      • CEbbinghaus
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        44 months ago

        They were using SourceSafe back then. But any source control that isnt decentralised has the same problem. If the central server gets deleted so does all history

      • @[email protected]
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        24 months ago

        I had a worse experience. My first internship was doing web development in ColdFusion. Why that language? Because when the company was first starting, none of the funders wanted to learn Linux/Apache administration and CF ran on Windows.

        Also, the front end development team did not have version control but shared code via a file server.